The words on the fluorescent pink sign call to me. The address and hand-drawn arrow guide me. I turn, pull into a cul de sac, and there it isโa single-family home with innards splayed out on lawn and driveway.
Shoppers mill around, mulling over chairs, small appliances and bright plastic baby gear. Jackpot! I might find clothes for an adorable and fastest-growing toddler I know.
Sure enough, several boxes and bags of clothes from 2T to 4T.
โHow much?โ I ask, holding up a denim skirt.
โA quarter.โ
Clearly my kind of people. Iโm no fan of yard sales where parents want to recover a hefty fraction of pricey gear: โI paid $300 for that Donna Karan baby bib. How about $30?โ
I gather T-shirts, shorts and itty swimsuit.
Then I dig into a pile of books. People reveal much with their discarded reading materialsโpristine untouched Bibles, dog-earred South Beach Diet cookbooks and worn copies of Tolstoyโs War and Peace.
We are what we read. When Iโm not bleeding quarters at yard sales, Iโm compiling a list of around 120 books to plow through as I complete my doctoral degree in English. The plan: Read these books over the next year and complete written and oral comprehensive exams on material therein.
Then I need only to write my own book (aka dissertation) and students can call me Dr. Deidre.
Crafting the reading list seems tricky. For tips, I visited my adviser Scott Slovic, a professor in the Literature & Environment program. Slovicโs work in the literature and environment arena earns him international recognition. Heโs also a bona fide bibliophile. Piles of books overflow his office shelves and desk onto the floor.
Slovic suggested that I look at what other students are reading. Then I can create a list that reflects my own interests and goals. Iโm thinking about combining known nature writers like Thoreau and Ed Abbey with more obscure works like John Clarkโs The Anarchist Moment: Reflections on Culture, Nature and Power and pop culture novels like Chuck Palahniukโs Invisible Monsters.
Hopefully, my eclectic interests will meld into a coherent dissertation on what scholars can learn by analyzing the intersections of nature and culture in mass media.
A taste for turning aesthetic chaos into coherency runs in my family. โI buy things I like, things that appeal to me,โ my mom says of her home decor, โand because I like them, they go together.โ
While I peruse the books at my neighborโs yard sale, I make a curious observation. One of the books selling for 25 cents is on my reading listโand several would be at home there. Alison Hawthorne Demingโs Writing the Sacred into the Real is piled atop Barry Lopezโs Crossing Open Ground and Gary Paul Nabhanโs Cross-Pollination: The Marriage of Science and Poetry.
The titles feel oddly familiar.
โAre these books from a UNR class?โ I ask the woman taking my money.
โI was an English major.โ
โYou took a class with Scott Slovic?โ
โHowโd you know?โ
I shrug. Lucky guess.
Iโm still thinking about this at home as I picked up one 25-cent find, a marked-up copy of E.O. Wilsonโs Consilience: The Unity of Knowledge. In the book, the biologist and Pulitzer Prize-winning author talks about the discovery of universal order, about a โsearch for objective reality over revelation [as] another way of satisfying religious hunger.โ
โWhen we have unified enough certain knowledge,โ Wilson proposes, โwe will understand who we are and why we are here.โ
Maybe heโs right. Maybe not. I know one thing for sureโI donโt plan to tell my adviser that a former student was selling Barry Lopez at a yard sale for a quarter.
