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Which Author Takes Up The Most Shelf Space In Terms Of Unread Books You Currently Own? (4/28/24)
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Marc
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Apr 27, 2024 06:30PM

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I believe it's not even close for me with Philip Roth coming in first with 7 unread titles (and I've actually read a bunch by him; I think everything I have unread was either bought used or found free in a Little Free Library). I have 3 unread titles by a bunch of different authors (some of them trilogies, some not).



Ha! In truth they are sitting in a box in my overcrowded study .... I know i'll never read them but when i think of the journey they will have been on from one household to another since 1895 i cant bear to part from them . i know i know .....

wow . That's something .
My library in Leeds has most of them and i often wonder if they are readily available in libraries in the USA ?
The Turn of the Screw is probably the smallest (novella-length) James if you wanted a place to start. His writing can be very dense and most of the "action" occurs in the minds/hearts of his characters (these are aspects I actually love about his writing).
It's really hard to part with our own books, much less ones inherited from a loved one, Hester! I have my mom's Girl Scout Handbook and Applied Secretarial Practice books and can't bring myself to get rid of them (despite maybe glancing at them once or twice and having no memories of her ever having spoken about either the books or the subject matters/experiences).
It's really hard to part with our own books, much less ones inherited from a loved one, Hester! I have my mom's Girl Scout Handbook and Applied Secretarial Practice books and can't bring myself to get rid of them (despite maybe glancing at them once or twice and having no memories of her ever having spoken about either the books or the subject matters/experiences).

If I include my parents' home, my dad has a full collection of Arthur Ransome. He's read them all, I've only read a handful.



We still have floor to ceiling bookshelves. ;-)

Awesome! I do love a series even if it is just to have and to hold. We have the Britannica Great Books series, takes up two shelves, so much beauty and gravitas in the library. I didn't count it because it is all different authors, and I have no idea actually how much I have read in other venues of the historically dated view of the Western Cannon that some day I may be a completion-ist about. It comes with several volumes to guide reading and conversation between the texts, which is also fun.

The focus of LOA is to get them into school librarys. One of the ways to donate to LOA is to pay for a set for a school library. They are beautifully bound volumes in slipcases and worth every penny just to be able to hold and open them and look at them!

Saramago for me too - mainly because my partner kept buying them for me & I find I read them very slowly. Great writer but for some reason I make exceedingly slow progress with his novels.
I actually instituted a rule quite a number of years ago where I can't buy a book by an author if I already have an unread book by them. I haven't been 100% committed to this (largely because of group reads), but for the most part, it has kept me from compiling multiple unread titles by one author (the exception possibly being books in a series, which I will frequently buy together).

Probably Elmore Leonard. I've acquired paperback copies of just about everything he's ever written, although I haven't even read half of them.
Well, he IS the "filet of the genre."



Oh how I envy you with all you have to look forward to.


There are also quite a lot of books in Spanish which I haven't read because my Spanish isn't good enough, but they're my wife's books not mine so I'm not sure if they technically count...!
Guy wrote: "I have a couple of shelves dedicated to unread books, so they're segregated and I can always lay my hands on a new one when I want; I don't like them to get lost in the general shelves and then fade their way to being permanently unread."
Allow me to diminish your shame, Guy...
I have an entire bookshelf dedicated to unread books and have had to move on to piling books in the basement. (And this doesn't include ~150 unread e-books, although many of these were free or super-discounted.) Somewhat magically, I haven't bought a single one of the 6 bookshelves in our house (all picked up over the years by neighbors getting rid of them)... Where else to invest those savings but in more books!!!!!!
Allow me to diminish your shame, Guy...
I have an entire bookshelf dedicated to unread books and have had to move on to piling books in the basement. (And this doesn't include ~150 unread e-books, although many of these were free or super-discounted.) Somewhat magically, I haven't bought a single one of the 6 bookshelves in our house (all picked up over the years by neighbors getting rid of them)... Where else to invest those savings but in more books!!!!!!

My shame is sensibly diminished 🤣 I love that your neighbours are tossing out bookshelves and you're hoovering them straight back up again. Feels like you're responsible for maintaining the cultural capital of the neighbourhood in equilibrium...!
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