From E.M. Forster, “A Book that Influenced Me,” collected in Two Cheers for Democracy (1951):
I suggest that the only books that influence us are those for which we are ready, and which have gone a little farther down our particular path than we have yet got ourselves.
I spotted a few words of this sentence on the band that runs across the bookshelves of Niles Crane’s library.
[“Sharing Kirby,” November 20, 2001. Click for a larger view.]
That’s Kirby Gardner (Brian Klugman) on the ladder, son of onetime high-school goddess and Frasier crush Lana Gardner, née Lynley (Jean Smart).
No disrespect to the actor, but I think
Frasier jumped at least a baby shark with the introduction of Kirby. Here he’s rearranging Niles’s library, pausing now and then to read and eat Cheetos. (Don’t worry: he’s wearing gloves.) Why is Kirby working for Niles? Because Frasier, claiming to feel guilty about not getting Kirby an internship at KACL, has talked Niles into hiring the lad. In truth Frasier is getting revenge for Niles’s not sharing a rare wine find. Kirby is no prize:
Kirby: I fudged a little bit on my job history.
Frasier: So you never actually worked at NASA.
Kirby : Or Burger King!
The book that influenced Forster: Samuel Butler’s
Erewhon.
[Lots of English majors in those writers’ rooms.]