The Threepenny Review

Table Talk

THE HOUSE I grew up in was full of books, even though hardly anyone in the house read books. My father was a teacher in a state school, and my mother had a full-time job bringing up their six children. To supplement my father’s meager salary, my parents would spend their evenings binding books.

This was a time when people bought books in separate installments, or fascicles, at the village store, and when they had the complete set, they would return them so that they could be made into books. Each Friday, my father would collect these fascicles in his Renault 4 and take them home to be worked on during the week, at the same time delivering the books that he and my mother had bound the previous week. I can still remember the cold, rickety workshop my father had built in the backyard. I can smell the paste used to attach the endpapers, the thin carpenter’s glue, the sheets of fake leather for lining the boards, the gold leaf with which they decorated the spines. I remember my mother sitting at the sewing frame—also home-made. She would stretch inch-wide strips of cloth between the upper part of the frame and its base, then stitch the fascicles onto the cloth. The nylon thread she used became, for us, a byword for toughness. It was impossible to break, and when she sewed, she had to wear leather protectors. Finger cots, they were called, and, again, these were home-made.

When my

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Threepenny Review

The Threepenny Review8 min read
The Self, Wherever She Is
Grand Tour by Elisa Gonzalez. Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 2023, $26.00 cloth. “WE MEET no Stranger but Ourself”: Emily Dickinson's haunting pronouncement on the plight of the individual consciousness may be cited less often than the bit about her head f
The Threepenny Review2 min read
D'Aulaires on My Grandmother's Deck
In D'Aulaires’ Book of Greek Myths, Zeus was always marrying different nymphs, that's what it said, married, no mention of abduct or rape or even forcible kiss. I wanted to marry Zeus. Also cow-stealing Hermes, also Theseus who refused the brigand on
The Threepenny Review12 min read
The Genius
IN THE 1940s, the only first-rate filmmakers who worked steadily and at their best in Hollywood were Orson Welles, John Huston, Billy Wilder, Alfred Hitchcock, Vincente Minnelli, and Preston Sturges. All of them began to turn out movies in Hollywood

Related Books & Audiobooks