I’ve written before about what we call “the flood.” Just over seven years ago, we moved into our house. The movers, complaining every inch of the way, lamented the number of boxes and the lateness of the hour. Since their truck was just outside our garage, we told them that they could stack about 100 of the boxes in there and we’d haul them to the house ourselves. This they did. Torrential rains came a day or two later but being new to the house we didn’t realize the garage flooded in heavy rain. Many, many books were ruined. I started a list but haven’t had the time or heart to finish it. Insurance didn’t cover it and most of the books were never replaced. That’s not what I’m writing about, though. I am writing about other missing books. Often associated with moving. And perhaps proof of an alternate universe.
I’ve moved a lot in my life, and if you know anything at all about me you know that I’m careful with books. I never leave any behind. And yet… yet some manage to disappear. The first one I recall was my personally annotated copy of Nietzsche’s Thus Spake Zarathustra. It disappeared between Boston and Ann Arbor, Michigan, when, no exaggeration, all of my worldly goods fit into the back of a rental car. I unpacked, wondering where it’d gone. Then moving back to the United States from Edinburgh, our annotated copy of Historic Scotland, the booklet describing all their sites, in which we’d written notes from when we visited, was gone. Moving from Somerville, New Jersey to our current house, Godwired, by Rachel Wagner, disappeared. Also, a new translation of The Odyssey that I’d received at work.
Now on this latest move there was nothing left in our Somerville apartment. And despite the griping movers, there were no boxes left in the truck. Every box has been opened and sorted and yet, Godwired and The Odyssey aren’t here. The other day I was looking for Wilkie Collins’ The Woman in White. I’m pretty sure it was lost in the flood (but it’s not on my list). I distinctly remember buying it at a used bookstore to replace the one I purchased at Watchung Booksellers in New Jersey. And it is not here. I keep careful track of my books, and if one goes missing it’s like the parable of the lost sheep. I can’t rest until I find it. None of this helps me if there is an alternate universe that’s sucking select books every now and again. If so, I’m sure it’s got one of the most amazing libraries in the multiverse.
