I'm at an interesting crossroads myself, now that I've got an eBook reader.
Ghavrel Send a noteboard - 29/10/2009 09:56:19 PM
A. I have about 600 eBooks in PDF format. Science Fiction/Fantasy, History, Science, Literature, Language, and Politics.
That's a lot. I'm beginning to collect public domain books, but I prefer the epub format. It lets me resize the font on my reader.
C. So the vast majority of my books are in electronic format. I enjoy reading them on the computer. I have been reading books on the computer since 2002.
I'm envious. I can't stand reading books on the computer.
D. I am about to get a dedicated eBook reader. Most likely the Nook, once I try it out when I see it available at the bookstore. But this is philosophy . . .
If you like books on the computer, I can't see how an eBook reader would be dislikable to you.
But I worry that I am being selfish. I worry that I am giving in to material attachment. To possession. (Sidenote, when I was in Kindergarten, I would be the kid who would give away all the toys and just be happy playing with paper and crayons).I'm not against possession necessarily. But I do like to limit my material attachment. I have read these books. And I feel like I will not read them again. So many other books to read. And I feel like they are mausoleums of ideas. They just sit there, not gathering dust(I clean. A lot.). I feel like they could better serve other people. Ideas need to be available. That's what libraries are for, right? Places where people without the funds(Or with environmental reasons) choose to get books from. I feel like they would better serve the local library whose history section is rather pathetic. Then someone else could discover Classical Athens or Byzantium or learn about The Dutch Republic or about the Meiji Restoration or about T'Ang China.(Yeah I tend to be Eurasian centric in my book choices). I have no North American or Latin American or African(I'm not counting ancient Egyptian, although I do have some Islamic history but that's more Eurasian)history.
I don't see why that would be a bad idea, although you might consider giving books to people whom you know have an interest in them. But yes, there's always the chance that someone will snag a history book from a library.
So, how do you feel about your books?
Some of them I love, and others I don't care too much about.
Would you ever give your books away? Sell your books?
Yes and yes. I only do the former if it's a book I love, and I only give them to people I know will appreciate them.
Have any of you ever thought about why you keep your books?
I get attached to stuff. It's a personal failing.
I know many of you don't like the ideas of eBooks. That's fine enough. To each his/her own. This post is more about possession. About intellectual exchange, and what it means to be finished with a book. I don't consider it a mark of education to see or to not see books in a household. I know others who would never dream of getting rid of their books. I know plenty of people in tiny apartments who make use of the library.
While I don't particularly notice when people lack books, I do find myself noting with approval people who possess many books.
From my own perspective, I have a complex about moving. Between NYC and Sydney to Tennessee to Boston to Illinois, I have moved a great deal in the past 7 years. And sometimes helped others move their books(Joe, I am looking at you). And it's a pain. So that factors into my desire to remove the "attachment" to these books. I won't have to worry about them when I move. Packing, unpacking, going downstairs, upstairs, etc. Life is so much easier when the books are on the computer, eReader, backed up onto a flash drive.
The itinerant lifestyle is vastly aided by the invention of electronic media, yes.
I wonder if my books are my last true "material attachment". If working in bookstores and libraries, seeing my mother with over 3000 books, being surrounded by librarians and academics has left me thinking that a house "needs" books in view(Great way to judge, people, btw.)
It's one of the more accurate ways to judge, I think.
Though I have written this post to see what Rafolites think, I am almost certain to give away all my books to the local library. Karma means actions. And I do think it would be a good action to help a library and in the process perhaps help some future readers of these books be able to access these books.
No harm could come of it.
"We feel safe when we read what we recognise, what does not challenge our way of thinking.... a steady acceptance of pre-arranged patterns leads to the inability to question what we are told."
~Camilla
Ghavrel is Ghavrel is Ghavrel
*MySmiley*
~Camilla
Ghavrel is Ghavrel is Ghavrel
*MySmiley*
On possession of books.
29/10/2009 07:13:44 PM
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Re: <sings Madonna>
29/10/2009 08:06:13 PM
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My friends wanted to make a bonfire of my books last time I moved.
29/10/2009 09:10:16 PM
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No.
29/10/2009 09:28:11 PM
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i always keep the books i think are worth it
29/10/2009 09:38:38 PM
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If I kept the books I felt worth it, I would keep them all.
29/10/2009 09:46:57 PM
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yes but i have a habit of re-reading my books at some future point -- except the textbooks
29/10/2009 10:03:04 PM
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I'm at an interesting crossroads myself, now that I've got an eBook reader.
29/10/2009 09:56:19 PM
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A failing you say?
29/10/2009 10:07:34 PM
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To quote my wise grandmother, "There's a difference between sentiment and sediment."
29/10/2009 10:22:31 PM
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Re: On possession of books.
29/10/2009 09:59:04 PM
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I wouldn't worry.
29/10/2009 10:19:10 PM
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Ok. I won't worry.
30/10/2009 01:37:18 PM
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Are you truly trying to claim that none of the knowledge you've learned from your books
30/10/2009 02:51:35 PM
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I think you may have failed to read the original post or have misunderstood it
30/10/2009 03:00:48 PM
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no
30/10/2009 03:06:53 PM
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Re: On possession of books.
30/10/2009 01:05:25 PM
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People seem to lend books! I am in a distinct minority. I don't lend books. Or give them to people.
30/10/2009 01:46:25 PM
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Library donation is a good idea; you might check around with some local schools, too.
31/10/2009 02:49:48 PM
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