August2
Its amazing how one thing leads to another, over the years.
Back when I was a teenager, was a member of the Science Fiction book club. I picked out a book with a nice looking dustjacket. It was a man with a sword, being menaced by two tiger sized siamese cats. This was the first few books of the Chronicles of Amber, by Roger Zelazny. If I have to identify the Chronicles of Amber for you, then you aren’t a geek.
I’ve liked Zelazny ever since.
A few months back, I learned that a massive compendium of Zelazny’s work was being published. Four of the six volumes were already out. I bought them, and spent several weeks reading them. I had never known he was a poet. So, while hanging out in my living room one evening, I read one of the poems out loud. The birds instantly took notice. Backs straightened and bird eyes swiveled around and focused on me.
Since then, I’ve made a habit of reading poetry to them. I often skip a day, but I try to read a poem a day to them. They still take note. Mind, I suspect that they would take note if I was reading the phone book. But since poetry sounds different, I could be wrong. The phone book is not interesting reading, so I don’t plan on testing this theory. Besides, I don’t actually have any phone books. The Internet and GPS have killed off any need I have for them.
Anyway, you can’t read poetry aloud for long without developing an interest in it. So I’ve been doing some casual poetry reading, and study, for the past few months.
The road to it is interesting though. A nice illustration on a book jacket catches a boys eye. That leads to a life long love of an author. The middle aged man that the boy grew into (physically anyway), looks into this favored author a bit more, and discovers he was a poet. Against the odds, this ties in with his love of parrots, because the parrots love poetry. (Or love the man reading aloud to them – close to the same, because poetry is meant to be read aloud, and prose is not). And that leads to the man appreciating poetry more. All because of a cheap dust jacket illustration on a cheap copy of a fantasy book. That illustration had an impact over twenty years later.
The world is a richer one than we often think.