I wish that in my youth I had had someone of good sense and taste to direct my reading. I dispair when I reflect on the amount of time I have wasted on books that were of no value to me. The value of reading is in its effect on character and its use for life.
When I lived in Port Moresby I had a friend from my Bougainville days who had also taken a job in town and lived in a company-supplied flat just out of town at Six-Mile. (I am telling you all this not because I think you are in any way interested in all this detail, but because it starts to fill out this post rather nicely.) Anyway, this chap - let's call him Brian, because that was his name - furnished his flat, which was empty to start with except for the bare essentials, with all the things left behind by other employees who had 'gone pinis' after their time in New Guinea.
This habit not only resulted in him eating from an ill-matched set of crockery with a fork which had one tine missing, but also dictated what he read. From the schmalziest Mills & Boon romance novel to the most extraterrestrial science fiction nonsense, Brian had read them all, simply because they'd been left behind by those departed employees.
My own reading habit is a little more discerning although still restricted by what's available in the local op-shops - one in Moruya, two in the Bay, and altogether three in Ulladulla - since every 'real' bookshop that ever opened its doors has shut them again within a few years, if not months.
The 'bookshops' inside those op-shops seem more real, at least to me, than the 'real' bookshops since they needn't cater to the popular taste but reflect what was read previously by people who must've kept them because they thought them of value, until divorce, death, or whatever other human tragedy befell them, forced their surrender to an op-shop (in fact, their antecedents, as evidenced by an Ex Libris sticker, a loving dedication written on the flyleaf, a hastily pencilled notation in the margin, or an airline boarding pass used as a bookmark, even one of those horrible folded-down dog-ears pointing to an important page, add to the charm of a second-hand book, and are often a story all in itself).
Usually costing no more than a gold coin, it is easy to buy more of these second-hand books than I would do if I still had to pay full retail price, which means the floor beside my armchair often looks like the photo above, which I took after Padma had restacked them by size while I had briefly gone outside to take in the sunshine. So which one had I been reading before I went outside? Was it a small, medium, or large one?








