How many of you have an e-book - a Kindle, a Nook or one of
the other varieties out there? I happen
to have a Kindle. One of the great
things about these books is the built in dictionary. I was just reading a book describing Vermont
in the fall, when I came upon a word of doubtful usage. It was the word zephyr and I was compelled to check out the subtleties of its
meaning. And it’s so easy. You simply click the word in question and it
instantly gives you a simple definition.
If your interest in things scholarly has not been sufficiently
satisfied, click again and it gives you the full definition along with other
meanings and alternate usages as well as the origins of the word. It’s great!
But here’s the down side. It’s a
problem I’ve long had with dictionaries.
They are chock full of words!
Interesting and fascinating words.
Words you wish with all your heart you could recall at some appropriate
time. In this instance, following the
word zephyr was the word Zeppelin: a German military man who in
his retirement developed the lighter than air craft named after him. And of course, after that was the word zeppelin, the lighter than air craft
developed by a retired military man in Germany.
By this time I was so engrossed in the entire subject I got on the
internet (yes, you can do that too with one of these digital wonders) and
started reading up on airships. Dirigibles,
blimps, balloons - I was fascinated. I
can just imagine what it was like to fly in one. And to crash in one, which happened pretty
routinely in the early days.
Now whenever I think of Vermont in the fall I will envision
it with a blimp lazily floating away in the distance. Perhaps it will fall from view - quickly - and
the entire forest, hundreds of acres, will suddenly be engulfed in a horrific
fire ball. Fire fighters will arrive
from every direction. Have you ever read
about fire fighters? There are books about
that! Check out “Young Men and Fire” by Norman Maclean.
Well, as a result of this rather benign malady – this interest
in words - it takes a very long time to read a book. There’s just no telling where I’ll end
up. (By the way, have you heard
Encyclopedia Britannica will no longer publish a hard copy? It is now only available online.)
So beware if you are thinking about getting one of these
e-books. They are fraught with dangers
of all sorts. Like the simplicity of buying
books. It’s the easiest thing in the
world. Just click on one of the hundred
million zillion books available and it’s yours!
The money is zapped out of your bank account so fast you don’t even
notice it leaving. (The blond I live
with notices though! I had to buy her a
Nook to keep her distracted.)
Now some people would rather have a real book. And I admit I have a certain fondness for the
smell and feel of an old book. Pages you
can really dog-ear to mark a place. The
heft of the book is in itself an indication of the weightiness of the
subject. But there you go. Who wants to tote a bunch of heavy books
around all the time? When I travel it is
not unlikely for me to have six or eight books in my bag (one being a
dictionary). Now I have a single book
that contains all the information of hundreds.
I wonder if in the distant past there was a resistance to bound
books. Do you suppose people once said,
“The new books are nice and are easier to carry around but there’s just something
about the feel and the beauty of a scroll.”
So, why books?
Why this enchantment with books? For
me, a book is tangible evidence of thought.
The book was written before it was ever set to print. Imperfect though it may be, the book is the
physical manifestation of a non-physical thought. By it, ideas are passed along. People long dead are still able to impress my
mind. There is nothing more real than a
thought and there is nothing real that is more difficult to grasp. Books, or
the words they are composed of, are merely symbols of thought. The technology of books is simply a
tool. A tool, like all technology, that compensates
for lack of skill or ability. In this
case, our inability to purely communicate one-to-another. Perhaps digital books are a step towards the
day when we will need them no more. But
for now, I’ve got to find out what’s going on in Vermont!