Wednesday, August 12, 2020
Perennial Question Can A Person Have Too Many Books
Perennial Question Can A Person Have Too Many Books Answer: Yes. Yes, she absolutely can. Over the course of the past weekend, I dealt with this situation: My husband calls it The Cube. Heâs called it that for years, because this is only the latest in many, many visits from The Cube. Iâm a librarian. And a reader. And a reviewer. New books enter our house every dayâ"some that I buy, some that I borrow from the library, some that publishers send in the hopes that Iâll cover them, some that seem to just appear out of thin air. As much as I read and as fast as I read, I will never ever ever ever be able to keep up. (Iâm guessing that a lot of you out there can relate?) So, despite the fact that I have a whole lot of shelf space, every few months the overflow becomes The Cube, and suddenly it feels like thereâs a third person living in our (extremely small) house. And thatâs when the weeding begins. I pull it all apart, and I sort books into two piles: books I immediately know I want/need to keep vs. books I immediately know can go away. Then I sort the Go Away pile into finished copies vs. unfinished review copiesâ"finished copies get donated to my library, and review copies get recycled. Hereâs a picture of what I ultimately discarded: Then comes the hard part: dealing with the rest. I sort and sort and sort and sort, breaking the piles down by publication year and, in the case of upcoming titles, by publication MONTH: Hereâs part of the (almost) finished productâ"also known as the Former Home of The Cube: I get rid of even more, shelve what I canâ"alphabetically by author for the most partâ"and then I start making room by weeding the shelves themselves. Sometimes I find books that I was once interested in reading, but that interest has waned; sometimes I find books that are there purely because I feel like I SHOULD read them. Letâs be honest: weâve all got a few of those books on our shelves. Books that weâre hanging on to because theyâre capital-I important, because they were gifts, because they won such-and-such award. And books that, worst of all, were holding on to because we think it will somehow reflect badly on us as readers if we not only havenât read them, but have no intention of reading them. Books that are there because of What Other People Might Think, not because we actually want them. Every so often, thereâs an essayâ"or sometimes an entire book, barfâ"bemoaning the State of Modern-Day Reading Culture, wailing about how a lack of interest in a specific subgenre of literature is a sign of the decline of civilization. (Not-so-surprisingly, said pieces usually focus on long-dead cishet white male authors, and not-so-surprisingly, said pieces usually say more about the essayistâs ego and desire for intellectual validation than they do about their supposed topic, but holy cow, I am digressing.) As much as we push back against that mentality, as much as we talk about reading what we want to read because we want to read it, like any other message that is pushed at us over and over and over again, deep down, itâs very easy for that message to worm its way into our hearts and our brains. Itâs like advertising. As I scan my shelves looking to make more room, I try to keep that in mind. If I look at a book and feel a sense of obligation rather than an active desire to read, thatâs a good indicator that Iâm probably never going to get around to reading it. If I change my mind, thereâs always the library. Or, more likely, I might buy it all over again, thus continuing the life cycle of The Cube. (At least Iâm honest about my bad habits?) For more on weedingâ"including various weeding techniques!â"see these posts.
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