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The art of medicine
Literature for nostalgics

I love books. I love them so much I even love reading about books. And reading about reading. And reading about other readers. I can’t decide what book club to join. I feel I might miss out on others. I have no time for them anyway, what good is talking about reading when you could use your time to DO more reading. And read about people meeting at book clubs to discuss their reading. The Dumas club perhaps, now that is a book club worth going to. Worth reading about too, even better perhaps (yes, I do have a weak spot for Perez-Reverte).

 

Maybe I should start a book club, my own book club. Wait a minute, I am my own book club already. And I am sadly closed to new members however… At my club I sometimes read very exclusive writers, you know. Writers that have never been read by any other readers at any other book club in the charted world. Writers like myself, for example. Or like my fiancée, whose text messages are sometimes filled with such inexplicable sadness. Is literature a function of the technological world? Is fiction an app?

 

I will look for an answer in the books…And if I find it out, I will write it down somewhere, in an obscure note at the bottom of a page in a book about the soil composition in Bolivia and the extinction of the Eocene elephants. So make sure you read the fine print at the bottom of such texts if you want the key to knowledge. Or you could just google it…

 

The speed of thought today defies reflection. Action, terrorizing action pushes thoughts through, unsanctioned by the judge of beauty who was once the master of our soul. We process rather than slowly digest, swallow whole rather than taste, shout rather than sing, demolish and rebuild rather than consolidate and beautify. The world has awoken me to madness and I want to go back to sleep, back to the slow movement of waves, the slumber of the deep. And dream of life, not one but many, different and bizarre, as many as there are mouths to speak or eyes to see and minds to think them. So give myself back to my books, let me slide away from what is real and discover what was real or will be real, let us all just pause and…no, not think, but rather stop thinking. And just read about thinking, read about ourselves reading about ourselves reading about ourselves reading…

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Razvan V. wrote:
If you want to capture a fragment of a different life just now, listen to Asta, by Mozdzer Danielsson Fresco. Instantly googlable...Continue with Asta II and Suffering and finish triumphantly in the arms of Asta III. Fall asleep and dream of the end of the sunniest summer you can remember. Or maybe dream of the warm March afternoon when you found out that you, like everyone else, will one day die...
3/5/2010 3:17 PM BST on bmj.com
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Odysseus wrote:
I would just try writing a nostalgic book. Writing is the great leveller like sailing. It is a case of sink or swim, succeed or die. There is no in between. Posterity, your sailing mates or the coroner will vouch for that
4/5/2010 10:01 AM BST on bmj.com
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Razvan V. wrote:
The wisdom of your words matches the reputation that preceeds your name sir :-)

I still chose to navigate the shallow waters of the coast and keep close to the shore, but I tentatively sink a toe or two in the foam of the waves from time to time. One day I will make the leap, or unfold the sails, or issue an aaarghhh to me maties and head for the open see of paper, ink and nostalgia. And leave this all behind... If I could only leave the couch behind as well...
8/5/2010 8:22 PM BST on bmj.com
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Odysseus wrote:
No excuse, Sire.

Wealthy Romans ate their meals on couches and were waited upon by slaves with food and wine and threw their scraps on mosaic floors patterned with fish skeletons and debauchery while nimble girls danced and young men played lyre and pipe. I therefore can't see why a dry couch should dampen papyrus or dull a sharp stylus dipped in the turgid ink of squid and nostalgia.

9/5/2010 4:42 AM BST on bmj.com
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Razvan V. wrote:
Fair words! Following the fine example of our great (and yet somehow largely uncivilised, for all their pretence) forefathers and their appetite for excess, I shall set my gaze on the unfathomable depths of the sea within, brimming with possibilities, and harpoon myself the largest squid, one that will provide me with the barrels of ink that will fuel my nostalgic crusade. That is, if it doesn’t pull my unworthy vessel to the said depths and I end up fuelling its nostalgic mitochondriae … Maybe I should just read about this instead :-)
16/5/2010 11:32 PM BST on bmj.com
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tesseylove wrote:
Hello My name is tessy,i saw your profile today and became interested in you,i will also like to know you the more,and i want you to send an email to my email address so i can give you my picture for you to know whom i am.Here is my email address(tessymurphy@yahoo.co.uk) I believe we can move from here I am waiting. (Remember the distance or co lour does not matter but love matters a lot in life) Thanks tessy,
30/8/2010 5:23 PM BST on bmj.com
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DuaneF wrote:
Writing a book is quite the undertaking, I have one book published, and working on a second. Be prepared for a bumpy ride Before, during, and after, and be warned, all manner of Judges will come out of the brush to Psychologically Tear at your Ego, and Mental health. DuaneF
9/1/2012 3:49 PM GMT on bmj.com
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