Please...Wesley...why can't I stay?

Fred ,'A Hole in the World'


Literary Buffistas 3: Don't Parse the Blurb, Dear.

There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."


Strega - Aug 20, 2010 8:39:43 am PDT #12108 of 28342

Kind of weird that Daughter of Time is shelved with Red Harvest but then science fiction and fantasy are conflated in odd ways.

If you think about it, organizing fiction by genre is a bit like organizing an art gallery based on color. It can be done, obviously, and at least that way you have a hope of finding something you're looking for, but it's so arbitrary that it doesn't really tell you anything useful about an individual items.


DavidS - Aug 20, 2010 8:44:11 am PDT #12109 of 28342
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

but it's so arbitrary that it doesn't really tell you anything useful about an individual items.

True dat. I think most Elmore Leonard fans would enjoy Neuromancer (which Gibson modeled on Leonard's plots), so it even defeats the marketing angle.

I actually do prefer shelving everything together. It's a pain trying to figure out whether they're shelving Iain Banks in Fiction or Science Fiction.

The reason we went with an alphabetical format in our Lost in the Grooves book was to purposefully arrange records next to each other from a variety of genres.


Jessica - Aug 20, 2010 8:45:09 am PDT #12110 of 28342
And then Ortus came and said "It's Ortin' time" and they all Orted off into the sunset

It's a pain trying to figure out whether they're shelving Iain Banks in Fiction or Science Fiction.

His SciFi books usually come under Iain M Banks.


DavidS - Aug 20, 2010 8:46:48 am PDT #12111 of 28342
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

His SciFi books usually come under Iain M Banks.

Right and some bookstores shelve them separately. But some don't!


Strix - Aug 20, 2010 8:50:17 am PDT #12112 of 28342
A dress should be tight enough to show you're a woman but loose enough to flee from zombies. — Ginger

I've know both kinds of academics, the hard-core "genre is crap" and the voracious "OMG BOOKS" kind.

Guess which kind I am?

I like all of it; light reading, and then getting into a book on the word level and really parsing it out. I remember distinctly my first courses in college with a really fabulous professor, really getting into the meat of some texts and despairing, "OMG, I will NEVER be able to do this" and then, of course, I was.

I remember doing a paper on Antony and Cleopatra (titled "Hips, Lips, Tits, Power: The Feminization of Antony" -- god, I loved that title and my prof cackled over it for ages -- he was this fab Shakespeare scholar with this broad-ass W. Va accent who loooooved talking about all the "booowdy" stuff in Shakespeare) and when I was consulting with the prof and telling him my idea, he just reached out and pulled a shit load of stuff of his shelves - "You need this, and that, and oh, this..." and I was all "How do you just KNOW this stuff?"

And then 15 years later, as I was doing pretty much the exact same thing for a student, and they had the exact same reaction, I felt a thrill.

But I knew English people who were all snobby and shit about anything that wasn't their area, and I just felt bad for them. All those books! All those stories!


Frankenbuddha - Aug 20, 2010 9:29:34 am PDT #12113 of 28342
"We are the Goon Squad and we're coming to town...Beep! Beep!" - David Bowie, "Fashion"

I actually do prefer shelving everything together. It's a pain trying to figure out whether they're shelving Iain Banks in Fiction or Science Fiction.

How do people shelve stuff (books, music and video media)? If you do it by author/artist/director, do you then alphabetize the titles or do you put them in chronological? How about anthologies?


flea - Aug 20, 2010 9:36:25 am PDT #12114 of 28342
information libertarian

I do it by a mixture of what the book is about (esp. nonfiction), author (for the authors I have a zillion books by) and shelf size.

At work, I use the Library of Congress system, natch.


Kathy A - Aug 20, 2010 9:37:30 am PDT #12115 of 28342
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

I divide my books by subject (kids lit, classics, mysteries, SF/Fantasy, general fiction, etc.), but the only section I then organize further is my romances, which I alphabetize by author. My dvds are also organized by genre (TV series, musicals, SF, action, dramas, comedies). My music is also by genre (show tunes, folk, blues, classical, then all the rest) and subdivided by performer.


megan walker - Aug 20, 2010 9:39:40 am PDT #12116 of 28342
"What kind of magical sunshine and lollipop world do you live in? Because you need to be medicated."-SFist

Books = I separate French and English fiction and then organization is alpha by author, and within authors usually chronologically. But I don't have a ton of fiction. history/film and other academic books, childrens books and bande dessinée, and language and poetry have bookshelves and systems of their own.

Music is divided into the christmas, concert, and contemporary, with christmas being stricly chronological, and concert and contemporary being alpha by composer/artist.

Video is divided into movies and TV, and then strictly alphabetical.


Gudanov - Aug 20, 2010 9:44:36 am PDT #12117 of 28342
Coding and Sleeping

I organize my books chronologically with the newest books being placed on the shelf where other books aren't or can be compressed to the sides.

I haven't done much reading since I started writing. My life is like a water bed, if I push down one place another place has to go up.