Donna Seaman is the author of the new memoir River of Books: A Life in Reading. Her other books include Identity Unknown. She is the editor for adult books at Booklist, and she lives in Chicago.
Q: What inspired you to write River of Books?
A: After my previous book, Identity Unknown: Rediscovering Seven American Women Artists, had been out in the world for a while, I started writing personal essays. I was thinking about people who inspired and guided me, including writers past and present.
This made me think about writing a new set of biographical essays, but before I got much further than vague intentions, I received a remarkable invitation. Seminary Co-op, a Chicago not-for-profit bookstore, decided to launch a publishing initiative, which included Ode Books, a series of brief books by book people about books and places devoted to books.
I was asked to be the second author in the series, following Paul Yamazaki’s Reading the Room: A Bookseller’s Tale.
I was thrilled and challenged. How to approach this? I decided to write about how I ended up doing what I do, basically tracking the making of a book critic and editor. I thought of it as a book-by-book chronicle leading up to my arrival at Booklist.
Q: How was the book’s title chosen, and what does it signify for you?
A: When I think about the way my life has turned out, about why I’ve been on the staff of Booklist for so long, I see myself dwelling beside a river of books. Books flow in and out of the magazine day in and day out and it’s quite mesmerizing. I also feel like I’m forever voyaging on a river of books since I read so much and work with other readers.
I was thinking, too, about how books flow through time and space, reaching new readers in new places over the years, over the centuries.
Another influence was the famous quote from the Greek philosopher Heraclitus:
Just as the river where I step
Is not the same, and is,
So I am as I am not.
This has always resonated for me. One may stay in the same place, but every day is different. Every book is different from every other book and books are different each time you read them. And the reader changes, too.
Q: The writer Susan Orlean said of the book, “River of Books is as exhilarating as a first date, and it delivers...” What do you think of that description?
A: I love that Susan Orlean compared reading my book to an exciting first date! We all know first dates can be disastrous, so to say that a book is as “exhilarating” as a pleasurable first date is high praise indeed.
I’m also struck by the romance of Orlean’s description. Reading is intimate; you are communing with another; you’re opening yourself to someone else’s words, feelings, questions, vision, story, and perception of the world.
Reading can be transporting and enchanting, it can be voluptuous. We fall in love with books, with characters. We feel known and entangled.
Q: Of the various books you discuss, are there a few that remain particular favorites?
A: Some books are etched indelibly in my mind, among them Virginia Woolf’s Mrs. Dalloway and To the Lighthouse; Rachel Carson’s The Sea around Us; Kurt Vonnegut’s Slaughterhouse-Five; Stanley Elkin’s The Franchiser. I could go on. The books listed at the end of River of Books are all favorites, all cherished.
Q: What are you working on now?
A: I wrote much more than we could include in River of Books, mostly about writers and teachers and books. I’m hoping to turn some of that material into essays. I also have other subjects in mind for biographical essays.
Q: Anything else we should know?
A: I’ve been deeply touched by people’s responses to the book. When people tell me that River made them think about their younger reading self; about how much books meant to them as children, teens, and beyond; and about which books they have felt they couldn’t live without, I feel affirmed. I feel buoyed.
I feel elated, knowing that others have relied on books to help them navigate life as I have. A love of books engenders caring and connection, conversation and conviction.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb