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'No More Buying Books Until I've Read the Ones I've Already Bought' Thread
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I love reading and am always buying books. I buy from Amazon, The Works, charity shops, boot fairs etc.
I actually work for a well known book shop and we get a good discount so am always using most of my wages! We are lucky as well as if a book gets damaged and can't be sold staff can take it. It does result in a free for all every time books are placed in the staffroom but I do usually manage to bring home a book or six!
I have books everywhere in my house and have one room which has shelves all round absolutely full of books. I have tons of cookery books as I love cooking. I also like books about travel (England or abroad) and have loads of books on that subject - some stories from people who have travelled and some with pictures and information about places. I read a lot of biographies from people like Dickens, Henry VIII to Jo Brand, Frank Skinner etc.
I don't read that much fiction but love Tess of the Durbervilles (have read it at least 3 times), Rebecca, Time Travellers Wife. Have read a couple of Linwood Barclay books and enjoyed those. I want to read Girl with the Dragon Tattoo as people at work have raved about it but am trying not to buy any more books at the moment - maybe a damaged one will come along!!!
My OH does read but not as much as me. He grew up in a house with no books and was never read to but started to read when he met me. I remember once his mum said to me "he never read until he met you" in such an accusing voice you would think she was talking about him taking drugs!
I rarely lend out my books as I am another one who does not break the spine and would never dream of turning over the corner of a page! I tend to buy hardbacks if I am buying new books as I prefer the look of them and will never get rid of them! I will occasionally get rid of a book I have got from a charity shop but I find it very difficult parting with them!
Not sure how many unread books I have but it is well over 100.
One last thing before I end this rambling post - I have friends who live in an actual castle - a really pretty fairy tale looking one with an actual moat and a drawbridge which they pull up every night (honestly I am not joking). I am not at all jealous of the fact that they live in a castle BUT I am extremely jealous of the fact that they have a large library with all handmade wooden bookshelves AND one of those wooden ladders attached to the top of the shelves which slides along the shelves!!!!!! I am green with envy!The world is over 4 billion years old and yet you somehow managed to exist at the same time as David Bowie0 -
One last thing before I end this rambling post - I have friends who live in an actual castle - a really pretty fairy tale looking one with an actual moat and a drawbridge which they pull up every night (honestly I am not joking). I am not at all jealous of the fact that they live in a castle BUT I am extremely jealous of the fact that they have a large library with all handmade wooden bookshelves AND one of those wooden ladders attached to the top of the shelves which slides along the shelves!!!!!! I am green with envy!
OMG, I would be as well! I would just like a room dedicated to books with a comfy chair in, but if I could get one of those...*Pickle's brain starts whirring at 1000mph*. And I sympathise at working in the bookshop: it's a like someone with a sweet tooth working on a chocolate production line.I worked in a deisgner clothes shop a year or so ago, and got a whopping discount on the clothes, so I used to go mad...I now have a three wardrobes full of beautiful clothes and more stunning shoes than you can shake a stick at, but if I hadn't left when I had, I would be in SERIOUS trouble!
In more book-related news, I went to bed a bit early last night and am now about halfway through my book. It's not a hard read, so hopefully I will be finished soon. Also, I got an e-mail from the library yesterday about a book I had requested a while back: The Money Diet, by some random guy called Martin Lewis. Anyone heard of him? Is it any good? :rotfl:Please call me 'Pickle'
No More Buying Books: ???
No More Buying DVDs: ???
NMB Toiletries ??? and I've gone back for my Masters at the University of Use Ups!
Proud to be dealing with her debts 1198~
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I dream of having a book lined room eventually when I own somewhere with enough rooms. My friends just can't understand it or why I linger so long in the libraries of stately homes.0
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solventsoon wrote: »Thanks for the recommendation, procrastinator, will look that one up. Always on the lookout for new authors/books and not heard of that one:)
Don't get excited, the person who wrote it only wrote one book then died. Her niece (I think) completed it for her. It is a lovely book thoughand well worth reading.
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procrastinator wrote: »Latest read was The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society by Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows. I loved this book, can't recomend it highly enough.
I'm glad you said this, it's on my to read pile. Might read it as an 'easy' read when I finally finish His Dark Materials!they have a large library with all handmade wooden bookshelves AND one of those wooden ladders attached to the top of the shelves which slides along the shelves!!!!!! I am green with envy!
This is my total dream, especially the ladder part! But like someone else said, at the moment I aspire to having a comfy chair in the corner of a quiet room to sit in. Perhaps with a lamp behind it... *sigh*
My RiSi bok arrived on Friday (Left Bank, Kate Muir) so my to read pile has increased! :eek: Going to get an early night tonight though so hopefully can crack on...Weightloss: 14.5/65lb0 -
What a fantastic thread:j. Thank you InaPickle. I would love to join you all as it's one of my resolutions this year to clear my pile of books.
I have just finished Hank Paulson's "On the Brink" and I am just starting to read "The Lord of the Flies". I've never read "Lord of the Flies" before. I bought it for one of my sons.
My goal is to read my pile of books and pass them on to Oxfam and clear me some space!
I will use this thread as somewhere to "confess" to my book buying and hopefully this will stop me buying any more.0 -
Brilliant thread. Books are my downfall, they're everywhere here. I hate the idea of parting with them.
And the dream, a castle with a "Henry Higgins" library: mezzanine floor, library sliding ladders, spiral stair up from study, Chesterfields, leather topped desk and blazing fire - not that I've thought about it too much
Oh oh oh - did you know that a library is now the most sought after luxury in a house over gym, pool, sauna, etc. It would be money saving to build one:A Let us be grateful to people who make us happy: they are the charming gardeners who make our souls blossom. Marcel Proust :A0 -
Oh I love this thread, lots of people just like me. I adore books and have read from a very early age. I was able to escape into books. I like thrillers and crime for light reading. The only genre Im not keen on is Sci fi. I keep all my books on metaphysics and alternative therapies. My library books are just for light reading. Ive realised Im not as bad as I thought for unread books. Just two shelf fulls. I have two very large bookcases and one in the spare room.
I used to hang on to loads of books but tend to take them to the charity shop or hospital now. At the moment I have two on the go. One upstairs which is light reading an author called Martyn Waite and downstairs a book called Why is God Laughing a spiritual book.0 -
setmefree2 wrote: »I have just finished Hank Paulson's "On the Brink" and I am just starting to read "The Lord of the Flies". I've never read "Lord of the Flies" before. I bought it for one of my sons.
Oooh, once you've read Lord of the Flies, I doubt it will be going anywhere! It's fabulous, and I haven't read it since I was 16, doing my GCSE.Please call me 'Pickle'
No More Buying Books: ???
No More Buying DVDs: ???
NMB Toiletries ??? and I've gone back for my Masters at the University of Use Ups!
Proud to be dealing with her debts 1198~
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Ah, I sympathise, there is nothing worse than forgetting your book. I am very very fortunate to have a (quite old now) Palm PDA, with over 200 books on it, so I am never without a good read. It also plays audio books, so gets a lot of use to and from work. I am dreading the day that it packs up as an equivalent model is way out of my budget.
I have 16 unread paperbacks (a few 2 for £7 and 3 for 2), that I have usually bought just before a holiday.
I too have a Palm PDA (TX) with about 125 books on it (10 unread).
Last month I acquired a 32GB iPod Touch and have been able to transfer the books across to this new device which is so much nicer and easier to use, as I take it everywhere with me (I still have my TX as a back up).
Whilst on holiday last month, I took 3 paperbacks and the iPod Touch and ended up reading 1 paperback and 2 novels on the Touch.
I like knowing that I can travel light and still have access to a good read.
My OH doesn't read that much, but on our last holiday, he took 2 autobiographies with him and he read both of them (previous to this holiday, he had taken the same fiction novel with him on our last 3 holidays and still not got to the middle page).
I gave him a gold star. :T
I will definitely be joining in this challenge.0
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