Decisions, decisions.

Books in a mess

Beyond a joke

My books have reached a critical mass. They’re spilling over the carpet, lent on each other like the lintels  of Stonehenge and hiding in the spider space under the bookshelves. Some have even mounted a break- away movement, stacked like a siege engines beside the bed.

 Something has to be done.

 Him-in-the-Office has moved out into his glorified shed behind the garage. The old office was empty, abandoned, unloved. Bless him, he paints it, he varnishes the computer-chair-scuffed floor and best of all, installs three whopping great big bookshelves.

The Library

So inviting!

Utter delight.

 Simply move my books in and Bob’s your uncle, (or Charley’s your aunt or whatever). Ah. Which books to move?

Now the sitting room shelves largely consist of the sea collection. Hundreds of them: diving guides, sailing yarns,whales, shark-spotting guides, mermaids. Oh and Venice and the arty outsize jobbies. So I move Venice out to the new shelves and move some children’s books about the sea down from my study. Fine. Though I might need them.

 Still too many books upstairs.

 I move the loose canons, the stacked sets, the-slotted-in-sideways-on-top-ones. Good.

How to organise? By author – no chance. I’ve got a blog to write!

 Subject matter then. Promising:  plenty of genres – gothic spooky horror things, folklore and fantasy, maps and pub walks. Should I move ‘Mortlock’ into its section – or leave it on top of the bedside radio? Where does ‘Tall Story’ go? Odd bits. Hang on, I haven’t read all of these.

Mustn’t start reading – mustn’t look at Philip Ardagh’s Book of Absolutely Useless Lists – it’s a time machine. Discipline – stick to your brief, woman. And what was that exactly? Reorganise the  so-and-so books.

M. A. stuff, that needs to be in the study. Easy. And all the how-tos, and the other reference books I might just need. Oh – I put the folklore downstairs. Clump, clump, clump. Right – kids’ upstairs, adults down. Seems reasonable.  Not enough room – or rather the wrong sort of room. Some are outsize and won’t fit in the new shelves anyway.

 Read and unread? Possibly – but I’m not sure which ones Him-in-the-Office has read. And I am not having all his Sharpes downstairs. Bad enough seeing my Tolkien addiction revealed in all its Numenorean glory.

Odd Books

Jolly Mixtures

 I try grabbing random books and shoving them on the shelves any old how.

There aren’t many places you’ll see Meg Rossoff next to Stephenie Meyer.

 Aaargh. I give up.

I go down into the village. I buy some fresh bread, some little cork feet to stop the book ends scratching my shiny new shelves and pop in the charity shops.. and buy more books.

People and pebbles…

…an over-extended metaphor that amused me whilst up to my knees in the pond.

The Pond at Peacehaven

So there I am, navy shorts turning black with damp and fish nibbling round my toes in the soup of algae I’ve stirred up. I’ve tried rebuilding the collapsed pebbly edge of our Japanese pond from dry land and it has consistently resulted in tears and/or swearing. Lean on it a bit and it all collapses. No togetherness.

Thus I tear off my velcro, park my sandals and lower my cautious tootsie into the murk. Nice. Actually, it’s warmish, nowhere near as slimy as I feared and at least I amuse the fish. Sparrows chitter on the fence ( probably laughing like those winged and toothy monsters in Roobarb and Custard).  The sun sneakily fries  the gap between my shorts and teeshirt, and glimmers on a stone full of mica. So pretty, so eyecatching and so flaky. Celebrity silica. It starts my thoughts off on a ramble.

We have five sorts of stone around the pond. There is a fine rockery of large, rough slabs around the cascade, laid by my husband. Tough, a bit coarse and enduring – the sort that will withstand a lot. These take a fair old bit of organising but make an excellent group.

Then there is a motley collection of sizable waterworn boulders; artistic, smooth, individual but don’t work well too close to each other. They have to be spread out, considered by themselves as unique.

Next come the pebbles – hundreds of thousands of ’em. Wave upon wave that blend in the eye as one sea of shingle but if looked at closely, each has its own character. They’re the ones that tumble into the pond with the slightest provocation and cause me to fume.

Smallest in size is the gravel. It doesn’t even seem to match the others if left in patches. Little bits, seemingly insignificant – but so useful for the gaps, the awkward spaces. Self-effacing, easy to manipulate and ignore. Yet brings a lovely cohesion when spread about and integrated into the whole design.

Ah but that’s only four.

This last group really interested me when dealing with the edge. The big rocks are too hard to manoeuvre, the boulders too peculiar. The well-rounded pebbles and the tiny shingle collapse. It’s the awkward squad that do the job. The broken, the knobbly, the frankly ugly ones, that underpin the most difficult part of the construction. Rejects are strong and have their place in the scheme of things.

This week’s worries.

 

Thursday: try to edit the row about the open porthole scene. When will Occado come?The 9-10 slot passes. Go to yoga-I can’t empty my mind of ‘tomato puree, did I order any?’ and ‘too much passive voice’. Lunch – bus  – tutoring.

It dawns on me. 9-10pm.

Friday: Hooray, hooray -cleaning day! The world and his dog for a barbecue on Sunday. Usual dilemma- clean first, write later? I mop and manage a micro- edit.

Saturday:  Montezuma chocolates melting – bought for Steve’s Mum. The bus is late. I make buns and tinker with The Thirteenth Pharaoh.

Sunday: No worries on the writing part. I didn’t do any.

Monday: Greg Mosse has prompted me to think about the main part of my MA – serial monogamy or a bit on the side?

Tuesday: My editing – making things better or worse? At least some variant of each chapter’s now in version 3.  Son number three arrives – gives tutorial on website. So quick, so clever. Puts me on spot – do it in front of him. I chicken out.

Go to Chichester – borrow car, worry about reversing lanky estate into walls. Talk at Library. Which road? Arrive – no lights, no swishee swishee automatic door,  no sign of anyone.

Did I get the time right, the venue, the day? Go to box office – pairs and pairs of posh people in evening dress. No enlightenment. Steam out of ears, or tears from eyes threaten.

Today: Will I post this right? Will anyone read my stuff – ever?

Welcome to my Wonderful World of Worry.