rinue: (Default)
rinue ([personal profile] rinue) wrote2003-11-22 12:31 am

Wormbooks

Lately, I've spent a lot of time thinking about books. Much of this is in the usual vein: what should I read next? Why do I have a high tolerance for dialect and creative capitalization unless these things are present in Victorian literature? Is it better to give money to a public library, thus providing for the common literary good, or is it better to amass a library of my own, giving the books new meaning through their association?

Specifically, I have been wondering why I am drawn to histories that I know are not true. Part of this, certainly, is my delight in the absurdism of conspiracy theories. (My most recent theory: Aaron Burr was under the direct control of extra-terrestrial thought rays.) However, this cannot explain why my bookshelf contains The Diary of Jack the Ripper, which I am damned certain was not written by Jack the Ripper - rather, it is the work a contemporary reading the newspaper, a work of escapist fantasy.

Nevertheless, it is shelved in nonfiction, alongside Double Cross: The Explosive Inside Story of the Mobster Who Controlled America, in which relatives of Sam Giancana seriously relate their memories of how the Chicago Mafia single-handedly authors every major event from 1950 to 1970 - including the World Series, the Bay of Pigs, several assasinations, and the entire career of Marilyn Monroe.

Why do I own these books? Why do I own these books and others like them? They contain no truth, either philosophic or literal. They are certainly not well written. Their only contribution to history is to misinform people who don't know any better. At the same time, I am always compelled to take them home and keep them safe.

One must assume it has something to do with situational irony.

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