Tuesday, April 19, 2011

When Home is... Full Bookshelves



This happens every year. The bookshelves are filled and no more books can be stacked sideways on top of others. It’s time to be ruthless and work out which are worthy to stay and which are on the way to Vinnies or the School Fete.

Usually I do this job alone and it doesn’t take too long to pick a pile of paperback fiction that I can live without but this year something different happened... Stuart. While innocently out having coffee, unbeknownst to me, he was busy making piles – ‘suggested’ piles – of books to give away. The suggested pile was chosen with common sense in mind but no emotion.

It was then that I realised books not only give a room its soul but they also act as markers of our history, they help shape the story of the people we become. They are yet another expression of making our homes truly ours.

Ok – I know I will never need to use my pregnancy books again or Robin Barker’s bible Baby Love but I still want to see the bent back spines of those books on the shelves, remembering how thumbed through they were. I like seeing the folded back pages in Baby Love reminding me that, yes, at three weeks old babies properly wake up and cry for substantial periods of time and that’s normal. It was hell at the time but now I fondly remember turning down the corner of that page at 2am one morning with three-week-old Lily screaming in one arm while I held the book in the other.

And as for fiction; I agree that my shelves filled with Virginia Andrews complete collection – and dare I mention Penny Vincenzi – may cause visitors to wonder how I became a book editor or why any magazine would ask me to write book reviews, but these books are such old friends. At least my Sweet Valley High collection is hidden under the bed...

I haven’t read Flowers in the Attic since I was 14 but it was within these pages I discovered the power of reading and the pleasure of escaping into another world. I like remembering that excitement and I don’t mind that it’s on display for all to see. They may take up nearly a whole shelf but they are staying.

So while Stuart’s ‘suggested’ pile went straight back on the shelves I still managed to get us back to full capacity rather than over capacity.

Interestingly, my ‘suggested’ pile for him also went back on the shelves. Funny how common sense goes when it’s about pulling apart your own story. I don’t think he’ll be reading Tuning a Racing Boat, Three Sheets to the Wind, They Ran with the Ball or The World’s Best Rugby Book Ever again but there they sit.

6 comments:

paula said...

Oh, I know all about that dynamic! I have the cringe factor at seeing science fiction books on public display... No matter how often I earmark them for donation, they magnetically return to their shelves too.

Anonymous said...

I am worse than you Germaine or is it because I have a longer history? I am now contemplating building MORE bookshelves to accommodate loved books kept since 1970 ! I can't bear to leave them in boxes in the basement any longer and the thought of giving them away is impossible!

Retrospections said...

And it's when you have 17 different vintage editions of Alice in Wonderland on display for all to see that you know you have a slight problem! Can't part with any, ever ...

First House on the Right said...

I find it almost impossible to get rid of books and sadly when I fill a bookcase I usually go and buy another :( Nicolex

Sleece said...

It must be that time of year... our old bookshelf struggles to stay upright as we wait for new one to arrive from France I too have made suggestions for books to be donated to someone else's shelves.... yet neither Brett nor I seem willing to part with any! I think the only solution is to order a second bookshelf!

Claire said...

You know I feel your pain... oh to have enough bookshelves to fit all my book.. I can't bear to throw them away for the most part, but console myself that at least I re-read the vast majority. In my dream house I have my own (incredibly spacious) shed with nothing but bookshelves, a comfy chair, kettle, small fridge and a padlock so the kids can't get in ;-).

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