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What do you do with books you own after you've read them?
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A few years ago I cleaned through my books and the bookshelves in the family room and donated them all to a local charity, VNSA (used to be the Visiting Nurse Service Auxiliary; now, the Volunteer Nonprofit Service Association), that holds a huge, once-a-year book sale. Monies benefit several local nonprofit organizations.
Since then, I've been good about bagging up what I've read, but have not been good about getting them out (YET, I swear!). My plan is to first take them to used book stores for cash or credit (to get more books!!). What they don't take will either go to the local libraries that support my habit or to the VNSA.
It's one thing about physical editions that make them superior to eDitions in my eyes. Right now, eDitions cannot be passed along when they've served their purpose. You may be able to lend the file, but you can't donate it to a library. I have several e-reader apps, but 99% of what I have access to (because one does not own eDitions) are freebies.


I'm quite sick of having so many books. I hate dusting them, and I’m tired of the clutter. I've given away books to the library over the last couple of years, but I've kept most to save for my kids, use with my kids who are still homeschooling, or lend to fellow homeschoolers. My husband hasn’t been willing to part with many of his own.
When items are donated to my local public libraries, librarians look over the donations and pick out any they want to add to the library's collection, and they give the rest to Friends of the Library (same thing with magazines, CD's, and DVD's). They also regularly cull items from the system that haven’t been checked out in a certain amount of time. That has to be done because they are constantly buying so many new items. My county's public library system has two branches, and each branch has an area set aside for Friends of the Library items for sale; if a patron wants an item, he takes it to the check-out desk to pay for it. Between the two branches, the Friends of the Library has had almost $32,000 in sales just this year. There is also an annual (semi-annual until last year) book sale at a different location, which brings in quite a lot of money. The one last month brought in nearly $15,000. My library system is a combined city/county system. Also, residents from the upper part of a neighboring county use my county’s library system, because it’s much closer than their county’s nearest library. Therefore, that county pays my county a large sum to allow its residents to use my county’s library (and that’s the way the residents want it). My community is very supportive of our library system. I read or was told by a librarian that while most other libraries in the country have received less money the past few years, our library system has received more.
My library buys a lot of ebooks and eaudios. It also has emagazines, emusic, and streaming video. It regularly wins awards for its services to patrons. When I asked a library employee why the library couldn’t get a book from a series in ebook version when the library had all the others in ebook and I asked about the costs of ebooks, I was told pretty much the same things as previous commenters about the special ebook policies and prices for libraries. So, I’m surprised that the Friends of the Library usually buys 150-250 ebooks per month, in addition to buying other electronic items, buying other items like hardcover books and DVD’s, and paying for various library programs. I feel very blessed to have a library that is able to offer so much to its patrons.
I buy books from the library book sales sometimes, and I sometimes donate the items back when I’m finished with them. I love ebooks (no dusting or clutter), but I don’t like to buy them. I’ve gotten more than 2000 free ebooks, since I daily check internet sites which include links to free ebooks. I’ve only bought two ebooks, and both of them were just 99 cents. I still check out ebooks from the public library, though.

I make a simple decision: Would I read this book again someday? If yes, it stays. If not, I sell or donate it. More often than not they stay because I am very particular when I make a purchase and usually end up with something to my liking. Some books are so memorable and fun that I will want to experience them again, and others I will probably forget completely...in twenty years it will be like reading a new book again! I have pulled out books I read in my late teens/early twenties and have no memory of them...and enjoy them all over again. I'm not sure if it is the passage of time or the result of my other leisure activities during my misspent youth!

I ask the same. However, more often than not mine go (or in my case, get bagged to go). I find with most books I'm one and done. Not that I couldn't or wouldn't read it/them again, but that I most likely wouldn't, even if it's a favorite author or series. I tend to hold on only to those books I so thoroughly enjoyed that I know I'd read or have read again (most anything by Donald E. Westlake, especially his Dortmunder series; much of Lawrence Block, especially his Bernie Rhodenbarr series; Carolyn Keene's Nancy Drew, childhood memories;...). Those are the books I keep on my shelves and those I'd buy in e-format (if CHEAP!) in order to have them with me when I need emergency reading material. That is, books I can read again and again without ever getting tired of them.
For the past few years I've been really good about not buying new-to-me books (or not buying many!). I hit the libraries, brick-and-mortar and e, my own TBR boxes, e-freebies for the Nook and Kindle apps, etc. Rarely do I not have something new-to-me to read. If I pick up a repeat, it's usually only to hold me until I can get back to the TBR boxes, libraries, etc. With so much new to read, keeping lots of books around that I may read again seems silly. And, it would be lots because I like a lot of books.
I used to keep everything I bought. And, I was bad for so many years that I purchased series of books to read and never got to them. They just kept piling up as I read other books and bought more. As mentioned above, I cleaned out my bookshelves. Doing that and forcing myself to get through TBR boxes has not only saved me new monies, but forced me to be more discerning about what I buy and about what I keep around as clutter.


Karen wrote: "I probably shouldn't answer this because I haven't done anything lately with the books I have bagged and ready to go somewhere, but...
A few years ago I cleaned through my books and the bookshelv..."
I'm still ROFL as I envision bags of books lined up against the walls, waiting, and waiting...
A few years ago I cleaned through my books and the bookshelv..."
I'm still ROFL as I envision bags of books lined up against the walls, waiting, and waiting...

And waiting... At least if I bag them, they're off the shelves and end tables. Though, there are now books I've read waiting to be bagged and added to my new collection of bagged books sitting on both. I keep looking at them as if I will do something with them other than walking by the stacks every day thinking about doing something.
It's the curse of the reader!!!



Is the prison program a local thing? How did you find out about it? That's a good idea I'd like to look into.



Karen - Now I'm picturing you having contests for creating a maze with your books. LOL
I've donated to my libraries and to the chemo center at the hospital. I'd like to donate to the Senior Center next.
I've donated to my libraries and to the chemo center at the hospital. I'd like to donate to the Senior Center next.

Is this what you mean?
http://celynoir.com/blogs/2014/05/i-w...



As for ebooks and audiobooks, I do share them with family. I also have an 'extra' Ipod nano and Kindle reader that I load with audiobooks or ebooks and lend to a senior living place. Someone's grandson bought a docking station speaker for the nano, which helped a lot. There's about 15 seniors who share my Kindle and 3-4 who share the Nano. Been doing this for a little over 2 years now and it's been going well. This is all perfectly legal because I retain ownership of these devices and they are registered to my respective accounts. However, I recommend that you check any unit you will lend that you require passwords for accessing your account online.
Alana, just a note for you - If you turn off the wifi and don't connect your device to a computer at least a day before your library ebook will expire, you may be able to get 'free' time to finish your book. This works with a lot of libraries. Another option that some have tried is changing the date on their unit so that it leaves them an extra week and a half. The library still gets the ebook released, but you have a little more time to finish.

Otherwise, my work place has an annual Children's Hospital fundraiser for a whole month. Part of this fundraiser is a book sale. I will donate any books I no longer want to keep.

And, donating your extra books to your library and Fundraiser's is a awesome idea!





I'd love to buy used (see book-buying binge above) and if I ever move back to the States, I'm gonna be the FOTL's best friend, but I'll still always buy new books because there are a lot of authors whose books I want while they're still warm from the presses. I'm fortunate that my husband and I don't struggle (much), and that my only vice or expensive habit is book buying. But UBS's and Library sales are great for finding books I'd never pick up otherwise (risk .25 cents on a book I've never heard of but looks good? SURE!), or upgrading beloved paperbacks to hardcovers, or filling in gaps in a series that has ended.
It's one of the true beauties of books in print, isn't it? That a book can lead many lives and travel great distances over time and that a single copy can pass through the hands of so many?

I might not be showing any intelligence here but was is FOTL? I figure UBS is used bookstore.
I do love that I can lend out my books, or that the neighbor kids and our friends come over to browse through and borrow books if they want, then when I go to read books again I can think of the others who have read them and enjoyed them.

Sorry about that - I was being lazy about typing out "Friends of the Library". They have such incredible book sales and where I'm from in FL, they are open 5 days a week with a permanent little "shop" in the front of the Library.


I'm the same way. I just keep adding books to my bookshelves and rearranging my books to make everything fit.
Authors mentioned in this topic
Donald E. Westlake (other topics)Lawrence Block (other topics)
Carolyn Keene (other topics)
My apartment complex is full of readers. People tend to leave their books in the laundry room for others to take and enjoy.
I've always described (most) cozies as books you can read to your grandmother and not get embarrassed. And that's what I do with the cozies I buy and finish. There's a nursing home three blocks from my apartment and I donate them there. There are four seniors that I currently read to and all of them love cozies. One blind woman told me that having cozies read to her makes her feel young again. She feels involved with the stories and pictures herself in the middle of them and being productive. Isn't that the best answer?
As for audio books, I do love them but they have to be read very well. The Cat Who... books by Lillian Jackson Braun are read BRILLIANTLY! I love listening to those as I go for walks around the lakes near where I live.