In my living
room there’s a near-ceiling high shelf crammed from top to bottom with books,
all of them my own. I’ll occasionally lie back on the couch perpendicular to
its placement and just gaze at it—not basking in it, but looking for structural
weak points. I’ve been collecting comics and literature for the express purpose
of building a library for the past seven years, and as a result I’ve turned
this towering, six tier bookshelf into a camel fearing the coming of some
straw-bearing harbinger. (I should add I have enough space for another shelf
and will be more than welcome to accept any donations or freebies, wink wink.)
This week, I’m
veering as close to narcissism as I fear to tread. Make no mistake: this is
literary show and tell, and when I’m done you’ll wonder if I’m even capable of
loving other people given how much I adore my books. So without further ado,
here are the most prized tomes in my personal collection. Pictures have been
cribbed from various sources online, as I don’t have a dedicated camera and I
don’t want to answer any of my roommates’ questions about why I’m holding my
laptop webcam up to the bookshelf.
House of Leaves
Hands down my
favourite book, and to which this website owes its namesake, Mark Z.
Danielewski’s House of Leaves is a
frightening, borderline-impenetrable labyrinth of a novel that’s worthy of
fifty essays on this blog, let alone one. This hardcover, along with its thick
paperback counterpart, is the “remastered” full-colour edition of the novel,
featuring blue and struck-out red text when appropriate as well as several
illustrations throughout the volume. Larger Chapters locations, like the one on
Rideau Street in Ottawa, will still stock this edition on occasion and if you
can get your hands on it, do so. Just, you know, don’t read it late at night
like I did, idiot that I was (and still am).
Walt Simonson Thor omnibus
I won’t spend
too much time on this bit, considering I wrote a review of the book last month,
but just to reiterate: holy crap this thing is heavy, maybe the heaviest piece
of entertainment I own that isn’t a video game console, and man this thing is
excellent. Walt Simonson is one of the best visual storytellers in the game and
the recolouring job on this whole volume just emphasizes that fact. While it’s
insane to recommend such a pricey and unwieldy volume I do suggest looking for
the Marvel Visionaries paperback trades containing his run. They feature the
same colour job, as well.
50th
anniversary The Lord of the Rings editions
I picked all
three of these up one autumn evening in my first year of university, in no way
connected to the fact that I just remembered the 200 or so dollars remaining in
my now-retired CIBC account. Featuring crisp dust jacket art based off of
J.R.R. Tolkien’s own illustrations and fold-out maps, I feel these volumes do
Tolkien’s epic the most justice, seeming both a little antiquated but elegant
nonetheless.
DC Absolute
editions
While DC’s
management can fall in a well, man do
they put out some good editions. I’ve fallen in love with their Deluxe
editions, but the real jewels of their library are the Absolute editions—huge volumes contained in slipcases and
packaged with a truck load of background info, interviews, sketch art and
script excerpts. They’re the Criterion Collections of comics, and so far I’ve
spent money—mostly Christmas gift money, I should add—on three: Alan Moore and
Dave Gibbons’ Watchmen, Jeph Loeb and
Tim Sale’s Batman: The Long Halloween
and Grant Morrison and Frank Quitely’s All
Star Superman. They’re great for showing off really subtle artists like
Gibbons and Quitely, who are apt to include miniscule clues or hints in their
work. And the quality of these things: imagine comics came in Blu Ray format.
Expensive, but so worth it.
It 25th anniversary edition
No
shit, I spent $170 on this thing,
including shipping and handling costs. Granted, this was all with birthday
money, but it’s also the biggest amount I’ve spent on any single volume outside
of university textbooks and I don’t regret it for one second. It isn’t just Stephen King’s greatest book,
it’s one of my top five favourite novels and alongside House of Leaves and Mike Mignola’s Hellboy comics one of the best representations of neo-Lovecraftian
horror. The 25th anniversary edition, put out last year by Cemetery
Dance Publications, has new illustrations and unsettling dust jacket art, two-colour
printing and a protective slipcase that keeps my OCD corner-wearing fears at
bay. And no I’m not showing off my advertising chops to Cemetery Dance why
would you ever think that shame on you.
’salem’s Lot illustrated edition
’salem’s Lot isn’t just one of my favourite books, it’s
a tradition of sorts. Every October since, oh, 2005, I’ve made a point of
pulling Stephen King’s sophomore novel off the shelf and reading it as sort of
a Halloween ritual, akin to my leaving out a bowl of Jolly Ranchers Chewables
for Cthulhu on the 31st. You’d think I’d get tired of reading the same book six
or seven times (I might have missed a year) but it really is a good novel and “The
town had always known darkness” chapter is truly one of the best passages in
the English language. I ordered this hardcover edition with its disquieting
illustrations by Jerry Uelsmann in my final year of high school and it’s been a
constant on my shelf ever since.
From Hell
When my good
friend Talbert Johnson accompanied me to the Toronto Comic Arts Festival my
second year going, he had us make a brief detour to the Beguiling comic book
store in Mirvish Village. This ominous-looking hardcover edition of Alan Moore
and Eddie Campbell’s From Hell, quite
possibly the single greatest work in the comics medium, caught my eye so
effectively that a couple months later I scheduled a day trip to Toronto for
the singular purpose of picking up this book. It’s an utterly disturbing story
that never holds back, leaving me eternally paranoid that someone might see
what I’m reading and think me a serial killer in training, but I enjoy it
regardless (well, as much as one can actually “enjoy” something so horrifying).
And that’s it
for my Consumerist Appreciation Corner for the month. Join in next time for “Which
Supermarket Frozen Pizza is the Best?”*
*A joke, I
assure you all.
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Love learning about what makes you "tick" ............
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