It started after Nashotah House. That event shook me to my very core. And I was approaching middle age. I started taking an interest in my childhood. I learned some uncomfortable truths that probably help explain the way that I am, but more tangibly, losing that job launched me back to both monster movies and the earnest need to collect books that I’d given up when I went to college to “grow up.” Fortunately (perhaps) the internet had been invented and it was possible to locate used copies from the seventies. I’ve written many times about the Dark Shadows books that I began collecting shortly after the incident in Delafield. But there were others. Many others. Often it became a matter of identifying and finding the same edition that I’d had as a child. (Modern reprints complicate this, but with enough patience the exact book editions can be found, and usually no more expensive than contemporary bookstore prices.
The goal has never been to replace all of my childhood books, but those that evoked a palpable sense of wonder in my young psyche. This was strange because I was very religious and these books sometimes challenged what my fundamentalist upbringing taught. Some years back I had to find the exact edition of Erich van Däniken’s Chariots of the Gods? that I had. The curiosity did not extend to several of his other books from the seventies. I got rid of these because they caused me to question my faith. Teenagers. In any case, I also had a compulsion to replace a book of Twilight Zone adaptations. The cover of that book still sends me back to Rouseville. Then I had a hankering to reread Logan’s Run. It’d been reprinted many times, and the one I had as a kid was itself a reprint. I needed that exact one.
My wife has been very patient with me. I’m seeking something here. I’ve always been haunted by the truth and there is a nagging feeling that I had grasped, only by the very tips of my fingers, a little bit of it before college. Facing higher education (the first in my family to do so), I felt I needed to “put away childish things.” The library that sustained me through those difficult Rouseville years was scuttled. There’s a saying about babies and bathwater. I’m beginning to think there may be something to it. There were some very dark incidents in my early childhood, before I learned to read. I think of them often. And yet, a sense of wonder remains. Mostly in the escapism of old, mass market paperbacks from the seventies.
