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Monthly Archives: August 2009

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As a former Californian I still maintain my friendship with Maxwell’s House of Books, just east of San Diego, one of the great West Coast purveyors of fine used books.  Try calling up Barnes and Noble for a recommendation on a good new (or old) book delineating, say, the precepts of conservatism, the principles of Lutheranism, or the best in Late Romantic musical composition, and you’ll get directed to aisle 23; at Maxwell’s you’ll probably get a well-informed reading list and the recommendations of a voracious reader, philosophy major and all-around intellect who can guide you to a wealth of material on innumerable topics (many of which he carries at great savings).  It was with real satisfaction that I came across this excellent recent essay by shop owner Craig Maxwell, prompted by the demise this month of Wahrenbrock’s Bookhouse but delving into far deeper, more disturbing waters as you’ll see.

 

A REQUIEM FOR READING?

 The memorial service for my grandfather, Vernon Wahrenbrock, was sparsely attended; the inevitable consequence, I suppose, of his having lived nearly a century. All his friends and much of his family were gone. We, his survivors, were there of course. And so were a few of the folks he’d gotten to know at the rest home. But the only other person to pay his respects that day was Chuck Valverde. It was February 18th, 2008, and already he was pale and thin. Still, I had no way of knowing that within six months I and hundreds of others would be attending a memorial service for Chuck himself.

The link between these very dissimilar but remarkable men was, of course, Wahrenbrock’s Bookhouse – the shop my grandfather founded in 1935 and that Chuck had operated (and later owned) since 1967. Wahrenbrock’s had always been the flagship of San Diego’s used bookstore fleet, and one of the best used bookstores on the West Coast. Recently, many San Diegans were shocked and saddened to hear that the store itself was gone – its doors closed forever.

The store’s sudden demise, falling as it did hard on the heels of its owners’ deaths, has provoked thought and memory. But this is due to more than mere chronological proximity. Here, smack on the front page of the San Diego Union-Tribune, was a story about a small business – Wahrenbrock’s – gone south. Why? Other failed ventures don’t get that kind of attention. Sure, at 74 the shop was old – at least by San Diego standards. But no one had paid any attention to my father’s business when it closed back in the nineties, and it had been around since 1896. No, there was something about Wahrenbrock’s, and perhaps about used bookshops in general (which have been steadily disappearing for twenty years or more) that led to all the attention and provoked our collective lament. I think I know the answer, but my explanation will require a brief detour through the past.

I, too, was destined to become a used bookman. On one occasion during my informal yet invaluable apprenticeship with Brian Lucas at Adams Avenue Bookstore a co-worker, while casually thumbing through a volume said, “You know, this is a pretty durable piece of technology.” He was right. The technology to which he referred was the codex book – the book as we commonly know it. I was amazed at the profundity of that simple observation.

In ancient Greece and Rome, books had been printed on long rolls (think of cellophane or aluminum wrap) called scrolls. This made the reproduction of them (not to mention dog earing pages!) very difficult. But even after the eighth century when most them had been copied into codex form – individual pages sewn or glued at one edge to a spine with hinged boards – the difficulty of reproduction remained. Fortunately, both the inconvenience and the scarcity of this commodity were made more bearable by the paucity of need; few people could read. Literacy was largely the province of clerics and scholars. It wasn’t until around 1450 when Gutenberg invented moveable type that this technical difficulty was overcome, and in what must be one of the most momentous historical coincidences of all time, Gutenberg’s innovation coincided with the work of another man whose teachings and followers would create for it an inexhaustible market: Martin Luther. Luther’s theology made the Book – the Bible, that is – more important for believers than was the Church itself. And this, of course, meant that people must become acquainted with it, must read it. In short, for Luther and his followers, reading was close to being a prerequisite for knowing God.

Talk about an incentive! But whether he was right or wrong, one can easily imagine the effect this doctrine had on the then fledgling publishing industry. Printing presses popped up all over Protestant Europe, and by the beginning of the Sixteenth century, had produced over nine million volumes! A revolution had occurred, and one the chief instigators was the need to read. Literacy spread like wildfire; the world would never be the same.

As Europe’s greatest progeny, America could not help but share in the culture of the book. Here, the changes which began with the Protestant reading revolution received the added impetus of powerful political theories which clearly delineated the natural rights of individual men. Included among these was, of course, self-governance, and this in turn required that every citizen be at least minimally acquainted with its fundamental principles. Red schoolhouses sprang up from east to west, and the teachers in them helped their students learn. But the primary vehicle of learning was always the book. It would be no exaggeration to say that from colonial times through at least the first half of the twentieth century the the heart, mind and soul of America was formed by books.

Was formed. But is it still? Since the Second World War many have been skeptical, and not without reason. Already hurt by the pseudo-philosophical “post-modern” literary theories still fashionable in academia (one all-too-representative professor I had the misfortune to speak with told me that he teaches his students that Shakespeare, comic books and and a deck of playing cards all possess the same degree of literary merit), books and reading have been further damaged by electronic competitors: movies, television, and worst of all, the Internet. Advocates of online reading argue that literature will still be read and that only the medium – not the message – has changed. But when these same tools can with equal ease, and in a split second, conjure up games, videos, movies, photographs, TV shows, phone conversations and every other conceivable form of cheap digital distraction, its difficult to see how attention-demanding literature can keep up. Veteran Wahrenbrock’s bookseller Jan Tonessen put it concisely: “We’re going from a culture that was once dominated by this” – and he pointed to the words on a page – “ to this” – and he then motioned to a photographic image.

In a recent lecture at Rice University, another skeptic, America’s best known bookseller and Pulitzer Prize winning author Larry McMurtry, mourned what he sees as the end of an era. “My theme is a sad one. It’s the end of reading. I had always thought that books may end, but reading would not. I’m not so sure anymore.” He continued, “It’s just sad that what is being left behind is a very beautiful culture, the culture of the book. I think it’s gone, I don’t think it will come back,” he said. “My bookshop has become a temple. It’s not a commercial real estate anymore. They come in and hold a book as if they’re holding a talismanic object from a past culture. And, in a way, they are.”

Sure, many people will continue to buy books on line. But utterly absent from such impersonal, sterile transactions is the irreplaceable experience – the romance of browsing – with all of the attendant smells and textures among out-of-print books on old wooden shelves, and the ever present possibility of stumbling across that unexpected work of genius.

And public libraries will probably continue to exist in some form or other. But they too are increasingly yielding to popular demands for contemporary media, and ultimately this means fewer books. Just a few weeks ago, a customer asked me if I had a specific volume from Will and Ariel Durant’s magnificent The Story of Civilization. He said he tried to find it out at the library but was told that they no longer carry the set. The reason: it wasn’t popular enough.

Wahrenbrock’s Bookhouse was San Diego’s oldest and most distinguished inventory of “talismanic object[s] from a past culture.” And the question that faces us in the wake of its demise is not can we survive without stores like it, but what must we be if the answer is yes. What are we without the past? Until recently America, along with the rest of the West, had been guided by the seminal ideas, emotions and desires, the stories, poems and annals that silently and unobtrusively reside between two covers until they are opened. So far we have had only had a foretaste of what will happen if they remain closed, and it is bitter.

 

Craig S. Maxwell

Maxwell’s House of Books

8285 La Mesa Blvd.

La Mesa, Ca 91941

619-462-3387

maxwellshouseofbooks@gmail.com

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I see the hot new blog Letters To Liberals as a series of elegantly phrased, impeccably well-groomed envelopes which once you open them turn out to be full of gun powder and dynamite.   Creator Jason Sanborn understands the pestilence called Obama through and through, and in his drily delivered but scathingly mocking letters & etc. you can really learn a lot about what’s going down politically these days.  Plus get a good laugh while you’re at it.  Recommended!

There’s no better name for a blog or website than that, so I won’t even try to top it with a clever post title.  I Own The World is a humor site for those who liked Airplane! and prefer their jazz real rather than “smooth.”  When you tire of the ersatz-edginess of people like Letterman– whose worldview afterall fits neatly into the Katie Couric/Oprah Winfrey intellectual continuum– try this stuff.  Nary a PC post to be found… breathe the air of Freedom!

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While visiting friends in southern CA my wife and I stumbled upon Friends of Cats, a no-kill shelter for felines located in the town of El Cajon.  It’s a tax exempt, non-profit organization where  homeless cats get a second chance at life: food, shelter and a kindly, caring staff.  Even a few celebrities of homelessness have made their way here, like the bunch of cats brought over in the wake of hurricane Katrina.  All they need to maintain this excellent facility is funds.  I hope my readers, Left and Right, can agree at least on the principle of donating a few always-needed, responsibly-utilized bucks to this thoroughly legit organization.

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Something tells me  The Lonely Conservative isn’t raising any spoiled, whiney children.  It comes through in her edgy forthrightness: she just doesn’t take any guff from self-important liberal-Left types, and I don’t think she’d take any from her kids either.  These are the kind of posts that ring with humor due to their intelligent honesty (and honesty about the inane words and actions of the Left can be pretty damn funny).  Give her a visit, she’s in a Blue State and could use some thoughtful company for a change.

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