I'd already found out that one of the secrets to happiness was never loan your books. But I loaned it anyway. We were all of us poor and living on ideas, stumbling home late to basement apartments, talking to ourselves. What did we own except books and debt? When the time came we could move it all in the trunk of a car. Tom knew what a book was worth—he brought it back a week later, seemingly unhandled, just a little looser in the spine, a trade paper edition of The Death of Artemio Cruz, required reading for a course in postmodernism we were suffering through. The book's trashed now, boxed up and buried in the garage with a hundred other things I can't throw away. When I moved back south I loaned it again to a girl I'd just met. At some party I'd said it was the best novel since Absalom, Absalom!, which may have been true, but mostly I was trying to impress her, and convince myself, still testing all I'd been told about how the matter of a book is best kept separate from, well, matter. Months later it turned up on my front steps without comment, the cover torn in two places, the dog-eared pages of self-conscious prose stuck together with dark, rich chocolate.
From Paper Anniversary, published by University of Pittsburgh Press. Copyright © 2011 by Bobby C. Rogers. Used by permission of the publisher. All rights reserved.