<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?><oembed><version><![CDATA[1.0]]></version><provider_name><![CDATA[Mythic Bios]]></provider_name><provider_url><![CDATA[http://matthewkirshenblatt.ca]]></provider_url><author_name><![CDATA[matthewkirshenblatt]]></author_name><author_url><![CDATA[https://matthewkirshenblatt.ca/author/matthewkirshenblatt/]]></author_url><title><![CDATA[Lost in Books]]></title><type><![CDATA[link]]></type><html><![CDATA[<p><img src="https://i0.wp.com/pre.cloudfront.goodinc.com/posts/full_1343864667amaze.me.2.jpg" alt="amaze.me" /></p>
<p>I am at a loss. I wander down long stretches of bookcase winding into shadow, eternity, and dust. I&#8217;ve lost all concept of time. The spine of Alan Moore&#8217;s <em>Minutemen</em> with its vintage essential 1930s-style artwork next to his <em>Watchmen</em> does not help me: though it would be interesting to read &#8230;</p>
<p>I keep moving. <em>The Twilight of the Superheroes</em>&#8211;more Alan Moore&#8211;sits there in an alcove but promises no solace. I go deeper. There is a manga section on the other side of me. Tezuka Osamu&#8217;s <em>Phoenix: Earth</em> stares at me mockingly whole: completing an incomplete saga and a lifetime&#8217;s work. I shake my head and keep going. I keep going past the rest of Moore&#8217;s <em>Big Numbers</em>, all twelve issues of them, long since past the time to remember how many steps I have given away to be here in this place.</p>
<p>It gets worse. I find myself at a complete run of <em>Marvelman</em> and it&#8217;s hard&#8211;so hard&#8211;to turn away. It&#8217;s as though I&#8217;ve come to a dead-end, like the middle of a maze in my mind, like the conclusion of Gwendolyn MacEwen&#8217;s <em>Black Tunnel Wall</em> right in front of me.</p>
<p>I begin to run.</p>
<p>David Eddings&#8217; <em>Zedar: The Apostate</em> sits on a shelf in loneliness. <em>Myst: The Book of Marrim</em> makes my heart-ache. There are so many Tolkiens. So many Tezukas. So much Alan Moore. Moore. Moore. More. More. More &#8230;</p>
<p>It is in the history section of this labyrinth of the literary bibliophiliac where I stop at <em>Maus III: My Mother Breathes Silence</em>&#8211;Art Spiegleman&#8217;s graphic novel based off the fragments of his mother Anja&#8217;s surviving journals from asylums and concentration camps&#8211;that I finally understand.</p>
<p>This place doesn&#8217;t exist. This is the place where I want to be.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m clutching my head in the darkness as the full implications of all this begin to sink in. Then I see something: something else in the dark. I walk past <em>The Continued Works of Keats</em> and <em>The Will to Power</em> that Nietzsche wrote himself to find a gap in the comics section. It is a small gap and I can barely make out the label on the shelf. When I read enough of it, I smile.</p>
<p>I can&#8217;t help it. In the Neil Gaiman section, the story of Morpheus before <em>Preludes and Nocturnes</em> is no longer here. It is somewhere else now. I&#8217;m smiling: hoping that the Marvelman section and its remaining additional issues will also disappear from this place sooner rather than later. It is is a small hope.</p>
<p>A transvestite Joker seems to laugh at me from a cover of Morrison&#8217;s <em>Arkham Asylum</em> as I slump down exhausted in a place more demented than Batman&#8217;s Rogues Gallery and more sad than a watch without a watchmaker: a library without librarians.</p>
<p>It is here, huddled in this dark corner, that I wish for a world that makes sense: a place where Homer existed, Shakespeare wrote his plays, Sappho wrote more poetry, and I&#8211;finally&#8211;know just who it is I am.</p>
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