Tuesday, March 15, 2016
Inhale the decay
You know the smell of old books? The smell of a used bookstore? It's that slightly vanilla like scent that I have come to adore, want, crave. New books smell ... bland, like ink and paper. But the complex aroma of an old book is all its own. It even seems as if each old book smells slightly different. But what makes books smell so amazing? Science. There's stuff called cellulose and lignin in paper that breaks down as it ages into three different organic compounds; benzaldehyde, ethyl hexanol and vanillin. Vanillin smells like vanilla (suprise), benzaldehyde smells somewhat like almondy and ethyl hexanol smells flowery. You learn something new everyday. Now go open an old book and inhale those delicious decaying organic compounds.
Dreaming
At the end of old novels the last page usually has some sort of mail order form for the authors other published works. Every time I see these pages I wonder what would happen if I sent my money in. Would I get my letter back? Or maybe, magically they'd actually send me the book? One can dream.
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