Books open doors to worlds we can never inhabit. There are a form of internet for the
imagination taking you to places an author has defined with words and
description. Well-crafted books create worlds, expose worlds and make you feel
a part of those worlds if only for a time.
A book I am reading me now, it is taking me to the New York
of the late 1970s. This is the second book I have read about Gotham in that era
in the last six months. This one seems to be the better of the two.
What I am reading is part family drama and part adventure
tale. In large measure it is also an homage
to the craftsmanship of 19th century immigrant builders in
American. The Gargoyle Hunters is not
what I would call a page turner so much as it is a leisurely pick it up
whenever tale. While I am reading it I
am thoroughly enjoying it. However, when
I have put it down and gone on to other things it does not immediately call me
back. Some books have an allure; they
just demand to be read. The Remains of the Day was that way for
me. Another book I could not put down, although it has been years since I read
it, was Hermann Hesse’s Narcissus and
Goldmund.
I digress.
At this point I have read about the first 100 pages of the The Gargoyle Hunters and I am pretty
sure I will finish it. Stark images of
urban decay always fascinate me. The
main characters make a living out of architectural theft. In some instances theft
might be too harsh a description. Taking
pieces of the cornice of a demolished tenement from a rubble pile before it is
carted away hardly seems like theft. But
other instances where the duo “salvage” old world craftsmanship are much less ambiguously
theft plain and simple.
Most of my interest in the father and son duo of architectural
pilferers is driven by my love of my adopted home city of Toronto,
Ontario. For years Toronto was seemingly
stuck in time. Old Ontario yellow brick buildings and large Dominion edifices
populated the landscape. With the city’s
growth those old buildings are disappearing quickly. Places like Kensington Market with its row
homes are under siege. All of the
filigree, the gargoyles, the mosaics, and the cast scenes of work’s value in
the industrial age are being discarded. What a crime, what a loss.
At this point I really don’t know where The Gargoyle Hunters will lead me and whether at the end I will
feel that it wasted “my precious time.” Still, I am going to give the account a
shot.
Another reason I am reading it is more selfish. When I don’t read something other than the
swamp of political commentary that is awash around us, I don’t get ideas for my
personal writing. Reading for me sparks
creativity.
I will let you know what I think when I am done.
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