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I didn't see this topic yet, please forgive me if it's already been done. What are your bookshelves like? It occurred to me recently that my bookshelf is like a crude road map to my life -- in my 29 years different authors, genres and fields of study have etched upon this map from whence I came. Here's a glimpse at my path as accurately as I recall it, tracing through from my current stock: Age 5: begin collecting books notable mentions: Norby the Mixed up Robot series by Asimov The Great Brain series by Fitzgerald Horror classics like Frankenstein and Dracula Age 10: the inquisitive years, lots of books about snakes and dinosaurs, got the 15th edition of the Encyclopedia Britannica Age 13: The scifi/fantasy years notable mentions: The Wheel of Time by Jordan Middle Earth books by tolkien The Foundation Series by Asimov Age 15: The history years began collecting history books: 40+ on the American Civil War as a primary focus, many various others in other periods of history. Age 18: College began collecting books on Psychology and military science. Age 22: Career Int'l affairs, geopolitics, expanded military science, int'l development, technology, intelligence. Age 25: Darker fiction & Classical Lit notable mentions: World War Z by Brooks House of Leaves by Danielewski Sprawl and Bridge series by Gibson War and Peace, Crime and Punishment, lots of Tolstoy and Dostoyevsky Age 29, today: History: 82 books Science Fiction: 31 books Psychology: 30 books Fantasy: 28 books Military Science: 19 books Science: 16 books Literature: 11 books Religious: 11 books Global Issues: 9 books Nonfiction misc: 5 books Philosophy: 4 books Space science: 4 books
Freedom breeds war; and Peace, slavery. So it shall be forevermore: Men who love freedom buy it with their lives, and lovers of peace with their freedom. | |
Overflowing and damn near about to collapse. We have boxes and boxes of books that we have to keep stored because they won't all fit in our apartment haha.
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When I moved out of home, it was comprised of the first four milkcrates I managed to "find", now it's 17 of them; plus a couple more to hold my record player, computer, etc.
Our Citizen. Our Justice. Bring Omar Khadr back to Canada. | |
My bookshelves just have the stuff I like to reference frequently, and some antiques I like to display. They're crammed full, then the rest of my books I have in boxes in the garage. We had a garage sale over the summer and had tons of books out, but very few sold. I might take some to Half-Price Books.
“We are not going to have the kind of cooperation we need if everyone insists on their own narrow version of reality. … the great divide in the world today … is between people who have the courage to listen and those who are convinced that they already know it all.” -Madeline Albright | |
Is anyone here a member of paperbackswap.com or bookmooch.com? They're a great way to get rid of excess books as well as get some new ones. Free. As for my bookshelves...I have WAY too many books. In my old apartment, I had three bookshelves, full, and those were all unread (I think I have a problem...). Recently I've decided to invest in a Kindle (Ebook reader), that will 1. significantly reduce space needed to store books (all my books will be digital), and 2. save me lots of money (the books I can't get free will cost me less, since they don't have to be printed.) It just seems to make sense. I have a feeling it'll pay for itself in under a year.
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We're in the process of building a book shelf along the wall of our den. When it's completed and I'm not feeling too lazy, I'll post pics. As for the collection, mix of mostly everything.
Gone for a while. Be back when I'm back. | |
I'm in grammar school, I have mostly 19th century fiction on my bookshelves(Tolstoy, Dostoevsky). And some manuals, and some other stuff. Like weird little ornaments. One of an owl with all these mirrors. And it's made of wood, and came from Portugal. I'm sure if I looked in enough places, I'd find a book about it, or maybe I could write one. I'd have to look in a lot of places in order to write a coherent book. I tend to get sidetracked.
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I'm in grammar(what I've heard an American might call a prep school) school, I have mostly 19th century fiction on my bookshelves(Tolstoy, Dostoevsky). And some manuals, and some other stuff. Like weird little ornaments. One of an owl with all these mirrors. And it's made of wood, and came from Portugal. I'm sure if I looked in enough places, I'd find a book about it, or maybe I could write one. I'd have to look in a lot of places in order to write a coherent book. I tend to get sidetracked. edit: American translation
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