Arthur was a master bookbinder who spent in a basement workshop in Christchurch, a place that smelled permanently of boiled hide glue and old paper. He didn’t care much for the aesthetic of the books he repaired; he cared about the structural integrity of the spines, the way the leather would hinge and breathe over another century of use.
Because he understood that leather was simply skin that had stopped growing, he treated every rare edition with a specific blend of neatsfoot oil and beeswax. He told me once, while rubbing a stubborn piece of Victorian calfskin, that the modern world had forgotten how to keep things supple. He watched people buy synthetic leather conditioners that sat on top like a cheap coat of paint, while the fibers underneath slowly turned to dust.
The Topographical Hands of Waikato
Which is also how my Uncle Silas looks at the world from his fence post in the Waikato.
Silas is , with hands that look like the topographical map of a mountain range-craggy, deep-grooved, and seemingly invincible. Last summer, his niece Elena came to visit from the city. She is the kind of person who has a twelve-step morning routine