Saturday
Iām between COVID shots. Retired. Nothing to do. The libraries arenāt taking book donations. So, I spend my days cruising from one Little Free Library to another. Take a book, leave a book.
I like how they vary in design. Here a caboose, there a barn. How some are linked to the Free Library System with tiny plaques and serial numbers, while others are renegade Free Libraries and not included on any neighborhood maps.
Which is fine by me.
I keep to a regular circuit. I prefer obscure books. Most of what I read isnāt in current library catalogs or available on Kindle. I have all these boxes of giveaway books just sitting underfoot.
I even wondered about having a safe distance book sale.Ā But Iām not that comfortable around people yet.
Then thereās all of the books my wife left behind. Mostly mysteries and books about diseases.
Not my thing.
Itās funny, I never noticed these little book trees before. Blissfully unaware. Like I was about babies in strollers before we had kids. Didnāt pertain to my reality. Until it did. Strictly on a need-to-know basis.
I used to drive aimlessly trying to make babies and toddlers fall asleep. Now I drive aimlessly to find Free Little Libraries.
Through trial and error, Iāve found some folks who leave treasures.Ā I steer clear of the libraries near schools or playgrounds because they pretty much house YA or childrenās books.
I follow my gut more than I follow the map. I drive around with two boxes of books and I travel neighborhood by neighborhood. Yesterday, I hit a bunch around Sibley Hospital, then the kayaker hippie neighborhood across the Maryland line, out to Glen Echo, and on toward Potomac.
Today Iām trusting my intuition. Driving around and enjoying the Spring and turning when I have a hunch. Iāll bet thereās one down by the bike path. Azaleas are blooming. Dogwoods. TheĀ grass and trees are that shiny new greeny green. But nothing. Struck out. I know this road loops around and heads up to a dead end. And I donāt know how I know this, but at the top of the hill where a For Sale sign on a one-story brick home sends a distress signal
because the house next door has been McMansioned and towers 3 stories above it and extends to the edges of the lot, I see a baby blue library box with double glass doors and a flower antenna. Two young mask-less moms are talking while their kids kick a soccer ball around the asphalt.
I stop so I can don my double mask layers. Still being as careful as I can be. Theyāre looking at me. I roll down the window.
āHi there.ā
They wave.
I point to the only remaining space on the circle in front of the Little Library.
āCan we help you?ā
āIām going to park there,ā I say and point at the library.
āDo you know Catherine?ā the other woman says. The kids have picked up their soccer ball and run over to their mothers.
āNo, Iām only visiting the library.ā
āWell, sheās picky about people parking in this space. Pull back down the hill. I think thereās an empty spot.
I wave and do what she says. And there is one. I grab a Rex Stout paperback and march back up the hill toward the women and their kids. Up close the McMansion is even more hideously ugly than Iād imagined. Wasted space and difficult to heat with all those church ceilings.
āDoes she know youāre coming?ā the first woman says.
āWhat?ā I realize Iām winded.
āIs Catherine expecting you?ā
āNo, I donāt know her. Iām just visiting her Free Library.ā
They go all wary. And I guess it must be weird. Only folks in the neighborhood trade books here.
I ignore them, while their kids run inside the neighboring house, and pull open the double library doors. Interesting selection. I have to slide my specs atop my head to squint and read the titles.Ā Shel Silverstein, Bruce Catton, the Lunch Lady, Donald Westlake, Lee Smith, Anne Tyler, and here ya go, a Richard Condon novel Iāve never seen before.
I love the rush. I get something new to replace something thatās just gathering dust. A return to a goods and services way of transacting.
āYou really were just stopping for a book?ā
āYep. Have a nice day.ā
By the time I glance in the rearview the dead end is empty.
Sunday
Iām thinking about shaving my beard after the reception at the Little Library yesterday. I mean itās true Iāve been wearing the same clothes three days straight. Let my hair grow over my ears. My beard is now an unholy tangled mess. I havenāt really had any reasonĀ to do anything. I figured everybodyās wearing masks so they canāt smell me if Ido stink. Just another change living on Pandemic time.
Maybe thatās delusional?
The kids werenāt wearing masks but they kept staring.
I indulge in a long shower. Hot as I can stand. Then slide down to the blue tiled shower floor, with my legs surrounding the drain, and trim the knife-like toenails that have ripped holes in my socks. I do wash everything. Even remembering the nape of my neck.
After lunch, a couple hardboiled eggs and some iced coffee, I attack the beard with scissors before taking the electric shaver to it. The razor has to be brushed out several times. I donāt look like Santa yet but Iām getting there. Salt and Pepper de jour.
I chuckle realizing that sounds like a Dylan tune.
I use disposable razors on what remains. Takes three to scrape my face smooth. I still need a haircut but at least Iām a more respectable Papa Hemingway-looking old guy and less Pandemic Demento.
Monday
Hitting the Little Libraries in nearby Vienna today. Looks like one side of the main drag is completely dug up. The Wolf Trap Motel is fenced in and apparently about to get scraped. I turn down side streets. Swap an Agatha Christie for a Douglass Wallop Iāve never seen before. What has Four Wheels and Flies? About a dog.Ā Swap an Ellery Queen for a book about Tricksters.Ā Slim pickings today.
I like to return to a library a month later. No point in going more often. Even then, I frequently find the book I swapped still in residence. Kind of heartbreaking. Too often the selection of books looks exactly the same as it was last month. Either way makes you feel bad. I will swap a book anyway.Ā Just to freshen things up. And then drive the swap book to another library in a different neighborhood.
Tuesday
Cloudy and rainy all day. Just sat reading and sipping coffee.
Wednesday
Falls Church today. I try some different streets and find a three-level Library filled with SciFi.Ā Old pulp paperbacks. Thrillers. Maybe this is where the folks who owned Hole in the Wall Books on Route 7 live? I donāt recognize the guy in the Todd Rundgren Utopia Tour tee mowing the lawn. But honestly, I donāt recognize anybody when theyāre masked and have gone to seed.
RA Lafferty. Ballard. Sheckley, Simak, and Sturgeon. Some Conan books. Yet I pass them by for Tarzan and the Ant Men by Edgar Rice Burroughs, one of the first authors I ever read. I liked Tarzan though only the Greystoke film ever captured the written words.
I adored the Martian series. Barsoom, Dejah Thoris, and John Carter. I waited my entire life for a movie adaptation and Disney blew it. I loved the movie but the advertising campaign was an unmitigated disaster. They should have kept the actual title A Princess of Mars.
Plus, my kidsā friends ridiculed them for liking it. Told them it ripped off Star Wars. I told my kids it was the other way around.Ā Star Wars ripped off the Martian series. Lifeās not fair.
No sequels will ever be made.
Iām daydreaming when I realize a dog is barking, a huge German shepherd bounding past the lawnmower and heading my way. The Utopia guy abandons the mower and gives chase but heās not nearly fast enough.
Heās yelling, āSammy. Stop. Dammit Sammy, come here.ā
Sammy jumps and I shove the paperback in his jaws. He bites down hard, shakes his head looking pretty confused, and that second allows me to grab his collar. He immediately starts pulling away and barking and shaking his head but Iām not letting go and when Sammy freezes we stare at each other until lawnmower man arrives and takes over the collar hold.
Thursday
Sipping Iced coffee from a black-on-black Contigo on the deck steps. The red maples in the yard are losing their helicopter seedlings. The air is alive with the tiny whirly birds. The sound theyĀ make as they doink the roof and then slide down the shingles to the gutter or the ground is so tantalizing.
I shift to my right and a red fox moves across the yard and effortlessly over the fence.
And I think of my wife. How she always wanted a dog. Not a handbag dog. A big one she could jog with.
Next, Iām doing a memory dump of all of the appliances we replaced in our time together.
3 refrigerators
3 washing machines
2 dryers
4 dishwashing machines
3 garbage grinders
1 stand-alone freezer
3 toasters
2 stoves
4 blenders
2 kettles
2 furnaces
2 lawnmowers
Iām stumped. Watching the squirrels run around the fence tops now that the fox is no longer in the area and chewing on crushed ice in my drink. And then I think–
2 vans
2 Honda Civics
1 Toyota Camry
1 Mazda
We shared all that.
Friday
One thing Iāve learned from driving down every cul-de-sac, every dead end, is that rich people tend to buy at the ends of such streets. When a neighborhood gets McMansioned it seems to begin at the back of the street and then work its way back to the cross street. Why? My guess is they donāt want us to see their gaudy residences. Donāt want us snooping around. Casing the joint. The looks I sometimes get. Damn.
I rarely find Free Libraries on those streets. Not like they read books.
Closer to the high school I found a bike path with a Free Library done up like a train engine. The front is Plexiglas and the books are jammed in. Nobody has stopped here in a long time.
One spine sort of winks at me. I lift the Plexiglas door, one of the sort you have to hold-up or balance with the top of your head, pulled out the book, turned it over, and noticed my hand was crawling with ants. Looked at the book. Looked at the space Iād pulled it from, and there is a writhing ant colony. The book is crawling with ants–theyāre racing up my arms. I shove the book back in place, let the door slam, and sweep the tiny army off my hands, wrists, arms, elbows.
Fuck that nonsense.
Later, next to a rental brick Colonial full of jocks, the Free Library was on a post that leaned precipitously forward. When I opened the glass front, the books slid out and hit me in the chest. If you were quick enough you might catch one or two in your arms. These knuckleheads must get their kicks watching people juggle the books.Ā Drop one. Close the door. Pick it up. Try to slip it back inside, drop two more. I hate these guys. Think about puncturing one of the tires on their football party bus.
Saturday
Today yields Planet Dog. An everything guide to manās best friend. The only book I kept for myself. Some days you discover that the only book you can trade for is a book you already have.
So, you walk back to the car, and add it to the box of books youāll trade back in another neighborhood. I seem to be too into the one-for-one swap scenario to just leave my book andĀ go without taking one in return.Ā Very Old Testament, I guess.
But this dog book is kind of fun. I suppose a few years ago it would have been one of theĀ āDogs for Dummiesā guidebooks. Same idea.
Sunday
Back at the Sci-Fi writerās house and Sammy is barking and carrying on at the front door.
The maskless guy walks over to have a look see and puts the dog on a leash and walks down the sidewalk. Heās wearing a black 9:30 tee today.
āBack again?ā
āItās an addiction.ā
He snorts a laugh. āI guess it is.ā
The dog isnāt barking. As though being on the leash has calmed his anxiety somewhat.
āHey, want a beer?ā
āNah, just had my second vac today.ā
āYeah. Which flavor?
āPfizer.ā
āWhew. Moderna hits harder.ā
āSo, Iāll wait for two more weeks before I go maskless.ā
āGreat. Come back and weāll sit on the deck.ā He claps me on the shoulder.
āOww.ā
āDamn. Sorry man.ā Ā He steps out into the road. Waves a hand. āOff to walk the dog.ā
āSee ya.ā
My take this visit is A Martian Odyssey. I remember that was a pretty good yarn.
Monday
I havenāt felt this excited about NASA since the Mercury 7.
NASA was like Disney in how they scrubbed everything squeaky clean before feeding the hungry news machine.Ā Most official histories donāt mention the wild woman who slept with six of the original seven astronauts. Only one turned her down. Guess which one.
The space agency paid her a bundle to keep her mouth shut. And the only way I know any of this is because a buddy of mine was a reporter for Life magazine back when that meant something. He was nose to the ground 24/7 news hound but they killed his story.
The Space Race.Ā Now weāre finally where Iāve always wanted to be. Mars. The red planet.
And the Mars Rovers have been my lifeline. More than I ever hoped they would be. Iām no scientist but that theyāre really walking on the surface of another planet and beaming back incredible photos. Itās helped a lot during 2020. The year we all learned what itās like to be shut-ins.Ā I love Perseverance. I love Integrity. And todayās the day. The little helicopter will fly roundabout Mars.
Not that I can watch it though. They say theyāll have video in a few weeks.
Tuesday
Doing another circuit. Sky is threatening rain. Nice surprises today. Ā A Modesty Blaise hardback.Ā A pair of Delacorta paperbacksāDiva and Vida.Ā A book of WWI poetry. A Haiku anthology.
Now itās literally raining on my parade. I read some Haiku. I dip into the WWI poets.Ā Isaac Rosenberg is new to me.Ā No sign of letting up. So, I start the car. Notice at the top of the steps the front door is open and a woman is staring at me. She has aĀ phone to her ear. I wave and pull away.
When I turn the corner thereās a young kid twirling a bright yellow umbrella by a front yard lemonade stand.Ā I brake. She looks pleased with herself despite the rain. I feel bad for her.
I undo my seat belt. Reach for some change. Nada. I feel a bill. Itās a tenner. Figure she deserves it. Park. She notices me.
āYou want some lemonade?ā
āBut of course.ā
The rain shifts from drizzle to steady just as it has been switching back and forth all day.
She runs up the grassy hill. I fear she will fall but sheās laughing and pours me a lemonade
Out of a large thermos. Holding the umbrella clamped between her neck and chin.
āHere, let me help.ā I slide the wet handle away and shield her and the thermos.
āItās pink. I hope thatās okay?ā She hands me the plastic cup.
āI like Lemonade no matter what color it is,ā I say and take a sip. Not bad. Itās not a mix.
āMy brother and his friends think itās sissy, being pink and all.ā
āBoys are pretty silly,ā I add.
She giggles. Shows buck teeth.
āWhat do I owe you?ā
75 cents.
āHere ya go,ā and I hand her the tenner.
Her eyes widen.
āIāll have to run get change from my mom.ā
āNo, donāt bother.ā
She tries to hand the ten back.
I wave it off and finish the drink.Ā āKeep it. You earned it.ā And I point at the sky.
āReally?ā
āAll yours.āĀ I set the empty cup down, wave, and head back to my car.
She pauses, waves, and races back to her house.
Good deed accomplished.
By the time I drive a block the rain has stopped, just as suddenly as it began.