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- From: hoosiers@carson.u.washington.edu (Mary Loveless)
- Newsgroups: rec.arts.books
- Subject: Re: Reading as an addiction (Was: 92 in rabreview)
- Date: 31 Dec 1992 17:26:40 GMT
- Organization: University of Washington, Seattle
- Lines: 90
- Message-ID: <1hvaggINNqob@shelley.u.washington.edu>
- References: <1htqodINNbui@agate.berkeley.edu> <1992Dec31.050130.24366@sophia.smith.edu> <1992Dec31.161524.545@speedy.aero.org>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: carson.u.washington.edu
-
- In article <1992Dec31.161524.545@speedy.aero.org> nadel@attatash.aero.org (Miriam Nadel) writes:
- >In article <1992Dec31.050130.24366@sophia.smith.edu> orourke@sophia.smith.edu (Joseph O'Rourke) writes:
- >>Seeing the astounding quantity of books some posters consumed in 1992
- >>makes me wonder if reading can be a type of (benign?) addiction.
-
- Not so benign, at times: Continue on for the sordid CONFESSIONS OF AN
- ADDICTED READER >>
-
- >When you talk about genre novels specifically, I think you might want to
- >ask what the purpose of reading them is. Addiction isn't simply the regular
- >ingestion of massive quantities of a substance - the desire for escape, or
- >other psychological relief, is also implied in the world. So I would
- >classify reading trashy romances when I was in grad school and just
- >couldn't face working as addictive behavior, while reading a mystery a day
- >for sheer entertainment (given a sufficient amount of free time that I'm
- >not neglecting other pursuits) is not addictive.
-
- Good distinction: I have to agree. I gave up on getting my degree in
- English literature one night in 1965, not long after my pet prof
- recommended my being admitted to Purdue's honors program, when,
- overwhelmed by the dichotomy between my repressed girlhood and the, shall
- we say, **liveliness** of the '60s, I went to cram for an exam in my
- dorm's library. Surrounded by trashy romantic novels, a candy machine and
- a soda machine, the next morning at exam time, I found myself still in
- bathrobe and slippers, reading (the third? the fourth?) romantic novel
- and scarfing chocolate and caffeinated soda.
-
- As far as light reading to pass the time, I think it is addictive reading
- when it's *two* mysteries...last night, _Miss Seeton Goes to Bat_ and _The
- Rabbi Finally Retires_ [garbled title, but I was up awfully late last
- night].... and a cartoon collection (1987 Bloom County--does anyone *else*
- miss Milo and Cutter John and Steve Dallas and Bobbie?)
-
- > >> Among those who are voracious readers, do you feel the
- >>equivalent of withdrawal symptoms when (for whatever reason) you cannot
- >>read for an extended period?
-
- For whatever warped reasons relating to my upbringing as a fundamentalist
- Christian farm woman, I got rid of **all** my books (nearly 1,000) in
- 1983. I went through classic withdrawal symptoms--nausea, vomiting,
- headaches, chills, fever, etc. for more than a week. And no, all you
- skeptics, it wasn't the flu! One of my books (an Isaac Asimov
- collection of Black Widowers stories) had escaped the purge. All I had
- to do to get relief from the symptoms for a while was read a couple of
- paragraphs. Once through the miseries, I wrote 30 songs, all 'keepers', in 2
- months. The previous 10 *years* I had managed to produce around 5 or 6
- good songs. I started reading books shortly after the clean-up, but
- weightier fiction, even some non-fiction, and it was such a pleasure to
- read for content and enlightenment, taking my time, going back and
- re-reading a passage maybe discussing it with a friend. I'm not sure just
- why I went back to addicted reading, but I'm sure I would find out if I
- stopped all reading for a couple of weeks (nonononononono! Anything but
- that!)
-
- >I can't imagine not reading for an extended period but I suppose I would
- >become intensely bored.
- >
- >I do find that I become uncomfortable if I don't have enough books on hand.
- >When the unread stack dips to fifty or so, I will invariably find myself
- >rushing off to a bookstore.
- >
- >Miriam Nadel
-
- My older sister, safe in the deep country miles from Albany NY, rides her
- bicycle into town to keep her 'stash' in the garage up to a certain level.
- I haven't asked her, but having grown up with her I know enough about her
- to suspect that she keeps the books out of sight so that she won't forget
- to eat--or even worse, renege on a word-processing contract.
-
- I pass a bookstore on my way home from my bus stop. Last night I picked
- up a stack of 5 books and left a boxful, worth about 60 bucks in trading
- credit. I still don't have room on my shelves for all the books, but I'm
- closer to breaking even. The irony of feeding my addiction at that
- particular store is that they host "Rational Recovery" meetings for alcohol
- and compulsive eating. I have tried to get them to start a chapter for
- bookaholics but for some reason they seem to *want* people to be addicted
- to books. Should I call the vice squad? };)
-
- Happy New Year!!!!!
-
- Mary Loveless hoosiers@carson.u.washington.edu
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- All of my opinions are self-righteously my own and **certainly** have
- nothing to do with the University of Washington.
-
- "Too much of a good thing can be *wonderful*." Mae West
-
- "I wonder how I'd look in *Madonna's* underwear." Zippy the Pinhead
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