Kaylee: So, uh, how come you don't care where you're going? Book: 'Cause how you get there is the worthier part.

'Serenity'


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."


Toddson - Sep 21, 2007 11:30:30 am PDT #3923 of 28212
Friends don't let friends read "Atlas Shrugged"

In re books (yes, I'm among those who furnish with books) - a while ago the Post magazine section had an interior design issue with lots of uninhabited rooms with knick-knacks and other fancy decor. One of the rooms shown was the "library" ... with not a single book to be seen. Lots of glass thingies - nice ones, but .... Anyway, there were quite a number of letters from people saying that if it's a library, where were the books. Stoopid decorator!


Kathy A - Sep 21, 2007 11:43:06 am PDT #3924 of 28212
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

The only time I agree with removing books when redecorating is when you're trying to sell your place. The A&E show "Sell This House" always has people packing away all their tchotchkes, photos, and excessive books to make the place more impersonal, so potential buyers can imagine their stuff in the house. I personally think that people who can't look beyond the furniture and personal things are not seriously house-shopping, but too many bookshelves can cover up the actual amount of wall space in a room and make it look smaller. Also, packing up stuff early helps when you have to pack up after you sell.


Ginger - Sep 21, 2007 11:45:30 am PDT #3925 of 28212
"It didn't taste good. It tasted soooo horrible. It tasted like....a vodka martini." - Matilda

One place I worked built some model homes to demonstrate energy-efficient features. The home had some books artfully arranged on the built-in bookshelves and scattered about the living room. The books were a very odd assortment, and I asked the decorator about them. She told me there were companies that sold books by the pound to decorators.


Connie Neil - Sep 21, 2007 12:07:01 pm PDT #3926 of 28212
brillig

it's a library, where were the books.

I saw one picture of a room described as a library, and after some hunting in the picture I saw one shelf with some books tucked behind the couch. It looked like a bunch of law books intermingled with Reader's Digest Condensed books.

Amateurs.


Laga - Sep 21, 2007 2:19:09 pm PDT #3927 of 28212
You should know I'm a big deal in the Resistance.

the new fad of putting the books on the shelves so that the pages, not the spines, are showing?

I had no idea this was a trend. On my shelf the backwards books are the ones I'm embarassed to own.


Jessica - Sep 22, 2007 6:34:53 am PDT #3928 of 28212
And then Ortus came and said "It's Ortin' time" and they all Orted off into the sunset

too many bookshelves can cover up the actual amount of wall space in a room and make it look smaller.

The flip side is that when looking at homes with no bookshelves, I always have to remember to mentally subtract about a square foot of wallspace from every room to get an idea of how big it will really be once all our books move in!


Liese S. - Sep 22, 2007 7:38:56 am PDT #3929 of 28212
"Faded like the lilac, he thought."

Ha!

We switched our plans early on to go from slab to crawlspace. The designer had put in a plumbing wall when it was supposed to be slab, but now that it's crawlspace it's not necessary (the pipes will go under the house). So the builder was asking us did we want to switch those 2x6 walls back to 2x4.

And I was thinking to myself. Two more inches! That means I might be able to fit my bookshelf in there! And it was go.


Anne W. - Sep 22, 2007 10:48:48 am PDT #3930 of 28212
The lost sheep grow teeth, forsake their lambs, and lie with the lions.

neither of us wants to read it again, no reason for it to languish on our shelves when it could be out there making some other reader happy. I look at getting rid of books as giving a gift to that mysterious other reader, which makes it a lot easier.

A while back, I found I no longer felt a need to hang on to every book that made its way into my house. I'd rather re-home them than hang onto them for the sake of hanging on to them. I think moving all my possessions cross-country may have had something to do with my new willingness to re-home items I had once clung to the way Gollum clung to the One Ring.

I will admit that in the built-in book cases in my living room, I do have some non-book objects in there. Part of the reason is thaty they're safe from the cat up there (He cannot jump more than counter-height). Also, the backs of the bookcases are a very pretty red and it's nice to have bits of that peeking through.

One of my plans for my basement involves an entire wall of shelves. That will be an all book (and DVD) and no tchochke zone.


beth b - Sep 23, 2007 11:11:24 am PDT #3931 of 28212
oh joy! Oh Rapture ! I have a brain!

our not quite 8' by 8' bookcases were full before we finished them. Dh was surprised, I was not. What did surprise me that when it comes to keeping books - I am the one responsible mostly for that. oops.


Scrappy - Sep 23, 2007 11:49:55 am PDT #3932 of 28212
Life moves pretty fast. You don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.

After lugging them around for four different moves, the DH has decided to give up his (about three feet of shelf space) hardback Robert Parker books. This is more due to him being a completist and not liking them much anymore, than it is to sacrifice, but still--three feet! The three feet won't last long, of course, as we are going to take them to a local used bookstore and see what we can trade them for.