Monday Musings

Too many books? You can never have too many books or can you? A decorating project Chez Tidalscribe led to moving a lot of books and wondering why so many are unread. Some are inherited from my book loving aunt and uncle, others date back to our Book Club days when we would leave a book club, then re-join it later to get yet another introductory offer of six books for a pound each, then there are the treasured Christmas presents. Many are beautiful illustrated hardback non fiction, excellent reference books in pre internet days. Alas, when we are writing a blog or checking facts for our novels, we don’t say to ourselves ‘I’ll just pop downstairs and look that up in the very heavy giant Encyclopaedia of British History or the equally heavy Family Medical Encyclopaedia ( probably out of date )’; we just Google it. As I dust each book to decide where to put it on the new shelves I am overwhelmed with guilt at my neglect and promise to read it on the afore mentioned long winter evenings.

Do you have too many books?

Have you attended any interesting classes lately?

23 thoughts on “Monday Musings

  1. I’ve always preferred physical copies of books, but I’ve solved the space issue by getting a Kindle. Still, there’s something missing from the feel and small of a book.

    Equilates pilates is a new term for me. Learn something new each day.

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  2. My friend Jo might be running your Equilates class! I used to ride with her around Throop. I don’t know if Equilates was already a ‘thing’ or whether she invented it, because she’s a Pilates instructor who rides.
    The hardest thing about my travelling lifestyle was getting rid of all my precious, beloved books. I have a Kindle – and Google – but that’s never the same as leafing through a magnificent tome and absorbing random information.

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  3. I never attend any classes, but I do have far too many books. Most of my books are stored in boxes in the garage, sadly neglected since 2012. The rest are stacked on two large bookcases, and inside cupboards. Some are actually stored in piles on the floor of the office room, and around 10% of all of them have never been read.
    (Not to mention some 30+ books on my Kindle that I have never read so much as one page of)
    But I still buy, or receive as gifts, around six new books every year. It’s like a form of addiction.
    Best wishes, Pete.

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  4. I have had several severe purges of books – novels I will never read, non-fiction that is no longer relevant have gone. I have a small selection of ones I treasure and use the library for everything else. It makes fr a lot less dusting!

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  5. I knew you were an author, Janet but never knew your genre. Might be a mish-mash like mine, but At the Seaside attracted my interest. Perhaps I should drop a few hints to the big guy in the red suit with a white beard if I can manage to be a good girl for a few more weeks. 😀

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  6. We have so many books in this house but I do love my Kindle. My first one was still going strong after 10 years when I treated myself to another one for a big birthday. This Kindle has a back-light so I can read in the dark in the caravan when I’m the only one awake – bliss!

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