Avi

word craft

blog

Holding beauty

Lindisfarne Gospels, pg 700, British Museum in LondonMy next book, Catch You Lat­er, Trai­tor is well into pro­duc­tion. To be pub­lished in the win­ter of 2015, my com­put­er gen­er­at­ed text is grad­u­al­ly being trans­formed into a book, a book that will be pub­lished with x num­ber of copies—I have no idea how many, much less how it will be received. Nonethe­less, as this evo­lu­tion hap­pens, the book grad­u­al­ly becomes an object.

It is, I think, impor­tant to real­ize that the con­tent of a book—that which an author has writ­ten (with the major sup­port of edi­tor, copy­ed­i­tor, and proofreaders)—is only a part of what makes a book a book. Grant­ed that the text is the key part of a book, there is also the design of the pages, the art of the cov­er, the design of the cov­er, the lay­out of the book, the kind of paper on which the book is print­ed, the bind­ing of the book, the way the pages are put togeth­er, the choice of font for the text, and so forth, all phys­i­cal attrib­ut­es that make a book a book.

In this day and age of dig­i­tal texts, I think we some­times for­get that a book is—or should be—in itself a work of art. The way a book feels in your hands, holds the eye, can be and should be in itself an aes­thet­ic expe­ri­ence. A well-craft­ed book adds immea­sur­ably to the plea­sures of read­ing. We intro­duce young peo­ple to books with pic­ture books, whose very premise is they are a delight to the eye. We revere The Book of Kells not mere­ly for its sacred text, but for its infi­nite beauty.

Obvi­ous­ly, few print­ed books reach such a lev­el as illu­mi­nat­ed man­u­scripts, or even the best of pic­ture books. I sus­pect, how­ev­er, if print pub­lish­ers wish to com­pete with dig­i­tal books they can­not do so with con­tent alone, but with books that are tru­ly won­der­ful to hold and to see.

4 thoughts on “Holding beauty”

  1. I hope pub­lish­ers read this. What you have writ­ten is true and impor­tant to the love of read­ing. I think the phys­i­cal expe­ri­ence of the book is crit­i­cal, not super­flu­ous, to a read­ing culture.

    Reply
  2. I agree. I love the smell of a book, the actu­al hold­ing a book in my hands and turn­ing the pages. I have a Nook,which I enjoy (I need the back­light and larg­er text now 

    Reply
  3. I read a book once titled The Fal­con­er’s Knot. It was a mys­tery that took place in a Fran­cis­can fri­ary where the fri­ars hand paint­ed and let­tered all the books they were copy­ing. I loved all the detail described in mak­ing these old, beau­ti­ful books. In our house, we have a few Kin­dles, but noth­ing beats all those good-smelling books over­tak­ing our home. Plus, a book just feels bet­ter in my hands than a Kindle.

    Reply

Leave a Reply to BookLoverCancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Subscribe to Blog via Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Recent Posts