The committed bibliophile is cousin to the obsessive, an easily seduced accumulator frequently struck with frisson. Cram your home with books, and you’re lovingly called a collector; cram it with old newspapers, and you’re derisively called a hoarder. But be honest: The collector is a hoarder, too—a discriminating and noble-minded hoarder, perhaps, but a hoarder just the same.
If you can't distinguish between a collector and a hoarder, then I submit that you're lost. A hoarder has a psychological problem: he doesn't merely collect—he collects indiscriminately, rarely bothering to organize his hoard. The hoard sits there in piles; pets can die, trapped inside those mounds of crap, and the hoarder won't even notice his pet's absence until the stink becomes impossible to deny. Hoarders are also completely unable to part with their trove, whereas avid bibliophiles will likely have learned, through reading, the virtue of nonattachment to material goods. If a bibliophile's library burns down, there will be sadness and anger for sure, but the loss of all those books won't fundamentally damage the book collector's psyche: he knows he can rebuild. Try removing even one item from a hoarder's hoard, though, and watch the overreaction. Bibliophiles care enough about their books to organize them and treat them with respect. They also come back to those books, avidly rereading, relearning, reliving. What does a hoarder do with his trash except guard it and warn other people not to mess with it? If you can't tell a hoarder from a bibliophile, then you can't tell a pig from a librarian.
The author of this article seems to be saying that a collector is a type of hoarder. If anything, if one truly is a species of the other (and I'm not convinced this is necessarily the case), I'd say he has it backward: a hoarder is an insane form of collector.
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It won't surprise you that I have a couple of thousand books.
ReplyDeleteIt also won't surprise you that I have a sizable movie collection.
I don't consider myself a hoarder. In fact, particularly with my DVD collection, a great deal of what I do is use it as a lending library. It's a way for me to introduce other people to movies I really love--particularly the weird and little-known ones I tend to buy.
Indeed; I know what you mean. Most of my own thousands of books are languishing in public storage in Virginia because it'd be too expensive to take them with me to Korea.
ReplyDeleteAnd I agree: you're not a hoarder. That article was silly. What's funny, though, is that if you read further along, the article ends up making points about books—their heft, their value to mind and heart—that completely undermine the early claim that bibliophiles, as collectors, are hoarders.