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Angelus News | July 2, 2021 | Vol. 6 No. 13

On the cover: For a Christian, how important is taking care of the mind? This year’s “Books Issue” has a few ideas. On Page 10, Mike Aquilina interviews Catholic convert and writer Zena Hitz on her new book about “the pleasures of the intellectual life.” On Page 14, Angelus contributors share their picks for the best new books of the pandemic. And on Page 18, Elise Italiano Ureneck reviews a groundbreaking new book by a scholar with autism who sees his condition as an intellectual gift from God.

On the cover: For a Christian, how important is taking care of the mind? This year’s “Books Issue” has a few ideas. On Page 10, Mike Aquilina interviews Catholic convert and writer Zena Hitz on her new book about “the pleasures of the intellectual life.” On Page 14, Angelus contributors share their picks for the best new books of the pandemic. And on Page 18, Elise Italiano Ureneck reviews a groundbreaking new book by a scholar with autism who sees his condition as an intellectual gift from God.

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DESIRE LINES<br />

HEATHER KING<br />

A place to soften solitude<br />

The Los Angeles Central Library. | PERUPHOTAR /SHUTTERSTOCK<br />

For those of us who can’t afford to<br />

buy all of the books we read, the<br />

library is as essential as a grocery<br />

store. We need books to remind us how<br />

deeply we are connected. We need<br />

books because we know we are going to<br />

die. Bewildered, alone, or despairing,<br />

we still have Anne Frank, Ivan Ilyich,<br />

Gregor Samsa.<br />

Susan Orlean, a New York writer and<br />

author of the best-selling book “The<br />

Orchid Thief,” had frequented her<br />

local library as a kid. As an adult, living<br />

in New York City, she got into the<br />

habit of buying her own books.<br />

In 2011, however, her husband<br />

accepted a job in LA. They moved to<br />

the Valley and one of her 6-year-old<br />

son’s first assignments was to interview<br />

someone who worked for the city.<br />

Orlean suggested a public library, so<br />

the two of them went to the Bertram<br />

Woods branch.<br />

Entering a library again after all those<br />

years flooded Orlean with sensory<br />

memories. Everything was the same,<br />

she realized: the “creak and groan<br />

of the book carts,” the soft sound of<br />

pencils on paper, the “muffled murmuring”<br />

of the patrons, the raggedy<br />

community bulletin board.<br />

“It wasn’t that time stopped in the<br />

library. It was as if it were captured<br />

here, collected here, and in all libraries<br />

— and not only my time, my life, but<br />

all human time as well. In the library,<br />

time is dammed up — not just stopped<br />

but saved. The library is a gathering<br />

pool of narratives and of the people<br />

who come to find them. It is where we<br />

can glimpse immortality; in the library,<br />

we can live forever.”<br />

A door opened. “The Library Book”<br />

(Simon & Schuster, $<strong>13</strong>.69) is the<br />

fruit of what happened when Orlean<br />

stepped through it.<br />

The book is ostensibly about the fire<br />

that ravaged the Central Library on<br />

April 29, 1986. A million books were<br />

damaged or destroyed. Irreplaceable<br />

artifacts were reduced to ash. The arsonist<br />

— if there was an arsonist — has<br />

never been found, though for years a<br />

would-be actor and fabulist Harry Peak<br />

30 • ANGELUS • <strong>July</strong> 2, <strong>2021</strong>

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