I decided, in a fit of desperation this Spring, to buy some used books in hardcover for works I couldn't find new in hardcover. I ordered Victor Hugo's Quatrevingttreize, Remarque's Der Weg Zurück and Drei Kameraden and Huysman's Là-Bas. The results were as follows:
1. Quatrevingttreize. The book was a 1961 edition, which made me hopeful it would be in good condition. When it arrived, the stench of mold was so overpowering that I gagged. I sealed it in a tupperware bin with charcoal and left it there for two months. Upon opening, I still gagged from the smell. I then went to the extreme step of opening the book, dumping out half a box of Arm & Hammer baking soda on it, then resealing it for another two months. After taking it out in June, the stench was still very strong and no matter how hard I scoured the book, little bits of baking soda were still coming off it. End result: I tossed the book into the basement and will likely throw it out.
2. Der Weg Zurück. It is a 1920s edition and it smelled horrendous. Due to my Hugo problems, I have kept it sealed in charcoal for six months now and plan on trying to open it around Halloween. If it still smells I'll take it to the basement.
3. Drei Kameraden. The book didn't smell at all and was in good shape, all things considered. It went onto the shelf, no problems.
4. Là-Bas. Actually, this one was ordered the year before. It had a smell, but it was understandable given that it was an 1895 edition. Charcoal for two months reduced the smell to the level of not being noticeable, and at that point the book ended up on the shelf.
Despite the fact that I've had some successes, I came to the conclusion that used books are not worth it. I would still go out and buy new hardcover versions of both books currently on the shelf if I could find them. It's something about having unknown people having touched the book that really makes me disgusted. Of course, I have old books that have been in our family, and I have no problems with them because I know whose books they were (my grandfather's, my father's, my mother's, etc.).
1. Quatrevingttreize. The book was a 1961 edition, which made me hopeful it would be in good condition. When it arrived, the stench of mold was so overpowering that I gagged. I sealed it in a tupperware bin with charcoal and left it there for two months. Upon opening, I still gagged from the smell. I then went to the extreme step of opening the book, dumping out half a box of Arm & Hammer baking soda on it, then resealing it for another two months. After taking it out in June, the stench was still very strong and no matter how hard I scoured the book, little bits of baking soda were still coming off it. End result: I tossed the book into the basement and will likely throw it out.
2. Der Weg Zurück. It is a 1920s edition and it smelled horrendous. Due to my Hugo problems, I have kept it sealed in charcoal for six months now and plan on trying to open it around Halloween. If it still smells I'll take it to the basement.
3. Drei Kameraden. The book didn't smell at all and was in good shape, all things considered. It went onto the shelf, no problems.
4. Là-Bas. Actually, this one was ordered the year before. It had a smell, but it was understandable given that it was an 1895 edition. Charcoal for two months reduced the smell to the level of not being noticeable, and at that point the book ended up on the shelf.
Despite the fact that I've had some successes, I came to the conclusion that used books are not worth it. I would still go out and buy new hardcover versions of both books currently on the shelf if I could find them. It's something about having unknown people having touched the book that really makes me disgusted. Of course, I have old books that have been in our family, and I have no problems with them because I know whose books they were (my grandfather's, my father's, my mother's, etc.).
Most of the ones I've bought were printed in the past 20 years, so it may be that they just haven't mouldered enough yet. But I do recall a few older books giving off a faint whiff of decay; most of those I've replaced in recent years. But when I can choose the used books, generally I get books that have no obvious prior reads, that or the leatherbounds don't display them. But the dog-eared copies marked up? Gah, I hate those so-called "readers" (or rather, their stupid treatment of objects) with a passion.
Generally, however, I don't fret too much about the prior reader if it's something like acquiring the likes of Calvino, Cortázar, et al.
Illusions fall like the husk of a fruit, one after another, and the fruit is experience. - Narrator, Sylvie
Je suis méchant.
Je suis méchant.
/Survey: the changing face of home libraries
12/07/2012 12:27:26 AM
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Well...
12/07/2012 10:08:20 AM
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The obsessive compulsive in me won't let me stack books in corners.
15/07/2012 01:53:57 PM
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Not even if you stack them in really neat piles? You need to get your C.D.O. checked. *NM*
17/07/2012 08:07:42 PM
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My collateralized debt obligation? I hate those things.
17/07/2012 08:15:30 PM
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Um
12/07/2012 02:05:17 PM
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You had a free bookshelf above the headboard of the bed in a spare room? Lucky you
15/07/2012 01:52:42 PM
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we just keep buying more bookshelves... and putting books in different rooms *NM*
12/07/2012 04:26:56 PM
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Karl May? Interesting.
12/07/2012 07:36:42 PM
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You people are wussies
12/07/2012 07:56:20 PM
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I got the BUR edition in a little box.
15/07/2012 01:48:04 PM
- 652 Views
That is odd
17/07/2012 02:56:52 PM
- 789 Views
Well, you know my opinion of used books
17/07/2012 05:00:13 PM
- 745 Views
I must not be very sensitive to those smells
17/07/2012 05:57:35 PM
- 787 Views
I take books I haven't read in several years to Half Priced Books... a tiny refund on my purchases. *NM*
13/07/2012 01:44:18 AM
- 300 Views
Thankfully I haven't had to make such hard decisions yet
15/07/2012 08:11:57 AM
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Yeah, I can't go and buy a 21st bookcase.
15/07/2012 01:38:56 PM
- 630 Views