"A long read allows us to hold the beginning and the ending of the story in our hands, see the start and the finish at one sitting, and in the process, we touch what is ordinarily too unstable, too shifting to grasp."

 


Magazine
Winter/Spring 2002

The pleasure of reading


by Carol Tyx

Late one November afternoon I settled down for a long read. As a professor of literature, I read nearly every day, but it’s not often I find the space for a sustained read. Most often my reading is like a walk around the block: just enough to stretch my legs. I looked forward to a long, leisurely hike. Curled up on the couch, I opened the cover of the book and walked into another world.

While part of the pleasure of reading lies in going somewhere else, that’s only one piece of the story. Reading a novel is like watching a potter at work: out of a lump of words, a story emerges. Or maybe it is more like being a potter yourself, the story taking shape right between your hands. As you pull the words up from the page, you see the contours of lives—the curves, the contradictions. It is more difficult to discern the shape of our lives, one chapter overlapping with another.

A long read allows us to hold the beginning and the ending of the story in our hands, see the start and the finish at one sitting, and in the process, we touch what is ordinarily too unstable, too shifting to grasp. Momentarily, we witness the shaping power of time. And through that witness, we understand more fully what it means to be alive in time.

The room darkened; I pulled the afghan over my legs and kept reading in the lamplight. Somewhere the sun was still shining, and I was there, watching the artist, time, at work.

Carol Tyx is visiting assistant professor of English at Wabash.

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