And when I say that, I'm clearly not talking about people. I find that I tend to make snap judgments about people I don't know not really by who they surround themselves with. Rather, I find that I make snap judgments when I can see their reading material.
I'm not a flirt. And I rarely talk to men I don't know.
But. Sometimes I'm tempted to start talking to men when I see them reading.
I never do, because I've never quite figured out how to have that conversation: "Hi! Clearly, you read. And clearly, you have marvelous taste in books. I, too, read. And I also have wonderful taste in books." I mean where else can you take that sentence, except to: "So would you happen to have any good reading recommendations?"
The temptation arises any time I see a decent-looking guy holding an actual book. Sometimes the temptation falls away quickly. You're reading Clive Cussler? No, thank you. (Random confession: on my last--blind--date, when my date admitted to what he read, he listed a litany of nonfictional genres. Which was fine. But then I asked if he read fiction, and he said: "I enjoy Clive Cussler." At which point it's about 145% likely that I said something such as: "Well, I wasn't judging you based on your reading habits before. But I am now.")
But sometimes. Sometimes I see someone sitting at lunch in the Gateway, eating a sandwich and reading a book called
The Art of Racing in the Rain. And I don't start talking because of that whole awkward-book-conversation thing, but also because I don't know the book. What if I make the wrong judgment?! (Incidentally, I looked the book up and it sounds pretty darned interesting. I guess that guy gave me a book recommendation without even knowing it.)
And other times. Other times, I see an attractive man a few Trax stops past mine getting on while reading
The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks and I want to do all of the following, in this order:
1. Tell him he's reading one of the best things I recently read.
2. Acknowledge this means he's got really great taste in books.
3. Let him know that he won't be sorry.
4. Ask him to marry me.
What I really do is try to bestow a look of gleaming approval--you know, the sort that might come from a cute and beatific librarianlike type of person? It's highly ineffective. But safe. And my books like that look just fine.
2 comments:
Now you've got me wondering if I fit the description of "cute and beatific."
Also, I've been known to walk into someone's house for the first time and more or less ignore them until I've checked out their bookshelves in detail. (I'll find out more about them from the books than I would making small talk, anyway.)
So I'd be one of those gentlemen as I get most of the books from you, eh? Girls watch out! Hahahahahaha
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