When I go to the library (once, twice a week), I must
confess half the time I have no pre-conceived idea of what I’m going to pick
up. I go to browse, and it’s a great
way, I’ve found, to relax and shed off the concerns of the world for a while.
What do I browse for?
Unless I’m fixated on a certain topic du jour (like the
Civil War, or mathematics, or ancient civilizations, etc), I usually try to
find something that will blow a fuse or two in my brain. Something eye-opening, world-shattering,
goosebump-inducing, head-smacking weird.
A different way of looking at the world, or part of it. A new set of glasses, so to speak.
Which is why I spend such a large amount of time in the
philosophy, alternative religion, and history’s mysteries sections that I
pretty much know each and every spine on the shelves by its color and
font. Read half of ’em, and skimmed
through the other half. But I still
look, and will keep on doing so.
Yesterday I was rewarded.
Took the little ones with me to the library more for them, as I am in
the thick of two hefty tomes myself and was not actively seeking new reading
material. But that is when the magic
happens.
I found two very, very interesting books, books that qualify
for the qualities aforementioned in paragraph three of this post:
Emanuel Swedenborg:
Visionary Savant in the Age of Reason.
Don’t know much about this 18th-century European mystic, save
that he had some visions of heaven and the afterlife that, while maybe not
enthusiastically endorsed by the Church, at least are not outright condemned by
her. At least, so I think, though I
claim ignorance. A bit more research is
involved here on my part. But, man, I’d
love to read what this man saw, see how it fits in with my world- and after-world-view. Read thirty pages yesterday and it held my
interest. (536 pages)
The Exegesis of Philip
K. Dick. Don’t know too much about
this, either. Went through a heavy PKD
phase in the second half of 2005 (read a couple of novels, an anthology of his short
stories, and a biography of the man), came away with a glimpse of his tortured,
crazy, drug-exacerbated genius. While
not a True Believer in the wackiness PKD
believed, I always approach him with an open mind. From what I understand about this book is
that it is the work of a team of editors sorting through and making sense of a
few thousand pages of stream-of-consciousness Dickian “exegesis” on reality,
philosophy, and out-and-out weirdness the man began jotting down after
commencing with – perhaps – Swedenborgian visions. (944 pages)
Should be a great pair of weird readings.
And I will report further on any weirdnesses witnessed
within them.
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