When I was in high school and college I had a thing for bookmarks. By “a thing” in this case, I mean that I refused to use them.
My much younger brain kept page numbers and paragraph images perfectly catalogued. I never used a bookmark. Even while working hectic jobs in Japan, it never even occurred to me to use a bookmark… of course, it was never more than a few hours between reading times.
The subways and trains of Japan, though crowded, were a great swirl of white noise rhythms that made reading easy. I even had a lot of time to work on the young adults novel I’ve been playing with.
The advent of kids and my beloved minivan in Japan took a huge chunk of my reading time away from me. I was out of practice, and slowly plugged through a few books. In fact, the only books I really devoured quickly during those years were Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, and Beneath the Underdog: His World as Composed by Mingus. I’ve been a huge fan of Charles Mingus since high school, and his autobiography is on par with his music.
(While we are on the subject, and in parentheses, here are a couple of videos of Charles Mingus for people that are unfamiliar. The first is his music. The second is a fascinating interview with him. The autobiography has the same linguistic flow as his speaking here.)
Now, after such a long and fun digression, I’ll get back to the point. This morning my daughter came proudly to me, telling me she’d found the stickers I had “hidden”.
The stickers in question are a part of a bookmark distributed at the library advertising PBS’s new Cat in the Hat kids’ show coming this September. There are indeed stickers on it, however I had been using it as a bookmark in the book I’m currently reading, Joe Hill’s “Horns: A Novel”.
Well, she found the stickers hidden in the book, marking the last page I had read. I didn’t mind because I used my still properly functioning brain to browse through the book and find my place again the way I used to in Japan. It helps this time that I was only on page 9, but I am hoping I can get back into the reading and remembering groove and free myself from the need for bookmarks yet again.
Tags: bookmarks, charles mingus interview, charles mingus moaning
LOL I use bookmarks religiously, probably because I don’t want to risk spending the time required to rediscover my spot in the book.
Mingus’ music is DEEP. Good stuff.
I wish he would have sat down and got the pipe out of his mouth for the interview. Nice rifle! Whoa he wants to rig it up to shoot when the door opens? Intense interview.
The no bookmark thing is going very well. I love knowing where I’ve read to. Makes me feel like my mind is still young and spry.
… and also, I can buy a TastyKake lemon pie with all the money I save each year on bookmarks… so there’s that.