bookshelves, part 2
Mar. 15th, 2022 01:18 pmThis past winter, I realized I could gradually get rid of books I really didn't like anymore, and it still would not leave me with a collection that fit into an apartment I could afford. Especially when I started looking at apartments with Vicki and Andy and thinking beyond all our accumulated books. Where can we put 3 desks? Yes, we COULD put a bookcase in the hall closet, but then where would we put our coats?
So the next step was to get rid of books I like, but would rather read online versions than the versions in my apartment. Why do I, why does ANYONE, have all of Shakespeare in one unwieldy hardcover in tiny little print with hardly any margins? Why do I have that particular translation of Oedipus, which is nothing special? Why do I have anything in my apartment that's already on Project Gutenberg? I don't even like Emily that much, and Dean Priest is a total creep...but you still kind of get attached after so long. The last time I looked at Goethe's Faustus, I actually looked at the library's ebook. (I waited for the library's ebook, rather than reading my own little paperback. If I had remembered Project Gutenberg I wouldn't have had to wait.) So out went the little paperback. *sigh*
So the next step was to get rid of books I like, but would rather read online versions than the versions in my apartment. Why do I, why does ANYONE, have all of Shakespeare in one unwieldy hardcover in tiny little print with hardly any margins? Why do I have that particular translation of Oedipus, which is nothing special? Why do I have anything in my apartment that's already on Project Gutenberg? I don't even like Emily that much, and Dean Priest is a total creep...but you still kind of get attached after so long. The last time I looked at Goethe's Faustus, I actually looked at the library's ebook. (I waited for the library's ebook, rather than reading my own little paperback. If I had remembered Project Gutenberg I wouldn't have had to wait.) So out went the little paperback. *sigh*
no subject
Date: 2022-03-16 06:06 pm (UTC)One sad thing about this move is that I will be losing a library network. The Minuteman Library Network includes libraries in every Middlesex village and town. (They won't take my card away when I move across the river, but I'll feel guilty about using it until it breaks.) The Boston Public Library is for everyone who lives, works, or goes to school in Massachusetts. It's nice to have both.
no subject
Date: 2022-03-18 07:06 am (UTC)When David and I moved in together, we said that we were not doing so in order to cut down on the number of copies of Tolkien's works that we had. Shakespeare got in under the same statement, and a startling number of other writers too.
Also there's the need to have two sets of somethings lest, in lending one out, it suddenly becomes essential to reread the books. Dorothy Sayers, Dorothy Dunnett, and Patrick O'Brian are particularly prone to this difficulty.
I am sorry about the diminishment in your available library networks.
P.
no subject
Date: 2022-03-21 04:56 pm (UTC)