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- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!yale.edu!yale!engelson
- From: engelson-sean@cs.yale.edu (Sean Philip Engelson)
- Newsgroups: rec.arts.books
- Subject: Re: Reading as an addiction (Was: 92 in rabreview)
- Date: 1 Jan 1993 11:46:33 -0500
- Organization: Yale AI Mobile Robotics Project
- Lines: 34
- Distribution: world
- Message-ID: <1i1sh9INN3ru@FRIDGE.AI.CS.YALE.EDU>
- References: <1992Dec31.050130.24366@sophia.smith.edu> <1992Dec31.175313.25919@athena.mit.edu> <1992Dec31.183207.25805@crd.ge.com> <1992Dec31.223105.7326@netcom.com>
- Reply-To: engelson-sean@cs.yale.edu
- NNTP-Posting-Host: fridge.ai.cs.yale.edu
-
-
- In article <1992Dec31.223105.7326@netcom.com>, dani@netcom.com (Dani Zweig) writes:
- |> meltsner@crd.ge.com:
- |> >22. When a stranger walks into your house or apartment, are his or her
- |> >first words usually a comment about your books?
- |>
- |> This is frequently a source of embarrassment to me -- on their behalf.
- |> Most of my books are upstairs, so strangers who walk in just see three
- |> relatively small bookcases. So "Boy, you sure have a lot of books!"
- |> from them means "I don't often see a house with over a hundred books".
- |> How does one answer such a comment?
-
- Wow, I wish I had an upstairs, rather than having to pile the books up
- in the hopefully-soon-to-have-a-bookshelf corner. I guess the right
- answer is a non-committal, "Yeah, I suppose so." No reason to get
- your knickers in a knot over it, it any case.
-
- A related phenomenon is the reverse of the above---does anyone else,
- when entering someone elses house, automatically form a somewhat
- negative opinion of them if there *aren't* reasonable quantities of
- books in evidence? I suppose that my unconscious reasons that either
- (a) they have no books, in which case they're not much worth knowing,
- or (b) they feel they have to hide their books; for some reason
- they're embarrassed by them or something. Not that I'm proud of
- reacting this way (and I *certainly* don't say anything!) but it's one
- of those autonomic processes, like breathing, that one has little
- control over. Such is life. Any thoughts?
-
- Enjoy!
- --
- Sean Philip (Shlomo) Engelson
- Yale Department of Computer Science
- Box 2158 Yale Station
- New Haven, CT 06520
-