Seanan McGuire (seanan_mcguire) wrote,
Seanan McGuire
seanan_mcguire

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Confessions of an incurable bibliophile.

I love books.

I love the feeling of them, the weight of them, the smell that you only get when you have a sufficient density of books in a room. I love the reality of them. I'm never going to be one of those people who makes the transition to electronic books, because they just aren't real enough for me. I say this as someone who writes books on a computer, and rarely, if ever prints them out before they hit the final draft; I realize it's not a rational way to be. It's just how I'm wired. It doesn't help that I'm an obsessive packrat who collects basically everything you can think of. When Pokemon was big, the core philosophy -- 'gotta catch 'em all' -- made total sense to me. I just chose to apply it to books.

All my life I've wandered through used bookstores, looking at the shelves and wondering how anyone could ever, ever let some of those volumes out of their hands. I've seriously theorized that certain books must have come from estate sales following the tragic deaths of their owners, because otherwise, how could they have wound up on that shelf? There's just no way the parting was voluntary. The knowledge that someday, my books will be on those shelves, books with my name on them, cast into the chilling world of the second-hand tome, just doesn't compute. Once you own a book, it's yours forever, right?

Right?

Recently, the rapidly shrinking floor space in my home has forced me to take a long, hard look at this philosophy, and admit that, perhaps, there are things in life more important than owning every book ever published by Leisure Horror. Like, y'know, being able to find my way to the bathroom. And not being one of those 'human interest' stories about the woman found a week after the big earthquake, smothered under the weight of her own toppled anthology collection. Also, I'm trying to raise money to go to WorldCon in Australia in 2010, and selling some of the books I have no intention of ever reading again seems like a good way to start. And I have books I'm never going to read again. I try to pretend that I don't, but I do. There are books I only get the urge to read every six or seven years, and that's one thing. There are reference books, and that's another thing. But works of fiction whose contents have long since ceased to appeal to me in any meaningful way? Yeah, those can go.

Getting rid of books is at once entirely alien to me and deeply cathartic. This book I didn't like? I'm not obligated to keep it. This book I liked just fine but haven't read since 1992, and wow, the idea of reading it now ceases to appeal after three pages? It can go. This book here that was the literary equivalent of a bad Science-Fiction Channel Original Movie? It was fun once, I'm not buying the DVD, the novelization can go. Suddenly, it's possible that I might be able to put the books I actually want back on the shelves. Suddenly, I can see the floor.

It's all very strange.

But kinda cool.
Tags: cleaning my house, contemplation, reading things
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pghkitten and I came to this realization earlier this year, coincidentally a few months before we found and bought a house, and eliminating a lot of "never gonna read-again's" helped a lot. We're still about one large bookshelf short of space for our entire library, but that's at least one bookshelf better than we were at the beginning of this year, and now we're looking critically at the manga and saying "Psychic Academy had some nice fanservice, but really, am I gonna read all 11 volumes again? No." It's not an easy realization to come to, as a fellow book-hoarder, but it helps when you do, and it makes more room for the good stuff to add later. Our writing styles change as we grow, and so do our reading styles; just as I won't mourn the unpublishability of my third-grade short stories, I've decided not to shed a tear over the novels that I realize I just don't enjoy like I used to.