001. The End, by Anon.
I think I’d have to write a
very short book. Yes, I have wanted to write lots of books before. I think my
first book would be about actually how to get into the position of having to
write a book in the first place.…
The book would be red and
white. That’s all I know. The colour of snow. I don’t think it would have
pictures.
And yes, it is about
isolation. Maybe the whiteness is the blank page. Maybe it’s the blank page.
(Recorded
at Brompton Cemetery May 2001)
116. This Is a Story, by Anon.
… My dream would be to write
it in a column. I’d have a big book but only write in an inch and-a-half space
down the middle, with lots of paper on either side so you can draw pictures. If
you are writing in short blasts, like I was saying, you can fill out the
details with little stick figures doing stuff. If you can’t figure out how to
write it, you can do it visually.
I just want to write it. It makes me laugh and that’s the most
important thing.
(Recorded
at Battersea Library 8 September 2002)
215. The Latvian Table, by Richard Layzell
Perhaps it would be set in
this café. I have a little bit of a
thing about café tables, just like we are sitting here. I think a café table is
a great place for being reflective, but you might also be interrupted by the
waiter or the waitress. It’s very ordinary.
There are cafes all over the world, so I don’t even know where it would
be set. Might be Eastern Europe or even the Soviet Union ,
places that people in the West don’t know very much about. I have been to Minsk and Belarus ,
but there weren’t any cafés there, because they couldn’t afford it. They couldn’t afford to go out and have a cup
of tea. So maybe it would be somewhere a little bit richer than Belarus .
I haven’t been there, but maybe somewhere like Latvia …
I might talk a lot about the
table. The table would be like the blank stage or blank canvas. Everything
would be very rich. If there was butter on the table, it would taste very
special, and the colour might remind this fictional person (it probably isn’t
me, I think it might be a woman) of looking at the sun, and she goes into some
kind of poetic journey until the cup comes with the coffee in, or something
like that. …
(Recorded in
307. The Boy in the Coffin, by Amanda
… I fished out a bizarre newspaper cutting I’ve had for twenty years. It was in the Daily Express. ‘The Boy In The Coffin – Mystery of Man in
They dried out the film and
when they played it back it showed him as a young boy in scenes with a
coffin. First they show him lying down
in the coffin, then he gets out and this thing swings towards his head, swings
across the screen; then there’s the doll’s head being smashed, squashed
tomatoes... all very ritualistic. They found a ring in the water as well with
the initials BR.
That linked him to a family in Swindon who had
always practised black magic, and the sons – one went missing, one was
murdered, and one died in suspicious circumstances. … and now twenty years on it’s haunting me
again.
I’m back on the trail but I’m
not going to bother about the reality behind the story. All I’m going to use is the actual point of
death – whether he was pushed, jumped, or bumped off is irrelevant really. What
I’m going to stick to is how the film in his pocket was made. …
(Recorded
at Spread the Word, Lambeth Walk, London 23 May 2004)
712 My Secret Marbles, by Marbles Mya (aged 9)
I’ve collected five hundred and sixty-four marbles. I’ve got one big one and I’ve got six medium sized ones and I’ve got four hundred little ones. I’ve got white ones with spotted different colours, blue ones, purple ones, two that are sky blue but one’s a light sky blue and one’s a dark sky blue and I’ve got an orange one with black spots and waves, a purple and white one that’s all wavy and a dark green and light green all mixed up together. I haven’t got a favourite; I like them all.
In my spare time I like to
pretend they’re people. I’ve got some toy cars that I pretend they drive around
in and I’ve got this doll’s house that I got for Christmas and I put some
ornaments in it and pretend that they’re sitting on them and stuff. …
It’s called My Secret Marbles because my friends
always say it’s a bit weird so I don’t really tell them. I don’t like it when
people say stuff is weird but I don’t really mind. Anyway, it is a bit weird
because nobody else would probably do that. Maybe it’s because they’re not
really into marbles, they’re into pencil cases and stuff, and they don’t
realise how much fun it is if you haven’t got any brothers and sisters to play
with at home and have something to do when you’re bored, instead of just
sitting there watching TV or playing on your Nintendo all day long like I do
sometimes.
(Recorded at New Art
Gallery , Walsall
1 September 2007)
COMMENTARY
with John Bloomberg-Rissman
source: Library of Unwritten Books
(http://www.unwritten.org.uk/about.html)
[Write the
founders of this work in progress – an exploration of poiesis as a basic human capacity, even where
unrealized]: “Library of Unwritten Books is a collection of possible books.
Short interviews are recorded with people about a book they dream of writing or
making. Limited edition mini books are published from transcripts of the
interviews, which are made available to readers at exhibitions and special
events. Touring book-boxes also display the books at everyday venues such as
cafés, pubs, libraries and launderettes.
The concept was inspired by a fictional book repository featured
in The Abortion: An Historical
Romance by Richard Brautigan. The novella’s main protagonist is a librarian
who catalogues any book deposited in his care.
“Inspired by the non-selective ethos of the Brautigan
library, Caroline Jupp and Sam Brown founded Library of Unwritten Books in
2002. The books are collected through random encounters in parks, city streets
and public places, and by invitations to visit literature festivals, public
libraries and community centres. People are prompted to spontaneously record
their unrealized ideas, fictional tales, and personal histories. There is no
selection procedure and all contributors to the library receive a free copy of
their own unwritten book.” (Library of Unwritten Books website)(2) Who could be more “outside” the world of writing than someone who hasn’t written? Yet, as the creators of this project note, “The collection is evidence of the common desire to write a book and is an ongoing survey of this literary phenomenon.” This common desire tangles the written with the unwritten, and complicates the notion of inside and outside immensely.
1 comment:
the large marbles are called
"bunkers"
the small ones : "pee-weed"
the metal ones are called "steelies"
all writers of un-written books should
never, ever 'hunch' when shooting fro the perimeter.
my very favorite "shooter" was a 'cat's eye'
one day I'll write a book about her.... we can then
get in that card-board box and (do our 'thing')
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