====================================================================== Title: Summer Jacket Date: 2023-04-01 Link: https://spool-five.com/poetry/2023_apr01_cover/ Word Count: 515 ====================================================================== It's day one of poetry writing month of 2023. The prompt for today is: > And here’s our own prompt (optional, as always) for the first day of > Na/GloPoWriMo. They say you can’t judge a book by its cover, but they > never said you can’t try to write a poem based on a book cover — and > that’s your challenge for today! Take a look through Public Domain > Review’s article on “The Art of Book Covers.” Some of the featured covers > are beautiful. Some are distressing. Some are just plain weird (I’m > looking at you, “Mr Sweet Potatoes”). With any luck, one or more of > these will catch your fancy, and open your mind to some poetic > insights. This prompt reminded me of a book I read recently, The Clothing of Books by Jhumpa Lahiri[1]. Here is a quote from it: =>[1] https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/551051/the-clothing-of-books-by-jhumpa-lahiri/ > The right cover is like a beautiful coat, elegant and warm, wrapping > my words as they travel through the world, on their way to keep an > appointment with my readers. > Books come to stand for various episodes in our lives, for certain > idealisms, follies of belief, moments of love. Along the way they > accumulate our marks, our stains, our innocent abuses, they come to wear > our experience of them on their covers and bindings like wrinkles on > our skin. I like the romantic imagery of the quote above, but in my own experience, book covers have served a more practical/functional purpose. I respect them when they keep the books structurally intact while I scribble on the margins, or bend the covers back while reading. I'm also reminded of one of the worst ways I've treated the 'clothing' of a book. When I was a philosophy student, Slavoj Zizek released a large book on Hegel ("Less than Nothing"). I bought the hardcover version, which also had a protective sleeve. It is a large book. That summer, the latch on my window also broke. It was a heavy window that you slid up to open. Anyway, although I did read a fair chunk of the book (around 1/3rd) my main memory of it was as a 'prop' to keep my window open during the summer months! It performed this job very well, and remained mostly intact. However, the book jacket/sleeve get quite torn up in the process. The jacket kept your head dry And hid the tears from view While traces of light Across the night sky Lept into action And passers-by formed rapid judgements About books and covers The jacket hid your elegant clothing behind its dusty, torn blackness You preferred it to baring your personality full force and liked that it combined Us two in one covering Your dress my jacket The jacket held your scent long after you'd gone The jacket stopped the window frame From scratching the book's body As it maintained the opening As I knelt smoking And catching the summer breeze Rolling off the Tay