Iโve been home alone this week. Iโm happy in my own company, so for the most part I really enjoyed the time to myself. Iโve puttered around, cooking what I want, tidying things as I want, and lounging in front of my favourite television shows. I donโt want this all the time (Tyler, yes I did miss you), but for a week it was very nice.
One night, however, was not so nice. My friend Suzanne gave me Beloved by Toni Morrison for my birthday recently. Itโs a beautifully written book, if dark and disorienting (or confusing by design, according to the authorโs foreword). Itโs also haunting – figuratively and literally, with one of the central figures being the ghost of the main characterโs dead baby daughter. Itโs certainly not a book for the faint hearted. So while I recommend it wholeheartedly, Iโd say pick your moment – I can only read it now because the daffodils are finally out and we can see spring peeking around the corner.ย
One night while Tyler was away I found myself very freaked out after reading this book in bed before turning out my light. I was spooked, twitching at every sound and convinced that the mark on our bedroom door was a malign hand curling around the edge. My logical brain was right there with you, thinking โhow silly – sheโs just freaking herself out thinking about this at nightโ. But there we have it. The book took me to a place where logic decidedly did NOT reign supreme (although Iโll leave the discussion of how much time I spend in this logic land for another timeโฆ).
I did get to sleep, eventually. After a couple of hours of jumpy hyper-alertness, I turned the light back on, fetched Cally to sleep on my bed (for ghost protection of course, good boy Cally) and started a new book. This book – The Correspondent by Virginia Evans – was exactly what I needed. A lovely, engrossing story interestingly written. No ghosts. I slept like a baby for the rest of the week.
I felt quite sheepish about this experience. Iโm thirty one years old, after all. But when I mentioned it to my book club friends, they said theyโd had the exact experience when their partners were away. Jane, my step-mum, told me she traps scary things inside her books by stacking others on top of them. Itโs comforting to know that itโs not just me!
To be honest, while I would have liked an undisturbed sleep last Sunday, I kind of loved it. Itโs a reminder that books can take me out of myself. Iโm not a big believer in the paranormal. (As an aside, I once went on a first date where the guy spent an hour telling me about his paranormal experiences. This was in California (of course?). While I can get behind โdifferent strokes for different folksโ, this didnโt feel like first-date territory to me. No second date was scheduled.) But regardless of my daytime thoughts on ghosts and the like, Beloved had turned me into someone who couldnโt say with certainty that my house wasnโt haunted. Thatโs pretty cool, right?
The world of ghosts and spookery isnโt the only way books take me out of myself. I love rereading books, and some of my favourite ones to revisit are those that remind me of where (and who) I was when I first read them. My childhood favourites, like Harry Potter and Roald Dalhโs classics, take me back to being curled up on a beanbag at home, perched in the sun on our corrugated iron roof, or parked under a sleeping bag in the garage, reading and listening to the rain while my dad tinkered away. When I think of A Little Life by Hanya Yanigahara, I am taken to a particular cafe in Sydney I visited when I first read that epic, traumatic novel. I Am Pilgrim by Terry Hayes takes me back to writing up my PhD during a covid lockdown, and it reminds me of the relief of an escapist page-turner. A good book draws me into its universe, or it can take me to another time and place in my own.
Tyler is back, so Iโve happily picked up Beloved again. I wonder where it will take me this time.


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