I have now been on holidays for 3 1/2 weeks and I still have not finished a book. There have been too many opportunities for cuddles, sesame street, cosmopolitans and late night chats with family and old friends. But I have been thinking about reading and what a person - well, a person without a one year old grandson that you only get to see once a year in person - needs to know about reading while on the road.
First of all - and you will all say 'of course, - a night time reader needs a portable reading light. Would you believe, and I'm telling you it is true because it happened to me, some people do not put bedside lamps next to the guest bed. What? So, a little lamp bought at Borders is a must. Oh, and make sure that it fits onto your ebook reader too!
Before you buy the local chocolate, the latest magazine that is one third the price of it is at home or go to the best bakery in the northern hemisphere hit the pharmacy and buy three (no less than three but more is better) pairs of reading glasses. You are going to want to read at any moment and I can promise you will not be able to find your glasses. You do not have a kitchen counter where you saw them last or another purse where they might be. They are on the pillow of the guest bed in the room without the bedside lamp and you forgot them. So be smart and have a couple of spare pairs in your bag. And if you are traveling with anyone your age or older - buy them a pair or two too - they will be borrowing yours because they will have misplaced their own as well.
OK. So far so good. If you didn't bring one with you, while you are at the pharmacy buying your extra reading glasses, buy a notebook and a pen. You will need these when you go to the bookshop. The bookshops will call to you and lure you several times while you are in another city, no matter what your resolve about not buying books. And each subsequent city will have new bookshops. All kinds of bookshops. Second hand bookshops. Craft bookshops. Museum bookshops. Cooking bookshops. And you will want to BUY! But, hey, think about your luggage for one minute. Do you really want to lug those four huge Cookbooks around with you for the next 4 weeks? I know you need the latest in the series you are reading but do you really want to carry it home with the 12 other books you found for a couple of dollars less than you would pay for them at www.bookdepository.com? If I find an excellent book that I am sure I cannot live without I write it down in my notebook and I dwell on it for a little while. I usually do want to read it but I am happy to wait till I get home and order it. And I save my back the pain of picking up my suitcase which has a big yellow tag on it that says "Extra Heavy" even without the extra books that I didn't buy.
I always travel with little vials of saline solution. This isn't just for readers but I highly recommend it for travelers. I have often got a hair or something in my eye and there is no one to find it for me. Thus, head on a towel on the bed and several flushes later I am in good reading order. (The old 'there's something in my eye' doesn't work anymore and if there really is something in your eye the cute guys isn't going to be able to find it and you will have red eyes and a runny nose by the time you get it out) - and a trip to the emergency room is going to cost you in a foreign country. Laying on the bed, waiting till you cry enough tears to flush out your eye is boring without a book to read and, well, you can't read with something in your eye, yada, yada.....
You need to take lower expectations for your reading time depending on where and with whom you travel. In my case its all family, more family and friends. I love it and as I said before I would much rather chat and giggle than go to bed early with a book. Not every night, but most, thus - less reading time. I'm just saying so you don't actually pack those 4 600 page non-fiction books you've been saving for your trip. Honestly, one will do - along with the 100 you have downloaded onto your reader or computer.
Last but not least expect new reading experiences. I was reading a book in a coffee shop when a young woman told me she was reading the same book. Her friend's mother gave it to her and it turns out I went to school with her friend's mother. I was looking at books at one of the best bookshops on the planet (Elliott Bay Book Company) and met a man who teaches literature and criticism at the University nearby and he gave me an invaluable list of good reads. These are not unusual or isolated experiences. They happen all the time when you travel with books and amongst book readers.
My opinion - reading is a great thing to do at home or away from home, on a plane, in a coffee shop, in an hotel bed, in an hotel lobby - anywhere. There are preparations to make before and during a trip but never without a book in your bag. My first consideration when planning a trip is which book to take (sometimes I have saved a read for several months before) and the first thing packed is my book. I know some people who look forward to buying a book for their trip at the airport. What a great start. But whatever - take it, buy it, borrow it, beg it - books are an essential part of any holiday but travel wisely.
Couldn't agree more with what you've written. I really like airport bookshops. There's the choice, coupled with the urgency to buy before boarding. Even though you've already got two books in your bag, what if you should run out of things to read? I have a question for you. Does an e-reader give you the same secure feeling when you're out, as a book?
ReplyDelete