Out goes he
Sep. 25th, 2007 10:34 amOne thing I do every year and more than once is to dispose of hundreds of books. I know this will cause raised eyebrows amongst people happy to live with tottering piles but, see above, I don’t like to feel out of control and I buy more books than I can keep. I’ve been going through the shelves in the hall and am rather shocked by what is a keeper and what a goer. IN stay Adrian Mole and Bridget Jones. OUT go Dostoievsky, Gogol and Turgenev. Admittedly, these are old Penguin Classics with browning pages and small print (print is getting smaller, I swear) but something puritan in me says this must be wrong.
But why? What are books for? Classics will always be available. I think the slightly guilty feeling comes from the idea that one ought to have a library and that means a range of reference books and of the great classics. OK, I’m certainly never parting with Jane Austen, George Eliot or Dickens because who knows when I might just have to read them and NOW. Do I need to keep Greek classic plays and the great Russians (I’m excepting Tolstoy, who stays) in case I want to check something? Or to impress visitors? Huh: the only thing visitors to our house ever want to look at is the juke box. I turned out huge numbers of history books years ago on the grounds that they were out of date and never looked at, but I still felt uneasy about it. I do still have a copy of the Penguin History Tudor England by S T Bindoff. It has my name inside, with ‘VI 1 Arts 11’ and I have a strange sentimental attachment to it.
So the boot of the car fills up regularly with neatly tied up carrier bags full of books for the Oxfam book bank. No doubt a number will be dumped but somebody, somewhere may be pleased to find others. I hope so.
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Date: 2007-09-25 10:01 am (UTC)I get rid of everything that I know I won't read again, unless it is a reference book (or Quentin Bell's biography of Virginia Woolf, to which I have a similar sentimental attachment).
But I get this wrong a lot, because I never know what I'm going to want to reread. I find myself replacing books I used to own, which is a pain. This was okay-ish when I was working, but it isn't really okay now.
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Date: 2007-09-25 10:07 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-09-25 10:41 am (UTC)And I am trying to be better about using the library for things I don't feel I positively must own. Unfortunately these days I am very bad at taking them back on time, and I occasionally feel it would have been cheaper to buy an Oxfam copy.
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Date: 2007-09-25 11:24 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-09-25 11:26 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-09-25 11:28 am (UTC)It was ever thus. My gardening books have been massively pruned (ha ha) but I had to get a dealer in to buy some.
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Date: 2007-09-25 11:31 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-09-25 11:40 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-09-25 11:41 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-09-25 12:06 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-09-26 08:54 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-09-27 06:47 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-09-27 07:36 am (UTC)Good for you. Unfortunately, our libraries are more likely to be getting rid of books than accepting them, or even closing down, so charity shops are the only option.