Mrs. Bosworth is a
It was reported recently that the Yugoslays almost wept with joy when exposed to their first sample of supermarket shopping. The luxury of picking and choosing from many items touched them deeply. In the local market the other night, I wondered if the day would ever come when they could buy a loaf of bread on the one hand and a book on the other. We take for granted our markets, even more so, our books. With the advent of pocket books, we can have everything from new developments in space travel to murder or adventure novels; the world at our fingertips for less than $1.00.
There is an element that says, “I wouldn’t buy a pocket book.” Many hold that all paperbacks are as lurid as the front covers on most of them. In other cases, people feel a book belongs in a permanent library and reprints don’t meet that need. No, they are made for reading while eating lunch, riding a bus or train, or waiting for a dental appointment. I buy them for another reason, too—they are wonderful for marking!
Something in my childhood training prevents me from marking up the clothbound books in our home library. When I want to refer to a particular passage in one, I have to hunt for it. Not so with my pocket books, they are underlined in red and blue and marked with brackets. Listen:
“Private fortunes are destroyed by public as well as by private extravagance. And this is the tendency of all human governments. A departure from principle in one instance becomes a precedent for a second; that second for a third, and so on….”
That is Thomas Jefferson, writing a letter in 1816. A book* of his collected letters cost me 35¢. It has 186 pages in all, but even if it had only the one letter, that was worth my investment.
When the news from Washington stands my hair on end, or another Senator gets an idea of what we should and shouldn’t make the functions of our government, I can sit down with Jefferson, and Madison, and Hamilton, and think about it—and it didn’t cost as much as a single night out to dinner at a half-way decent restaurant.
*Thomas Jefferson on Democracy, edited by Saul K. Padover.