My forays into Impressionist painting for my novel The Swan Thieves show up as a splash of artists' journals and letters and a cliff of art books. My newly published novel, The Shadow Land, left behind a wall of works on East European communism and Bulgaria - a rare library in itself.
I seldom look back at these collections; instead, I prefer two shelves that hold signed works by writer friends.
Equally precious to me is a long row of books I loved as a child: Treasure Island, The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, The Secret Garden, The Hobbit, Little Women, Eight Cousins, The Good Master.
And there are dozens of volumes - crumbling, elegantly 19th century - that I inherited from my grandmother, who inherited them from her grandmother, long-forgotten "ladies' novels", Montaigne's Essays, a Latin grammar.
I've postponed mentioning one important fact. Apart from collections, reference works and a few classics, I keep most books because I actually haven't read them yet. Once I read a book, unless it's something rare, I tend to pass it to the right friend or donate it to the library. This means reading is the only cure for my condition. I look forward to convalescence.
Lowdown:
Author Elizabeth Kostova visits Auckland, Wellington and Christchurch from tomorrow until Thursday.