Books to Bury Me With: Courtenay Schembri Gray

The book I’d want to take with me to the grave:
The Collected Poems of Sylvia Plath.
 
The first book that hit me like a ton of bricks:
Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov.
 
The book that’s seen more of my tears, coffee stains, and cigarette burns:
I’m going to go with Plath’s poems again. That woman and I are connected on a spiritual level.
 
The book that shook my world like a goddamn hurricane:
The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas.
 
The book I wish I’d discovered when my liver was still intact:
I hope my liver is still intact, but… Story of the Eye by Georges Bataille.
 
The book I’d shove into everyone’s hands if I were king of the world:
Other than Homer’s Odyssey and Illiad, the collected works of Shakespeare shapes our world.
 
The book that nearly drove me to madness:
Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck. It was our set text for GCSE, and if I never have to see that book again, I will be immensely happy.
 
The book I can’t keep my hands off of, no matter how many times I’ve read it:
The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath. If it’s not her poems, it’s her novel. 
 
The book I’d hide in the back of my closet, pretending I’m too highbrow for it:
Northanger Abbey by Jane Austen. She almost seems too twee, but I have a marginal interest. 
 
The book that left a scar I wish I could forget:
I don’t get scarred by books; I am healed.
 
The author who made me think, "Now that’s a soul in torment":
The Melancholy Death of Oyster Boy & Other Stories by Tim Burton. I found it when I was seven years old, and up until then, I hadn’t found anyone who loves the macabre like I do.
 
The book I’d get a tattoo of if I had the nerve:
From Plath’s poem Years in her collected works, she wrote: “In your vacuous black / Stars stuck all over, bright stupid confetti.” I am drawn to colourful stars, but once / if they darken, I escape with my light intact."
 
The book that made me question everything I thought I knew:
Roadside Picnic by Boris and Arkady Strugatsky. What a phenomenal book!
 
The book that’s so damn good I’d never loan it out:
My copies of Sylvia Plath are very precious to me—including my first edition of Johnny Panic & the Bible of Dreams. 
 
The book that’s been my companion through the darkest nights:
I have fallen asleep to the sweet crooning of Jeremy Irons narrating Nabakov’s Lolita. 
 
The book I’d throw in someone’s face during a heated argument:
The Collected Poems of W. B. Yeats. God forbid the magic transfers, quelling the bulbous tension. 
 
The book that reminds me of a lost love or regret:
Fata Morgana by William Kotzwinkle. 
 
The book I wish I could have written, but know I never could:
I don’t wish for that.
 
The book that makes me want to drink myself into oblivion:
Can you read Dubliners by James Joyce without a drink? 
 
The book that’s been my refuge from the world’s cruelty:
A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens: the perfect morality test, wrapped up in star-paper.

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