This was one crazy Beth day (there's a picture of me, being crazy). Somewhere in the middle of it (between writing a chapter of the novel, rushing, with my husband, to procure the various food stuffs that our soon-to-be-home-for-a-week son will no doubt yearn for, and finishing up the second draft of a client project), I pulled a substantial portion of my personal library to the floor in search of a Roland Barthes book—
Camera Lucida. I still can't find it. I might just have to buy another copy.
I did, however, discover (the book tumbling out onto the floor)
A History of Reading by Alberto Manguel. When it fell, it fell open to the passage below. It seemed a sign. I share it:
We read to understand, or to begin to understand. We cannot do but read. Reading, almost as much as breathing, is our essential function.
Published on November 17, 2011 15:41