Beach blanket book- worms
SHERWOOD KIRALY
“People say that life is the thing, but I prefer reading.”
-- Logan Pearsall Smith
Pretty soon you’ll be at the beach for a day, or a good part of a
day. You might go in the water. You might play ball. You might close
your eyes and make like a rotisserie. Or you might read.
Some of you may be uneasy about reading in public, sensing that
it’s elitist, nonparticipatory, and brands you as a Poindexter. But
you yourself read.
Don’t deny it, you’re doing it right now. You just did it some
more. A book at the beach can be good company.
Now if you read only one book a year it should probably be an
owner’s manual, but if you enjoy a good page-turner, days at the
beach are ideal for catching up with the latest -- or with something
you always meant to read and never did.
You need to watch what you pick, though. A few summers ago I
decided it was time to tackle “War and Peace,” and I read the whole
thing. It was pretty good.*
But I can’t really recommend it as a beach book; there’s such a
thing as too much sun, and by the time Napoleon’s army got back to
France I had some skin problems. You’ll want something a little
snappier.
Family recommendations: for magazine readers, my wife Patti Jo
likes Vanity Fair and a bimonthly called Foreign Affairs. Her
paperback choice is Azar Nafisi’s “Reading Lolita in Tehran.” Katie
is reading Gregory Maguire’s “Wicked,” having recently enjoyed the
musical show. For younger readers, she goes with “The Neverending
Story,” by Michael Ende.
I like a lot of dead writers myself; the best of them survive
tenaciously on the page. Here are three:
P.G. Wodehouse’s short stories about Jeeves take you to another,
funnier world, and who can’t use one of those?
Volume one of Tennessee Williams’ selected letters is out in
paperback and includes several letters from Laguna Beach. Turns out
he lived here in the summer of 1939, two miles up the canyon, and
worked nights setting pins in a bowling alley. He found Laguna
prettier than anywhere he’d been, including the Riviera, but later
decided it was “too perfect” and “unendurable.” Whereupon he left
town and went east to write “The Glass Menagerie.”
Food for thought there, surely. Are we still too perfect? In what
way unendurable? If I moved away too, would I write better? What
happened to the bowling alley?
Finally, the 1920s humorist Ring Lardner doesn’t get reprinted as
often as he deserves. Some years ago I picked up an old book called
“First and Last” and read his description of a female tennis player:
“She has grown into blooming young womanhood and can play three
musical instruments, all ukuleles.”
May you find equally good company this summer.
*Guinness nominee: shortest review of longest novel.
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