I collect boring books, which probably even sounds boring. I assure you it’s not. By “boring books” I don’t mean boring in the sense that an out-of-date psychology textbook or a 900-page history of dairy farming in the Hebrides is boring. Books like those, with their inherently limited readerships, aren’t aiming to be anything other than boring; they wear their boringness on their sleeves. They are obviously boring. What I am after are books that are uniquely, exquisitely, profoundly boring — books whose boringness intrigues, if that is not a contradiction in terms.