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View Poll Results: What do you think of conspicuous physical books? | |||
Books are estethically pleasing and I like to see them on bookshelves | 32 | 58.18% | |
I have no option but to store books where I can see them | 7 | 12.73% | |
Thank goodness we've gone digital! | 11 | 20.00% | |
Other | 5 | 9.09% | |
Voters: 55. You may not vote on this poll |
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07-27-2022, 06:38 PM | #1 |
Onyx-maniac
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Conspicuous display of physical books
Ok, I'm been to Trinity College, Dublin, Old Library.
It's quite the eye-porn, but what's the use? When was the last time that a volume was touched? You see authors, intellectuals against a backdrop of overflowing bookcases. (Especially lawyers, but we won't get into that one.) If it were 50 years ago and I were rich, I'd have a library of 25,000 volumes. I'd keep them in a (climate controlled) basement in Stor-Reels. Those are the shelves on train tracks so that in a whole series there is only 4 feet of slack that can be positioned where you want it. I want access to books. I don't want to look at them. But you. Do you consider them esthetic, visually pleasing? Or nasty, dust-collecting objects that steal space that could be better used for chairs, divans, reading lamps? |
07-27-2022, 06:45 PM | #2 |
Onyx-maniac
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Aaarrrrrrggggg!
Last edited by Renate; 08-15-2022 at 06:46 PM. |
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07-27-2022, 08:57 PM | #3 |
Wizard
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You asked me in a private message to defend my opinion. Why?
I like to see books in a house. I don't need tons of bookshelves, but a shelf or two showing my hardbound favorites. Right now, none are on display, because we moved and don't have the same space. We got rid of many, but still probably have a few hundred give or take. I can't read print books easily, so 99% of my reading is done from a Kindle or mobile device. A house with no books freaks me out. I know people who don't do any reading for pleasure. It's a trait I don't understand. |
07-28-2022, 05:21 AM | #4 |
Bibliolater
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I voted other:
I like to see a few books in a bookcase but not (in the home anyway) so many that they take over the room. I do like second-hand bookshops that are well shelved and orderly though. |
07-28-2022, 09:27 AM | #5 |
Grand Sorcerer
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My paper books aren't "conspicuously displayed", they're on bookshelves which have been normal household furniture for me my entire life. Cookbooks have their own bookcase, and there are bookcases in each bedroom and a few in the living area. This doesn't feeling odd or like some sort of performance to me. All my friends have bookcases also. Where else would I put them? A mildewy shed? That I'd have to trek out to every time I wanted to grab or re-shelve a book?
They're not dust collectors because all of my bookshelves have glass doors on the front. |
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07-28-2022, 10:08 AM | #6 |
Diligent dilettante
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I voted "other". I understand that many people are deeply attached to the physicality of paper books. They love the look of them, the feel of them, the smell of them. Those are subjective aesthetic judgments and I have no problem with that.
What I have a problem with is the widely held view that paper books are somehow superior to other types of books. The Twitter hashtag #booktwt for example, presumes that "book" means only "paper book". For some who hold that view it really IS about "conspicuous display", but that is no more "right" or "wrong" than putting pictures on walls, self-evidently for the purpose of "conspicuous display" For me, the content is more important than the medium, and would consider myself a bibliophile because I read voraciously. Many, many "bibliophiles" feel no compunction in contemning that notion, and that viewpoint irks me more than someone taking pleasure in walls of books |
07-28-2022, 10:19 AM | #7 | |
Onyx-maniac
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Quote:
Cookbooks might almost be a separate case. And I do have my greasy thumbed Chilton's for my truck. |
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07-28-2022, 09:49 PM | #8 |
null operator (he/him)
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I voted other
Apart from reference texts, a few grubby cookbooks, and some 'treasured possessions', I have never hung onto books, mainly give them to second-hand bookshops (or street side libraries), sometimes leave them on park benches or at bus stops. One of the things I 'hate' about e-books is that I cannot give them away legitimately when I'm done with them. Treasured possessions includes: an early 20th century leather bound 5 volume edition of Macaulay's "History of England…". My local library would have sent to the dump had I not taken it. I had referred to it a couple times at the library prior to that… it wasn't on a shelf, it was in a locked room and it couldn't be borrowed. Now it's in a cupboard :lol: since I snagged the Macaulay we got a new much bigger local library, maybe they'd like it back. BR |
07-30-2022, 05:51 PM | #9 |
Wizard
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I don't have a ton of paper books myself, but I've always liked photos of libraries in houses that are large enough to have a dedicated room for it. Even though most of my reading is digital these days, I'd probably enjoy having a home library room if I could afford it.
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08-02-2022, 11:23 AM | #10 |
Wizard
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My small living room is a living room library. I've always loved books and dreamed of having a mini library as an adult. As a teen I had these neat bookshelves my mom made that took up a lot of room with different colored boards and bricks. I think books are gorgeous and like having them around - not only for reading, but also the bibliophile in me.
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08-15-2022, 11:59 AM | #11 |
Wizard
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We've gone digital except for cookbooks and craft books. I actually like having far fewer books around the house. There is actually wall space for completed wall art!
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08-19-2022, 04:44 AM | #12 |
Ancient Sage
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I have two bookcases,displaying around a thousand books. To me, a home without books looks naked somehow!
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08-24-2022, 04:13 PM | #13 |
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Books are the last holdout for me when it comes to physical media. As digital media requires nothing more than a computer to function they to me are unjustifiable with regards to collecting or storing on shelves. CDs and Blu-ray disks for example seem just hangover parody of the analog era when the media was the medium itself.
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09-06-2022, 05:06 PM | #14 |
Connoisseur
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If you're going to have those big bookcases full of books remember to position them against outside walls so they do double-duty as insulation. Is it still conspicuous consumption when they are helping with the energy bill?
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10-06-2022, 10:36 AM | #15 |
Wizard
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I selected “thank goodness for digital”. I gave away every fiction book I owned several years ago. I mostly see physical books as heavy, bulky dust traps.
However, I recently reordered a few favourite paperbacks, because we were facing yet another hurricane, and potential lengthy power outages. The fly in the digital ointment is that kindles need recharging. And when there is nothing to do for days, it’s easy to burn through a stack of charged e-readers. |
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