The other morning I was drinking coffee, minding my own business, when a message popped up on my computer screen — a friend had sent me a link to an ad for books. These weren't just any books, but "real authentic books" of "varying colors" that were "tastefully weathered"; books, in other words, not meant to be read but meant to be used as decoration.
For $65, the ad proclaimed, the buyer will receive between eight and 10 books weighing in at somewhere between 11 and 19 pounds. Titles? Not important. Authors? Not important. Subjects? Not important. These are "authentic books" and that's all you need to know.
That link led me to other links and I was soon down a rabbit hole — sites that sell books by the yard, by the pound or by the color (call before ordering if you have "specific color needs"); minimalist sites that sell only white, beige or black books; sites that sell books in lots of green, or red, or, for the daring, "mixed-color vintage." Like zinnias!
Comments from happy customers left me stunned. One wrote: "Love these books, they definitely added good pizazz to our study!" Another was happy that, serendipitously, the books she had been sent matched her bedroom's gold decor.
Another said: "Needed some shelf filler and these are perfect!"
It was that last comment that made me shut my laptop in despair. Books as "shelf filler." That hurts.
I've written here before about the concept of decorating by covering every book in glossy white paper (for that clean, matching look) or grouping books by color, or turning the books spine-in on the shelf.
Somehow, weird as they are, all of those concepts seem explainable to me — books with the spines turned in or wrapped in paper are no longer books; they have become anonymous design elements.