I'm eleven hundred and twenty years old! Just gimme a friggin' beer!

Anya ,'Storyteller'


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."


deborah grabien - Mar 22, 2004 12:54:32 pm PST #1762 of 10002
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

Raquel, could you maybe talk Nic into doing that? We're hipdeep in guides for various bits of software and programming that have been outdated since three weeks after they hit the selves, each of which we paid about thirty bucks and upward for.


Ginger - Mar 22, 2004 1:02:21 pm PST #1763 of 10002
"It didn't taste good. It tasted soooo horrible. It tasted like....a vodka martini." - Matilda

The problem with getting computer books from libraries is that they're usually a few versions behind the software I'm using. Computer books do have a depressingly high cost to useful content ratio.

I really like owning books, as the wall-to-wall books in my house will attest, but I've gotten better about using the library since the county system put in place a really spiffy online catalogue that lets you find the books you want and have them sent to the nearest branch. I just sit there going, "And I want this one and this one." It's like Amazon.com without the credit card hangover.


Java cat - Mar 22, 2004 1:05:14 pm PST #1764 of 10002
Not javachik

In case anyone else is a Nevada Barr fan (park ranger Anna Pigeon solves mysteries), the newest is just out: High Country.


Volans - Mar 22, 2004 1:07:26 pm PST #1765 of 10002
move out and draw fire

Sure deb! Although like Ginger points out it does depend on what you can get...but I'd think that the library system there would be able to get just about anything. The local library here is actually really good with the computer books, so I guess I'm lucky on that count.


deborah grabien - Mar 22, 2004 1:19:19 pm PST #1766 of 10002
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

Maybe I should send Nic to the Silicon Valley Libraries....


Jesse - Mar 22, 2004 1:34:08 pm PST #1767 of 10002
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

really spiffy online catalogue that lets you find the books you want and have them sent to the nearest branch. I just sit there going, "And I want this one and this one." It's like Amazon.com without the credit card hangover.

Yes! I love that I can be sitting at work, think of a book I want to read, go online and reserve it, and I get an email when it's sitting waiting for me. Awesome.


Sheryl - Mar 22, 2004 1:35:46 pm PST #1768 of 10002
Fandom means never having to say "But where would I wear that?"

I don't buy every book I'd like to read because a)I'd go broke quickly and b) I don't want to own everything I read.

I divide my "want to read" list into a couple of catagories (with occasional subcatagories)

1)Buy in hardback when it comes out
a)Buy full price
b)Buy from the appropriate book club

2)Buy in paperback
a)Paperback originals
b)Came out first in hardback, but I can wait for the paperback

3)Library books
a)Search for and/or put on hold
b)If I stumble across it I might take it out.

Yes, I read that many books and yes, I am that anal-retentive. t g


Susan W. - Mar 22, 2004 3:04:56 pm PST #1769 of 10002
Good Trouble and Righteous Fights

I love the library, and it keeps me from going bankrupt and letting my book habit render our house completely uninhabitable. If I don't think I'll want to re-read, I get it from the library. It's also how I test drive new authors and/or reference books to see if they're worth actual cash money.


Kate P. - Mar 22, 2004 6:11:13 pm PST #1770 of 10002
That's the pain / That cuts a straight line down through the heart / We call it love

I am a book packrat as well. Nearly everyone else I met while travelling went the (much cheaper and easier) route of buying used and selling back for credit. Not me. I sent home at least five packages of books to my parents so I could keep them without having to lug them around in my backpack for the next five months. I get attached. I also reread a lot: not necessarily entire books (though I do plenty of that), but sometimes I just like to look for my favorite passage in a book, or just open it up and see what I find. I like visiting with characters and places I've come to love. And I like to be able to refresh my memory when talking, thinking, or writing about them. Plus, I like to recommend and lend them out (only to very trustworthy friends).

I grew up in a house with stacks and shelves of books in every single room, including the hallways. To me, it's not home unless there are books everywhere.


Java cat - Mar 22, 2004 7:34:48 pm PST #1771 of 10002
Not javachik

I love this:

From The Writer's Almanac [link]

MONDAY, 12 March 2001

It was on this day in 1901 that the steel magnate Andrew Carnegie gave New York City 5.2 million dollars to construct 65 branch libraries. He had just sold the Carnegie steel company for 250 million dollars, and decided to retire and devote himself to giving it all away. He later gave money to create more than 1700 libraries all over the United States and in Britain.

[link]

By the first few years of the 20th century, Carnegie had refined the giving of libraries into a neat, streamlined procedure. Over 33 years, he provided funds for 2,811 libraries in all, including 23 in New Zealand, 13 in South Africa, and one in Fiji.

I can't find the quote G. Keillor used, something like, Carnegie said, "In a library, you are always in good company."