By Ashton Hope
A few months ago
a friend of mine introduced me
to a book one of its kind.
That particular book
was the single and only copy;
the printing had long since been stopped.
There was another novella by that author,
but it didn't intrigue me as much
as this one did.
I don't know how I did it,
but I somehow got a hold of it.
The description on the back itself made me laugh.
It had me short of breath,
my eyes in a permanent crinkle.
I opened it
and I read.
a few pages in:
nothing interesting,
just a normal book with abnormal jokes.
It was a few chapters in that I got to know why it was the only copy.
It was horrifying -
the wrongdoings that were mentioned.
The plot made me want to
cry my heart out
as the sense of disillusionment
settled in
like a cold block of ice
on naked skin.
It awakened,
almost like a primal drive,
the urge to protect
the book at all costs
as it was the only piece of literature
that was the truth.
Not even halfway through
and I wanted the book injected
into my blood.
I wanted to breathe in the book;
get a feel of the hardships,
if only a taste.
I think
somewhere in between
I started to adore it.
I wanted to keep it in my pocket
at all times
and treat it like a piece of my own.
The book never left my sight
and any time it did,
something wrapped around me
like an invisible thread,
pulling at every breath -
making my hands clammy and cold,
desperate for the warmth of the leather.
The thought of losing the book
sent me down a spiral
where I clawed at my own skin
trying to stop the ‘what-ifs’ and ‘whys’.
I wish
to be buried with it.
I wish
it remains mine for
all of eternity
unless the book itself decides
it has had enough of me
and chooses
to leave.
Until it doesn’t,
may my name
forever be joined with its.
By Ashton Hope
Absolutely beautiful
This poem describes addiction so well... I'm speechless.