My personal work spaces and books

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William Blake's workroom and deathroom
painted by Frederic James Shields


"In the universe, there are things that are known,
and things that are unknown, and in between, there are doors.”

—William Blake

Friends Brendan of Oran's Well, Hedgewitch of Verse Escape and Mark Kerstetter of The Bricoleur bared their bookshelves and journals for us to see, shone a light on their work spaces, and encouraged others to do the same. What drives us to do such a thing? Something in me wants a peek at theirs and yours, and something else in me wants to show you mine. Will you be utterly bored? Intrigued? Curious? Will you relate to my shelves a little, or not at all? Personal libraries are just that, personal, intimately personal, driven by soul and spirit in ways we can only speculate about. I love that even the ways we organize our collections reflect our personalities. That and where we sit and do what we do: read and write.

So here goes.

(I'm not showing you our collection of classic and contemporary works of literary fiction, or children's books. Maybe another time.)

I have four personal bookcases and three workspaces, but I'll show you one two workspaces. I don't use a desk, just my laptop. I don't journal much any more, as writing longhand is nearly impossible for any longer than a card or note because of carpal tunnel. I have many poetry books on my shelves at the university office as well.

Bookcase #1: Poetry 

This is one of my three study spaces: the corner of the living room,
behind a screen my Grandma Olive made, creating a makeshift private space.
The chair is old, as you can see, from my grandparents;
pen and ink with watercolor on the wall: Paris;
Navajo rug inherited from my great grandparents,
who were explorers and mountain climbers;
stack of NY Review of Books waiting to be read




Most important here:
Jane Kenyon, Rilke, and Neruda;
Cartier-Bresson from MoMA




Key here:
Volumes of my mentor: Diane Wakoski;
Jung's Memories, Dreams, Reflections


Anthologies from college


Bookcase #2 Poetry and Spirituality, mixed

This one is in the bedroom.
The Chinese fellow on the wall is practically a brother,
I love him so much; and hanging from him is a talisman
made by my friend Alek Lindus in Greece for protection;
I think of this photo (found in an antique store) and talisman
as representative of all my friends around the world
with a charmed prayer for their safety and health;
my mother's waste basket, which I remember by her desk;
my dressing table is to the right of it.


Notable here:
Pagels, Moyers, Gospel of Mary Magdalene;
much study from these books as I began to rethink
spirituality from my religious past in Baptist churches;
I don't know where Eckhart Tolle's Power of Now is,
I must have given it away.


Years of studying good poems here:


Extra poetry stack in my spare room workspace;
anything that's stacked, not in a bookcase, is being read daily or weekly;
most important here: Rumi and Dickey


Bookshelf #3: Spirituality and Paris


Notable here:
James Hillman, Jack Miles' biography of God,
Jung's Answer to Job, and my grandfather's book on astrology


Most important here:
Gurdjieff, Ken Wilber's Brief History of Everything (!),
Oxford very short introduction books on the right,
bought in the Oxford bookstore:
these two on the Celts and Quantum Theory


Getting down into the France reference books now:


Three very significant books here:
The NIV Study Bible, Rob Brezsny's Pronoia
perhaps my most valued book: my Plan de Paris,
a street by street map of Paris (the blue and red one)



Bookcase #4 Oversized:
Flowers, Plants, Art, History

This is the bookcase Grandma Olive picked up
secondhand somewhere in NYC and painted.




Here you go, Montag; I had this closeup photo of the painting above on file:





Notable here:
Carolyn Roehm flower books, The Way We Live,
a fabulous look at dwellings and lifestyles around the world;
Better Homes & Gardens reference book
standing up in the middle, importantly;
the "Donald" and "El Freda" mini-planters
we found at a secondhand store:
guess which of us is which?



My primary workspace:
The Red Chair

I sit here in the dark every morning, starting at 3AM.


Current stack of books read daily or weekly:


Table by the red chair with handy stack and quilting thread;
glasses of varying strength, for reading books and for quilting


Collection of postcards from museums used for bookmarks;
thread and scissors for quilting;
my Kindle


What's on the Kindle:

most notably:
War & Peace by Tolstoy,
Fermor's A Time of Gifts
Rumi's Big Red Book





Phew! Well, I wonder what you'll find interesting.

This is one of those exercises in which it's hard not to immediately focus on one's own spaces when seeing someone else's. At least that's what I found looking at Brendan's, Hedgewitch's and Mark's. Won't you join us?


Painting at top: Frederic James Shields, "William Blake’s Workroom and Deathroom," c. 1880.


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