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Library Pruning

Flashforward to finally getting organized through goodreads. Also keeping track of how fast I'm reading. The # of books/life expectancy equation, not to mention space concerns, meant pruning was in order.
Mostly a matter of looking at how much I liked a book, am I likely to read it again, and is there any other special attachment to it (signed edition, special gifts, rare books, etc.)
That, and I found two local used book shops that will pay cash for books, not just issue credit. Though the credit has been nice, too.
Once this would have been very hard. But if I'm not going to read or appreciate them in some way, I figure it's best that someone else be given a chance. Hope someone enjoys the Lovejoy novels as much as I did! (Among so many others.)






I buy a lot of books at FOL book sales, and I love to flip through each one and look for messages written on the inside, or forgotten bookmarks. I have a book of T.S. Eliot poems with a love letter written on the last page. These books always seem very special to me, and I can't imagine ever getting rid of them. I'm a little obsessive.
My husband brought home two new bookcases for me a few days ago. He's the perfect enabler :)




So I don't have a lot of special collector's editions (the exception being The Tales of Beedle the Bard), or signatures, or anything like that.
I do have a few which have a sentimental attachment, though, which I'm not likely to get rid of.
That said, I do, sometimes, have a hard time deciding on whether to keep some books. For me, it's more a matter of deciding whether I'm likely to ever reread them again. For some it's obvious, one way or the other, but, for some - the ones I'm sort of lukewarm about - I figure I probably won't reread them, but there's always that slim chance I'll get a hankering somewhere down the line, and then regret having gotten rid of them.
Of course, I could always just get them from the library or buy them again, should that happen, but it makes me hesitant all the same.
Recently, though, it's been less a deliberation about what books to get rid of but, rather, which books to buy and which to get from the library. I've been getting a lot from the library lately, not wanting to spend money on books I'm not sure I'll enjoy and/or want to keep.
This has saved me money and, also, lessened the burden of having to decide which books to keep and which to get rid of. Win-win. ;)

I wanted to KILL HIM. OMG. I couldn't be around him because I wanted to hit him so bad. He kept following me around looking sad cause I'm normally playing with him.
But I was soooo angry I could barely talk.

Yeah, that's how I felt.
He doesn't do this a lot...and I've always had books around him. I'm not sure what to do. He's almost two. He's only don't this one other time but still...


I wanted to KILL HIM. OMG. I couldn't be around him because I wanted to hit him so bad. He kept following me around looking sad..."
Oooh no! MrsJ's two loves warring with one another. ;) Seriously, I feel for you. I had one dog that was prone to book chewing as a puppy, but thankfully, grew out of it. However, parrots are horrible paper chewers, and I have more than a couple with neat little "V" chunks taken out of the cover.
I do have a few duplicates on my shelves. I've noticed paperbacks don't keep as well, so if I really love a book, I seek it out in hardcover. Then I can lend the paperback and not care if it's returned.

;-)
--------
Traci, I haven't in over 40 years, so it's unlikely to happen.
:-)


YES! And he kept giving me these sad puppy faces. I would start to feel guilty but then look at the books in my hand and get mad all over again. !!
According to the book I have on his breed...ignoring is supposed to work really well but I'm too softhearted and he's too spoiled.

*snicker*
Soooo surprised. ;)


When we put our libraries together over 30 years ago, we had a lot of duplicates. It's one reason we got together, so it gives us a warm fuzzy to peruse them together. We've done that with the kids all their lives, too. None of us gets that from a computer directory.


That is so sweet!


and since I have added 1 smaller bookcase and a lot more books. I need to go around the house and make sure I've gathered them all up, lol.
I can do both ereaders (I have two) and paper books. I love them both! I keep a library in my pocket wherever I go. :-D And yes, I do keep my ereader in my purse when I go out with friends...just in case, lol.

This morning as I was (supposed) to be ..."Which brings me back to library pruning: How hard or easy do you find it to give away books. This includes extra copies, books you've read once and have no real plans to re-read.
Moving over the years, not only to different houses, but different cities and sometimes even continents forced me to give up a lot of books over the years. Some I regret giving away now.
Even though I have finally settled, this experience taught me whenever possible, to only buy books that I absolutely love and am going to re-read multiple times.
Now I try to get most of my books from the library whenever possible.

Your shelves are a LOT cleaner looking than mine. I have books stacked on top of others plus papers in between. Interesting facts or author's book lists are often printed out & filed (stuffed) in with the books. They're a nightmare to dust & we have a lot of that with 6 dogs & 2 cats in the house, not to mention the barn & shop dust. I usually just use a vacuum cleaner. Better Homes & Gardens will never make our place a stop on their tour.
;-)


Your shelves are a LOT cleaner looking than mine. I have books stacked on top of ot..."
Ahhh! See that pic was taken before. It's a hot mess right now, lol. I have books everywhere a as I try to rearrange them.

yes, she was sclose to getting murdered that day!
She recently ate the cover off Last Argument of Kings, which got her in a lot of trouble too. However, she usually sticks to her toys and dogbones so I am overall pretty grateful.

yes, she was sclose to getting murdered that day!
She recently ate the cover off Last Argument of Kings, which got her in a lot of trouble t..."
O_O
OMG I would have lost it. Benji has gotten the toes of my black flats and he destroyed our real estate agent's favorite designer pumps.



or on Project Gutenberg. http://www.gutenberg.org/ :)

The cost of some of the books, even paperbacks, that I'd love to see digitized is crazy. Many paperbacks from the mid-1900's can go for $30 or more. I spent years trying to find an affordable copy of Exorcisms & Ecstasies for my son. That's a hardback from the 90's & I kept seeing it for $200. I got my copy for $5 new at a remainder store not long after it came out, but paid $75 for a copy for my son a decade later. My cousin & I were looking for some books by Lippincott the other day & most copies were over $100 - those are YA animal stories.
Yes, I love Calibre, but I don't keep all my ebooks in it, just the ones I keep on the ereader. I use it for conversion & I store the rest as files in directories sorted by name. The Gutenbergs, Wikis, and miscellaneous other places I find articles & stories have just added up over the years.
Even if I did keep them all in a program, that's not the same as real books in the shelves. Several of us can browse those together & there are notes, book lists, maps, & more stuck in between the books. It's a very homey hodge-podge of bright colors & fond memories. The cold logic of a computer wouldn't do it any favors.
As for linking in the cover that you like, then you're changing the edition. That's not always a big deal, but sometimes it's a huge one, so you should be careful. Different editions of A Clockwork Orange have completely different endings. Ray Bradbury said in his afterword of Fahrenheit 451 that he found 75 edits done to the book before he restored it for the edition I listened to. That sort of thing happens more often than you'd think & is something I keep notes on for some books.
Cover art can easily be scanned or found online. I have directories full of some of it, too. One of my favorite artists is Frank Frazetta and decent pictures of his originals are available on his web site. The computer does shine there. I can see the entire painting that was used for a cover & keep a copy with both the artist & the author's books that it was used on, regardless of how it was cropped for the cover. I'd love to buy one of his paintings, but the last one I saw on sale started at more than I paid for my farm - just a wee bit out of my price range.
;-)
Right now we're discussing James Warhola's cover for A Night in the Lonesome October in the Beyond Reality group:
http://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/1...
He's the nephew of Andy Warhol & did a fabulous job complementing Zelazny's cryptic prose. I edited the picture to put numbers on the characters & posted it for everyone to see. Now we're all trying to figure it out. Lots of fun.

I don't think there's a problem as long as you don't distribute it.
Sounds like a whole lot of work though, and as you pointed out wont turn out so well for your poor paper copy.

Having said all that - cool library, MrsJ. Much nicer to look at than wallpaper.

:)
The books I'm reading now, the Iron Druid Chronicles, are a fun urban fantasy. They're not real keepers, so I'm reading them on my ereader & that's fine.

:)
The books I'm reading now, the Iron Druid Chronicles, are a fun urban..."
Firstly, What do ya think of the Iron Druid books, ive just finished the first one, and I can't help but feel like they are Dresden Files books with a different cast lol even down to the Star wars pop culture references.
and secondly, onto the top of the post, books are never ever allowed to leave my house unless its my current read and its accompanying me to work... or anywhere else I go really... suggesting it is almost enough for me to ask that person to leave my house :P full shelves, books in piles in wardrobes, under the bed, on the floor neatly stacked..... im working my way up to covering a whole room in bookshevles to accommodate them all, likely the living room as I dont think the other rooms are big enough :P


they will scan and digitize your books for you. But they destroy the book in the process. I have a really old cookbook that I want to get scanned but I'm scared because the book is older than me...
IIRC it's not illegal to make your own digital copy of any work you legally own ("format shifting"). The illegal part is distributing the digital copy.
With that being said...my preferred format is print. I'm starting to think of it as a luxury now but I still love it.

they will scan and digitize your books for you. But they destroy the book in the process. I have a really old cookbook that I want to get sc..."
Yeh I agree, can seem like a bit of a luxury with how much cheaper buying Ebooks etc is these days, but I can't help feeling you lose some of the joy of owning a book that way so still buy all mine in paper or hardback where possible.


Books mentioned in this topic
Deathworld 1 (other topics)The Warded Man (other topics)
Hounded (other topics)
The Lies of Locke Lamora (other topics)
The Blade Itself (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Robert E. Howard (other topics)Agatha Christie (other topics)
Lord Dunsany (other topics)
Brandon Sanderson (other topics)
Simon R. Green (other topics)
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This morning as I was (supposed) to be getting ready for work...I found myself in my library fiddling with my books.
Yes, I was a few minutes late today, lol.
My mom is coming to visit this weekend and I started a pile of books to give to her. It's about 7 books so far but I still have some poking around to do. I know that several of the books I'm giving mom I've planned to give away before...and it never happened.
Reading the thread referenced above, I know I think of myself as
I have been known to pick up books from the ground...and anywhere else I can find them. I am a genre reader...but I'll read the back of a cereal box if there's nothing else around.
Which brings me back to library pruning: How hard or easy do you find it to give away books. This includes extra copies, books you've read once and have no real plans to re-read.