The only standard we have for
judging all of our social, economic, and political
institutions and arrangements as just or unjust, as
good or bad, as better or worse, derives from our
conception of the good life for man on earth, and
from our conviction that, given certain external
conditions, it is possible for men to make good
lives for themselves by their own efforts.
Mortimer J. Adler
You know you have to read "between the lines" to
get the most out of anything. I want to persuade
you to do something equally important in the course
of your reading. I want to persuade you to write
between the lines. Unless you do, you are not
likely to do the most efficient kind of
reading.
I contend, quite bluntly, that marking up a book
is not an act of mutilation but of love. You
shouldn't mark up a book which isn't yours.
Librarians (or your friends) who lend you books
expect you to keep them clean, and you should. If
you decide that I am right about the usefulness of
marking books, you will have to buy them. Most of
the world's great books are available today, in
reprint editions.
There are two ways in which one can own a book.
The first is the property right you establish by
paying for it, just as you pay for clothes and
furniture. But this act of purchase is only the
prelude to possession. Full ownership comes only
when you have made it a part of yourself, and the
best way to make yourself a part of it is by
writing in it. An illustration may make the point
clear. You buy a beefsteak and transfer it from the
butcher's icebox to your own. But you do not own
the beefsteak in the most important sense until you
consume it and get it into your bloodstream. I am
arguing that books, too, must be absorbed in your
blood stream to do you any good.
Confusion about what it means to "own" a book
leads people to a false reverence for paper,
binding, and type -- a respect for the physical
thing -- the craft of the printer rather than the
genius of the author. They forget that it is
possible for a man to acquire the idea, to possess
the beauty, which a great book contains, without
staking his claim by pasting his bookplate inside
the cover. Having a fine library doesn't prove that
is owner has a mind enriched by books; it proves
nothing more than that he, his father, or his wife,
was rich enough to buy them.
There are three kinds of book owners. The first
has all the standard sets and best sellers --
unread, untouched. (This deluded individual owns
woodpulp and ink, not books.) The second has a
great many books -- a few of them read through,
most of them dipped into, but all of them as clean
and shiny as the day they were bought. (This person
would probably like to make books his own, but is
restrained by a false respect for their physical
appearance.) The third has a few books or many --
every one of them dog-eared and dilapidated, shaken
and loosened by continual use, marked and scribbled
in from front to back. (This man owns books.)
Is it false respect, you may ask, to preserve
intact and unblemished a beautifully printed book,
an elegantly bound edition? Of course not. I'd no
more scribble all over a first edition of 'Paradise
Lost' than I'd give my baby a set of crayons and an
original Rembrandt. I wouldn't mark up a painting
or a statue. Its soul, so to speak, is inseparable
from its body. And the beauty of a rare edition or
of a richly manufactured volume is like that of a
painting or a statue.
But the soul of a book "can" be separate from
its body. A book is more like the score of a piece
of music than it is like a painting. No great
musician confuses a symphony with the printed
sheets of music. Arturo Toscanini reveres Brahms,
but Toscanini's score of the G minor Symphony is so
thoroughly marked up that no one but the maestro
himself can read it. The reason why a great
conductor makes notations on his musical scores --
marks them up again and again each time he returns
to study them--is the reason why you should mark
your books. If your respect for magnificent binding
or typography gets in the way, buy yourself a cheap
edition and pay your respects to the author.
Why is marking up a book indispensable to
reading? First, it keeps you awake. (And I don't
mean merely conscious; I mean awake.) In the second
place; reading, if it is active, is thinking, and
thinking tends to express itself in words, spoken
or written. The marked book is usually the
thought-through book. Finally, writing helps you
remember the thoughts you had, or the thoughts the
author expressed. Let me develop these three
points.
If reading is to accomplish anything more than
passing time, it must be active. You can't let your
eyes glide across the lines of a book and come up
with an understanding of what you have read. Now an
ordinary piece of light fiction, like, say, "Gone
With the Wind," doesn't require the most active
kind of reading. The books you read for pleasure
can be read in a state of relaxation, and nothing
is lost. But a great book, rich in ideas and
beauty, a book that raises and tries to answer
great fundamental questions, demands the most
active reading of which you are capable. You don't
absorb the ideas of John Dewey the way you absorb
the crooning of Mr. Vallee. You have reach for
them. That you cannot do while you're asleep.
If, when you've finished reading a book, the
pages are filled with your notes, you know that you
read actively. The most famous "active" reader of
great books I know is President Hutchins, of the
University of Chicago. He also has the hardest
schedule of business activities of any man I know.
He invariably reads with a pencil, and sometimes,
when he picks up a book and pencil in the evening,
he finds himself, instead of making intelligent
notes, drawing what he calls 'caviar factories' on
the margins. When that happens, he puts the book
down. He knows he's too tired to read, and he's
just wasting time.
But, you may ask, why is writing necessary?
Well, the physical act of writing, with your own
hand, brings words and sentences more sharply
before your mind and preserves them better in your
memory. To set down your reaction to important
words and sentences you have read, and the
questions they have raised in your mind, is to
preserve those reactions and sharpen those
questions.
Even if you wrote on a scratch pad, and threw
the paper away when you had finished writing, your
grasp of the book would be surer. But you don't
have to throw the paper away. The margins (top and
bottom, and well as side), the end-papers, the very
space between the lines, are all available. They
aren't sacred. And, best of all, your marks and
notes become an integral part of the book and stay
there forever. You can pick up the book the
following week or year, and there are all your
points of agreement, disagreement, doubt, and
inquiry. It's like resuming an interrupted
conversation with the advantage of being able to
pick up where you left off.
And that is exactly what reading a book should
be: a conversation between you and the author.
Presumably he knows more about the subject than you
do; naturally, you'll have the proper humility as
you approach him. But don't let anybody tell you
that a reader is supposed to be solely on the
receiving end. Understanding is a two-way
operation; learning doesn't consist in being an
empty receptacle. The learner has to question
himself and question the teacher. He even has to
argue with the teacher, once he understands what
the teacher is saying. And marking a book is
literally an expression of differences, or
agreements of opinion, with the author.
There are all kinds of devices for marking a
book intelligently and fruitfully. Here's the way I
do it:
Underlining (or highlighting): of
major points, of important or forceful
statements.
Vertical lines at the margin: to
emphasize a statement already underlined.
Star, asterisk, or other doo-dad at the
margin: to be used sparingly, to emphasize
the ten or twenty most important statements in
the book. (You may want to fold the bottom comer
of each page on which you use such marks. It
won't hurt the sturdy paper on which most modern
books are printed, and you will be able take the
book off the shelf at any time and, by opening
it at the folded-corner page, refresh your
recollection of the book.)
Numbers in the margin: to indicate
the sequence of points the author makes in
developing a single argument.
Numbers of other pages in the margin:
to indicate where else in the book the author
made points relevant to the point marked; to tie
up the ideas in a book, which, though they may
be separated by many pages, belong
together.
Circling or highlighting of key words or
phrases.
Writing in the margin, or at the top or
bottom of the page, for the sake of:
recording questions (and perhaps answers) which
a passage raised in your mind; reducing a
complicated discussion to a simple statement;
recording the sequence of major points right
through the books. I use the end-papers at the
back of the book to make a personal index of the
author's points in the order of their
appearance.
The front end-papers are to me the most
important. Some people reserve them for a fancy
bookplate. I reserve them for fancy thinking. After
I have finished reading the book and making my
personal index on the back end-papers, I turn to
the front and try to outline the book, not page by
page or point by point (I've already done that at
the back), but as an integrated structure, with a
basic unity and an order of parts. This outline is,
to me, the measure of my understanding of the
work.
If you're a die-hard anti-book-marker, you may
object that the margins, the space between the
lines, and the end-papers don't give you room
enough. All right. How about using a scratch pad
slightly smaller than the page-size of the book --
so that the edges of the sheets won't protrude?
Make your index, outlines and even your notes on
the pad, and then insert these sheets permanently
inside the front and back covers of the book.
Or, you may say that this business of marking
books is going to slow up your reading. It probably
will. That's one of the reasons for doing it. Most
of us have been taken in by the notion that speed
of reading is a measure of our intelligence. There
is no such thing as the right speed for intelligent
reading. Some things should be read quickly and
effortlessly and some should be read slowly and
even laboriously. The sign of intelligence in
reading is the ability to read different things
differently according to their worth. In the case
of good books, the point is not to see how many of
them you can get through, but rather how many can
get through you -- how many you can make your own.
A few friends are better than a thousand
acquaintances. If this be your aim, as it should
be, you will not be impatient if it takes more time
and effort to read a great book than it does a
newspaper.
You may have one final objection to marking
books. You can't lend them to your friends because
nobody else can read them without being distracted
by your notes. Furthermore, you won't want to lend
them because a marked copy is kind of intellectual
diary, and lending it is almost like giving your
mind away.
If your friend wishes to read your Plutarch's
Lives, Shakespeare, or The Federalist
Papers, tell him gently but firmly, to buy a
copy. You will lend him your car or your coat --
but your books are as much a part of you as your
head or your heart.
Want to know more about reading and marking
books?