The bibliophile’s idea of heaven

I’ve mentioned Jo Walton before, referring to her wonderful story of Joseph’s reaction to the birth of his immaculately-conceived son, but I’m doing it again. She’s written an essay titled The Joy of an Unfinished Series. It’s well worth reading in and of itself, but what I really liked was her poem written back in 2000:

I dreamed I went to Heaven, once, and in the bookshop there
I went, the way I always go, to R.
Even though I’ve all the Renault, even though it isn’t fair,
Even though I know there won’t be any more.
And there were six new Renaults, six new books I’ve never seen,
Six unknown books she’d written since she died,
And I picked them up and held them feeling happy as a queen,
And a voice said, “Have you looked the other side?”
“There are four new Tolkiens waiting, he could never write them fast,
There are thirty Heinleins, written at his best,
There is Piper, there’s Dunsany, there’s more Sayers here at last,
And O’Brian, and Zelazny, and the rest.”
And I staggered there in Heaven, as my arms and eyes spilled o’er,
And I said “Now where to start I just don’t know,
I am rich in wealth of Heaven’s books, here gathered on the floor,
And four hundred years of Shakespeare still to go!”

Amen, sister.

2 Comments

  1. Oh, that does sound like Heaven!! How could one ever be bored with all that marvelous reading to do?
    Please leave me a little room in the mystery and science fiction section, Linkmeister!

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