I have to get over my fear of big books (I can’t find an official name for this and so I’ll coin machrysbibliophobia—and why did my autocorrect replace this with machrysbibliophobmia when there’s no such word? It’s a scary world where my fears go unnamed—go, aporripsophobia!) I’ve read many large novels with payoff (several by Stephen King and Neal Stephenson) and plenty of nonfiction from which I’ve learned a ton (perhaps literally). But still, when a book I really want to read is big, I tremble. I try to decide how to justify the time. Now, I know I don’t have to justify time reading—that’s a constant activity. I think it’s more a question of caesura, places to stop and perhaps claim credit for work done. I’m not a fan of multiple volumes since that drives prices up. Maybe just say it a bit more succinctly?
In my case—and I can only speak for myself—it’s all about a sense of accomplishment. The distinct, discrete book that I’ve jammed into my gray matter along with its companions. Some of us are driven by the shot of joy that accompanies completion. I have a few compendia of authors/genres I really like. I dip into them but never quite seem to have the time to finish them. You see, recently watching the X-Files got me thinking about Charles Forte. I have a compendium of his four books and I read Book of the Damned right through. But I’ve got three more to go. How are you supposed to count that on Goodreads, without its own ISBN? Or the collected fiction and poetry of Poe. It’s nice to have it all in one place, but will I ever read it cover-to-cover? I tried once, really I did.
As I write this I just started a big book. It’s on a topic I really find fascinating but I’d been putting it off for some time because of my machrysbibliophobia. I’ve been entrenched from before page 1. I know it’s going to take me quite a long time to finish it—I have a job that takes its pound of flesh daily, and even when I do get a day off, well, mowing season is here. And the porch needs painting again. Maybe if non-Catholic monasteries were a thing I’d have time to devote to the reading I really must get done before my time’s up. I like big books, but I’m also afraid of their ramifications. Enough so even to name my fear.