20 Problems Only Book Lovers Understand

Non-bibliophiles don't always feel your pain…but you're among friends here! We asked on Facebook and Twitter: What's a problem only book lovers understand? We got more than 1,000 amazing responses. Check out some of our favorites and share your own bookish struggles in the comments.
1. "The urge to buy books even though you still have too many books to read at home." Rie VdWarth
2. "Feeling sad for people who don't really exist." Kimberly Moniz
3. "RUNNING OUT OF SHELF SPACE!!!" Kim
4. "Getting interrupted when you are on the last few pages of a book." Sobe Daya
5. "The book hangover. When a good book finishes but you can't start a new one because you're still too immersed in the last book to move on." Meagan Lewis
6. "Wanting every book in a library section but knowing it is impossible to read all of them." Richard Azia
7. "Waiting so long for a sequel that you forget what happened in the first book." Jessica Luong
8. "When you're lying in bed and it's all cold in your room—and the hand holding the book freezes to death, even though the rest of you is warm under the blankets." Alina Marie Swan
9. "Finishing a book and having to wait a whole year to read the next in the series." Sarah Scanion
10. "Trying to keep the book dry while reading in the bath." Patricia Boland
11. "Ordering a book online and getting the book with the movie cover. A book with a movie cover just doesn't feel the same." Anna RN
12. "Not being able to read and eat lunch at the same time because you don't have a third arm." Bernadette
13. "When someone borrows your book and doesn't return it for ages!" Pallavi B
14. "Deciding. Which. Book. To. Read. First." Monique Balsamo
15. "Getting to a 'can't stop reading' spot in the book and it's 3:00am." Joan Chesley
16. "When you have a book with you, but it's not the one you wanted to read right then." Virginia Osborne
17. "Being forced to stop reading by other obligations, but choosing to ignore those obligations. Then getting in trouble." Feel Like Fangirling
18. "Packing for a trip and never being able to bring enough books." Erika Gallion
19. "Having a book fall on your face because you're reading on your back while holding the book up." Manuel Cedillo
20. And the ultimate book lovers' dilemma: "So many books, so little time." Navy Reading
Don't see your reader-specific problem? Share it with your fellow Goodreads members in the comments! Chances are you'll find someone (or many someones) who feel your book pain.
Check out more recent blogs:
7 Great Books Hitting Shelves This Week
Your Most Successful Book Club Picks
Readers to the Rescue: Your Best Book Club Tips
(Top image credit: Illustration by Quentin Blake for Roald Dahl's Matilda.)
Comments Showing 1-50 of 928 (928 new)
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Felicia
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Mar 15, 2017 06:52AM

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Thank god I'm not the only one. I thought maybe I was crazy ahah

Same here! Proud member of bookaholics not-so-anonymous. These are all real problems that we suffer from.


FAVOURITE"
this was me yesterday!! I've only ever dropped one in once. I was ashamed.


....and freaking out in the exam hall... I was actually surprised I passed some exams :P :D

For #11, I might skip buying the book if I couldn't find the one with original cover. Hunting for the used book will be better.
As for #18, just bring 1 physical book preferably mass market paperback edition and ebook/audiobook for other title.

- Wanting to continue your book but you really can't because student responsibilities and deadlines
- 1 word: READING SLUMP
- Going on goodreads to look up a book someone recommended and ending up adding 10 new books to your to read list
- NO MONEY FOR NEW BOOKS

I love my books and keeping them away from danger is foremost.


Oh, and 13, when they finally returned it, but with dog ears, food stains or worst, cracked spine. :(

I have also gotten in trouble for ignoring my responsibilities because I was too immersed in a good book. Read well past my lunch hour at work (use an egg timer now to remind me), and reading when I am supposed to be doing something else.
My first ship in the US Navy, I lost several books because my supervisor busted me reading when I was not supposed to be and tossed my book over the side into the Pacific. Thank God that I did not have a Kindle Fire back then! Not only would I have lost several, but I would have spent much more money buying books.
I love my Kindle for reading convenience, but there is something about the tactile feel of a book that some fancy electronic gizmo cannot replace. Maybe that is a book problem unique to me, but I love the smell and feel of a book that no Kindle or other e-reader can replace.

Or, you tell them about all three, and watch their eyes glaze over...



I love my books and keeping them away from danger is foremost."
I also do not put my books anywhere near the tub lol

Oh, and 13, when they finally returned it, but with dog ears, food stains or worst, cracked spine. :("
Yesss!! People don't understand that cracked spines are bad and I'm just like...... *crying in a corner* xD










- Wanting to continue your book but you really can't because student responsibilities and deadlines
- 1 word: READING SLUMP
- Going on goodreads to look up a book someone recommended and ending up adding 10 new books to your to read list
- NO MONEY FOR NEW BOOKS "
Ugh, responsibilities and other obligations getting in the way of your reading can really suck sometimes, not to mention annoying. Yeah, adding more books to your shelves than you're planning happens to me as well. EXACTLY! I'VE ALREADY BOUGHT TOO MANY!
Do Your Reading wrote: "My problem is starting too many books at the same time because I'll be in the middle of a good book but find something else that is so much more interesting that I have to start it even before I finish the current one. Needless to say my currently reading shelf is out of whack."
I've never had that problem - I don't tend to read two or three books at once because it's hard to keep track of them all, especially when you don't have loads of time to read every day. But I understand you well enough.
I relate to pretty much all the twenty problems listed above. The only thing I would like to add is ROMANCE IN REAL LIFE IS TOTALLY DIFFERENT FROM THAT IN THE FICTIONAL WORLD. REAL LIFE RELATIONSHIPS IS NEVER AS INTERESTING AS IT IS IN BOOKS. Anybody agree?

19 currently reading?! I thought I was bad with 6! I feel you though. At the end of the year last year I was at 12 currently reading. I made myself finish everything in my currently reading before I added anymore for the new year. I stuck to it, cleaned it out, and I'm back up to 6 again. But, hey... it's not 12! =D


Or, they have the last two but not the first one!


Oh, and 13, when they finally returned it, but with dog ears, food stains or worst, cracked spine. :("
Yesss!! People don't understand that cracked spin..."
Ugh! That drives me crazy when people destroy a book, especially a paperback. I watch how others read, it they fold the paperback in half, I never loan them a book.
Evil people who fold pages, eat carelessly over books, or abuse books are not favored with the privilege of borrowing books from our house library.
I also make sure when I loan a book that the person understands that I expect the book back in near the same condition as I loaned it.
I have had to purchase books again because some a-hole lost it or failed to return it because "it's only a book."
There is still one book that I cannot find a replacement because I made a mistake loaning it to someone who lost it somewhere in Iraq.

For #11, I might skip buying the book if I couldn't find the one with original cover. Hunting for the used book will be better.
As for #18, just b..."
This is me. I always have a mass market in my pocket, and my phone in the other, loaded with the iBook app, Kindle app and the Nook app, all 3 loaded with books.

- Wanting to continue your book but you really can't because student responsibilities and deadlines
- 1 word: READING SLUMP
- Going on goodreads to look up a book someone re..."
I can relate so hard to each of the problems

I WHOLEHEARTEDLY agree with that one! People who have the common interests as you do are those you tend to bond with the strongest.