Carl Sagan
Probably some of the best words ever written about the magic of writing and reading and books.
How clearly and simply he takes us from the flat object with some funny black squiggles to being inside another person's mind and having them, speak inside your head.
The notion of having someone speak clearly and silently inside your head. Speaking silently - so true, yet how odd when you look at it like that!
I also like how he references time travel - how the words can be centuries old; how books break the shackles of time.
I'd never focussed on the time-travel dimensions of a book before - certainly I had thought about how you could travel in a book to far away places. I oftentimes think about the fact that these words were written a long time ago; how prescient they were; how relevant they still are; and I think I have thought of books as artefacts; nouns and objects rather than aligning them with the action of time-travel.
Oh I am getting myself tangled in this meandering!
Nevertheless, I say yes to considering and pondering the role of books and writing in binding us together over millennia - what a marvel they are and how fortunate are we?
From 10 years ago - Australian Antiphonal, depicting magpie songs...
love that piece so rich in patterning
ReplyDeleteThanks Irene - it was lovely to look at this work again - it was random, yet patterned as you say. I remember just going with the movement and trying not to think too much...go well.
Delete"having someone speak clearly and silently inside your head" ... and here I confess that I actually "hear" the words as I read ... in my own voice, my own cadence, listening to what the author has to "say"
ReplyDeleteMe too Liz - I have a lovely conversation going on...
Deleteyour beautiful transliteration of magpie songs reminded me of "Sound and Flight of the Currawong" by Wim de Vos in the Artist Book collection of the State Library of Queensland
ReplyDeleteThanks Mo - I headed off fro look anda linger. What delightful combination that was!
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