Victorians! discussion
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Conversations in the Parlor
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TBR Lists

The Kindle's price just went down again this morning, and Amazon also is taking orders for one that can download books worldwide. I am never without my Kindle. I got the Kindle 1 the third day it was announced, and ordered Kindle 2 about an hour after it was announced. Now I always have a library in my purse, and I don't have to buy a bigger house.

As for loving books, I do and I don't. I love reading. I don't think I care one way or the other about the books themselves.



Hi Nils,it`s not that I don`t keep up with technology(my blackberry is part of me)I just CHOOSE not to read books in this format!
I do understand the benefits for other people but to me my books hold extra memories inside of them,where and when I bought it,who gave me it and their inscription,the last time I read it.......
Starling, I just had a wee look on Google and they do look handy, but not something I'd ever even consider!
What do they cost - £200 or thereabouts? I'd rather buy twenty-odd paperbacks.
What do they cost - £200 or thereabouts? I'd rather buy twenty-odd paperbacks.


This is a question I've been thinking about a lot lately, as my good frie..."
That was a great post, Heather. Because of time problems, I listen to many books on CD format in my car, or in audible book form on my iPod. Was a time when I never thought one would substitute for the other, but necessity is the mother of acceptance, to twist an old phrase, and I now enjoy many books I didn't have time for before, and am not as bothered in slow traffic.
HOWEVER. If I love a book, I must have it physically in my house, on my bookshelf. Even if I never look at it, it is comforting to know I have it. My house has bookshelves in every room (pretty much) and they are all full. And I love the look of books in a room. And, in fact, if an old book falls apart I'll go out and buy a new copy. So the fact that I listen to books, or might even read one on a kindle during a vacation, doesn't mean I won't own the book as well.

Physically, nine shelves of TBR books averaging about 20 books per shelf. And I buy faster than I read. On my Amazon wish list, another thirty. On the Palm, a "to get at library or on ILL" list of sixty four.
I have promised myself not to die until I finish off all my TBR books and lists. I expect to live, if not forever, at least a very, very, very long time.

I love physical books too -- built a two story library for them in our retirement home and still they spill out into every room in the house. But i also have a Kindle, because I can download for free hundreds of classics (at the moment it holds about 1,300 books) and take it with me when I travel so I have a whole library in less weight-space than one hardback book.
It's not an either-or, but a both-and.


Totally agree with this statement - Kindles are for convenience, not to replace 'real' books. I recently traveled for work and brought along Drood which heavily weighed down my carry-on bag, while my K2 fit nicely in my purse without seeming to add any weight at all. Was also nice to have quick and easy access to a ton of old favorites!

Very glad that you enjoy and benefit from yours.

Which would I use more frequently? Almost certainly the Kindle. I'm currently reading Under the Dome in a library, hard cover, copy. And it weighs a ton. And I found myself thinking how much happier I'd be if I was using a Kindle to read it. One of the main reasons I didn't buy the book was that I didn't want to store it once I was done reading it.
Looks like I'm almost at the buying stage.

I would go for THE KINDLE before DVD,and that is saying something as you know my view but you have to buy what you will get the most pleasure and use out of!!See I am actually quite practical LOL!
After I posted my previous comment last night I got to thinking of this weeks schedule for myself and I realised that I do not want to carry my copy of DROOD about to possible get damaged(its the first one I bought for this group and that makes it special to me)plus the weight factor and so I have come to the conclusion that I am no longer just going to read one book at a time,here is my plan
MOBY DICK for Friday nights(Husband out)(from January)
BOOK CLUB BOOK for reading in afternoons/evening at home
HANDBAG BOOK to carry with me so that it won`t be anything precious
BEDSIDE BOOK something designed to calm me at the end of the day..
I have always been of the opinion that I should devote myself to one book at a time but recently reading the threads I`m thinking that maybe I`m wrong and would actually benefit from mixing things up a bit i.e not reading anything too intense before trying to sleep etc,
Wish me luck to try and I would welcome any imput....

So I got rid of 3/4 of my books ! I worked on a TBR principle in reverse … what did I really need to have near me physically ? This usually meant beautiful or rare books and books with an association in memory. I gave all the other books to charity shops and set myself a shelf limit. If I exceed the shelf limit – I must chose a book(s) to go on my book “out-tray” which is by my front door. Books in my out-tray end up with friends or charity shops.
I'm still a book “junkie” but I have a trick to prevent me buying too many … I buy Antiquarian books … less books, more expensive, but lovely ones (however these are growing at an alarming rate too !). Anything for plain reading I try to borrow from the Library so I don't have to store it or try to buy it second-hand and then pass it on.
I only keep a list for books which are very unusual, rare, odd, eccentric, have funny titles or so obscure I might forget them. For example :
Raphael's Witch or the Oracle of the Future By the Author of the Prophetic Messenger and a Piece of Music By Blewitt (1830s)
The Scouring of the White Horse; or the long vacation ramble of a country clerk. (1859)
The Phantom Bouquet, A Popular Treatise on the Art of Skeletonizing Leaves and Seed Vessels and Adapting them to Embelish the Home of Taste. (1862)

I suggest you go online and look and see what people have said about your issues. I found a blog by an eye doctor who is telling his patients who need large print to buy a Kindle. He likes the black print on a white screen with no back lighting and the fact that you can increase the size of the type.

I like reading with back ground noise, so sometimes I will have a dvd playing and read at the same time. And have been know to read harry potter or pride and prejudice while the corrosponding dvd. Sigh maybe that is something I should have taken to the grave :).

Thanks, will do!

I can't just read one book at a time; I'm sure this says something about my ability (or inability) to focus, but I read at such different points throughout the day (morning before getting ready for work, lunch, before bed, randomly throughout the day) that one book doesn't always fit each mood. Another reason the K2 comes in handy; it lets my scatterbrained mind bring along multiple books for multiple moods!
Currently reading Drood, LesMes, Don Quixote, Terry Pratchett's Discworld series, and a few others; there is just no way I could bring those with them everywhere; I have a hard enough time leaving Drood behind when I go to work!

Hi Maggie - I guess it depends on what kind of sight problems you have? There is an option to increase the font size, to a size that is roughly the "large print" size found in real books. There is also a text-to-speech option, for weary eyes, but please know the voice on the T-S sounds very robotic.
EDIT: Saw Starling's post after Maggie's original question - seems my advice is a bit repetitive but well-intentioned! :)

Oh no, by all means, share away! We all have quirks and habits that some may find odd, but it's even more odd to find out how often one of your 'quirks' is shared by someone else!


Great idea, Paula. We could create a challenge thread if people are up for it so we can update our progress.
Like Paula says, though, please let us know your thoughts first as I know that we all belong to other groups and it's always challenges gallore on GR.

But I have been watching the first few episodes of Little Dorrit. And with finally getting up to Woman in White (I know a little behind) I can feel myself getting another Dickens kick. For some reason as soon as the temperature goes up here all I want to read is Dickens and his cold foggy London!

Sounds like a great idea, Boof. I have a list of 112 TBR's. I've read a little over 100 books so far this year, so perhaps I could do all of those TBR's next year--but there are always other books I want to read again, so the list would be longer.



I am delighted that you have suggested this as I was hoping someone would......

My TBR is 650!!!!
I envy you

Love it!
Ally

I would consider it a great success if I didn't add any more books to my TBR list during the year than I read from it.

Also I like the idea of the individual challenge. I like to read other stuff in between the Victorian tomes. But really looking forward to it!

I envy you
The 112 are just the short-term TBR's that I've committed to writing. There are many others, of course, and new ones keep popping in.

I don't want to be the only one to do this, but if others do, I'll work on mine, too. If I can list ten books a day, I should be done before the end of the month.


In my shelves there are:
Own but haven't read - 316
To buy/borrow - 222
Victorians - 110 (this is a mixture of read and not read and includes the neo's too).

I am still pondering mine and will update in the next few days. :o)

I can't remember if I've answered in this thread but yeah, usually when I talk about my TBR list, I'm specifically talking about the books I've recently bought and that are sitting on my shelf (or desk) waiting to be read. I don't think it's ever gone more than about 30, I think (that was a scary time, lol) and right now it's in a managable state, I think (about 14 given that I'm reading 3 at the moment). Those that I want to read but don't physically have in my room I put under the category of "want to read" (that one's a lot bigger; about 155 right now, I think). Choosing which one to read from my TBR list usually depends on my mood, if I'm in the mood for a classic, a short read, etc. =)



Too bad my reward for getting everything done today is to go to B&N where I got two new books. Oops!

Unfortunately, I am not so much disciplined, but more anal-retentive. And really the idea to make an additional queue TBR list just helps me to justify one more list in my compulsive desire to make lists. It's kind of a sickness ;)
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Paula--so awesome that you drove two hours to get a copy of LAS. I'll think of that next time I hear someone complain about the state of reading in the modern age!