Avoiding my taxes and book revisions, I roamed my house this
early morning taking photos of the stacks, rows, piles, and clumps of books
that line my tables, shelves, desks, and piano. Some of the books I've read;
some I haven't. Some are hand-me-downs from my grandfather, F. Allen Burt;
others are in storage for Ken, my brother-in-law, a dyed-in-the- wool
bibliophile. A select few come from my graduate school studies--those books
have been read multiple times, the pages are dog-eared, sticky-noted, Post-It'd,
and scribbled on. I feel smart when I see those books, except when I remember
how often I sat staring at the dense writing, reading it over and over again,
puzzled, left wondering.
Hundreds of my books come from my old high school English
classroom, Room 109 of Mountain Valley High School. There, my students and I
collected 2500+ books for our classroom library. In fact, my students got extra
credit once a quarter for donating a book! (Yes, I could be bought, but only
with books.) In Room 109, we had every-anything in our stacks, from "The
Basketball Diaries" and "When Someone You Know Is Gay" to
"How Cars Work" and a book on forensics with a full-blown autopsy
report and detailed photographs.
John Steinbeck said, "I guess there are never enough
books." This morning, I’d agree.
Time to get to work.
To see all of the album, just click here.
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