
Every year we go to the Planned Parenthood Book Sale.
The books had been plundered and pillaged by the time we got there on the second night. The classics were down to a few Dickens and Brontes. This is a slight exaggeration.
I had a sinking feeling I’d gone to the sale too many times. We filled a book bag instead of a box. I’m happy to have bought fewer books, though, because I have FINALLY shelved all my books and don’t want clutter. But why go if there is nothing unusual? I found a few in the trade paperback section. I haven’t read this novel by Julia Glass, who won the National Book Award in 2002 for Three Junes. And who doesn’t like David Lodge’s satires?
But, really, we have to find more book sales in the midwest. Where have all the good books gone?
REPLACING CRUMBLING PAPERBACKS!
Traditionally I’ve been a paperback person, but in 2017 I got hooked on Folio Society books. A group of friends and I purchased some FS books for a round robin. We were co-owners and traded them back and forth.
We logged our reading time. No reason.
My friend’s daughter, who had just gotten out of rehab, kept a journal because she was supposed to try to change her behavior. And she said she read enough to cut half an hour to forty-five minutes from her phone time. Pretty good for anyone!
The FS books will last, but I’ve been musing: how long will my other hardbacks? Will my cute affordable Penguin hardback classics last for 50 years? I am a fan of Coralie Bickford’s cover designs, especially the birdcages on the cover of Bleak House (think of Miss Flite). And these books are good value: usually under $20. The print is a nice size and the paper is sturdy.
But perhaps we are not meant to sit in bed and hold Bleak House in one hand while we slurp coffee. The cover of Bleak House took a beating! And, oops, a coffee stain on one of the pages.
I buy strictly reading copies. (Well, except for the FS splurge.) Should we buy paperbacks or hardbacks for replacements? Or do you buy first editions?