We're Literary 2: To Read Makes Our Speaking English Good
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."
They took my library card away. When I like something, I don't want to give it back.
I was very surprised and amused at the first time this came up, and so many Buffistas admitted they were basically Evil Incarnate when it came to library books.
See, when you don't return the books
other people can't read them.
But Buffistas are not and never have been particularly sane about books.
I haven't read anything I liked that much in a long time...this is sad.
Me neither. I have gotten really cynical with my reading. If it hasn't gotten good within the first 3 chapters, I'm done reading it. I also find myself laughing at some of the ridiculous actions/situations that occur instead of suspending my disbelief and going along with it. I have no patience any more.
When I like something, I don't want to give it back.
Yeah, probably another good reason why I shouldn't go to the library.
I was so happy when I was deemed old enough to bike to my town's library. It became nearly a ritual for me. Every Saturday I'd get my allowance (to buy lunch -- usually french fries or a hot fudge sunday), bike to the library, get as many books as I could jam in my backpack, and bike to the breakwater (my home town was on the Lake Huron shore). I'd sit and read by the lake until I had to be home for chores or dinner.
The need to immediately hug and pet the book and call it George is why I buy Lois McMaster Bujold and Connie Willis in hardcover. For everyone else, I can wait until the paperback. (I did buy The Weaver and the Factory Maid in hardcover because I was eager to read it and to run up the number of buyers.) Unlike Beverly, I'm able to transfer my affections from the library book to the shiny new paperback if I've fallen in love with the contents.
I don't know what I would have done without the library. I would have been out on the corner saying, "Do you have any spare change? If I get another dollar, I can buy a paperback."
I hate keeping most books. I've been known to leave garbage bags of them on the sidewalk.
Maybe I move too often, or have too few bookshelves. Libraries would work better if I were more timely, but yeah, borrowing rocks.
I keep all the picture books, and get rid of much of the novels.
Which reminds me ... I need to mail a couple to my mother.
MOST books in public libraries are bought new. People donate books to public libraries, and the libraries sell them. Yes, sometimes people sneeze into the books, or use pizza as a bookmark (this happened to a book in my University library) but often you will find books you'd swear had never been read. Sometimes they haven't. And for out of print books, the library's the thing.
Heretically for a buffista, I almost never buy books I haven't read already. I don't need to own books unless I plan to reread them.
I've been known to leave garbage bags of them on the sidewalk.
I was going to shriek, but then I realized I've actually done that myself. I had too many bad books from my book-of-the-month club phase, and not enough shelves. Now I have enough shelf space that I can buy books without having to get rid of any, for a while, anyway. I'm not a big book buyer.
I don't need to own books unless I plan to reread them.
Exactly why I give so many away.
But without a convenient library routine, I keep buying.
However, between msbelle (I owe her a shipment too) and Kat, maybe I could avoid setting myself up with late fees.
I like to own books. The size of my apartment and of my paycheck keep me going back to the library. Given unlimited funds and bookcases, I would go to my favorite bookstore and buy about every third book. Then I would take them home. Then I would rub my hands over them and cackle.
What?
I mean, I've liked a lot of books this year, but not in that "My precious...shiny. Want!" way that makes them hard to take back. I am glad half had "A Year On The Killing Streets" though cause I read it five times.