From: ted@loft.tnolan.com   
      
   In article ,   
   Paul S Person wrote:   
   >On Fri, 05 Dec 2025 18:43:33 GMT, scott@slp53.sl.home (Scott Lurndal)   
   >wrote:   
   >   
   >>Paul S Person writes:   
   >>>On Fri, 5 Dec 2025 01:41:24 -0600, Lynn McGuire   
   >>> wrote:   
   >>>   
   >>>>On 12/2/2025 9:05 AM, James Nicoll wrote:   
   >>>>> Things I Wish I'd Known When Starting a Book Collection   
   >>>>>=20   
   >>>>> Handy advice for overly enthusiastic bookworms (you know who you are)   
   >>>>>=20   
   >>>>> =   
   >>>https://reactormag.com/things-i-wish-id-known-when-starting-a-book-collec=   
   >>>tion/   
   >>>>   
   >>>>I only have 4,000 books at the moment. Plus 500 books in my SBR=20   
   >>>>(strategic book reserve). I keep them in seven 6 ft tall by 3 ft wide=20   
   >>>>bookcases, triple stacked, in my bedroom. Triple stacked is a front=20   
   >>>>row, a back row, and a top stuffing of books on each shelf.   
   >>>   
   >>>If they are vertical, you might be able to save some space by stacking   
   >>>them horizontally. Depending on how much space there is between the   
   >>>shelves and the size of the books, of course. Doing two rows like this   
   >>>can cause loading problems on the shelves (ie, if they are adjustable,   
   >>>they may bend enough to come loose; if not, then the shelf might bend   
   >>>or even break).   
   >>>   
   >>>>I have asked my wife if I can install an eighth bookcase in our bedroom.=   
   >>>=20   
   >>>> She said no. And then she said I should get rid of one of the =   
   >>>bookcases.   
   >>>>   
   >>>>I am getting rid of the 8,000+ books from my parents. Half were=20   
   >>>>hardbacks. It has been difficult. The local library has taken over a=20   
   >>>>thousand books so far.   
   >>>>   
   >>>>What do you do with a 60+ year old complete set of the Hardy Boy books ?   
   >>>   
   >>>=46ind a collector and sell it. Or at least give it away.   
   >>   
   >>There are several complete sets available on ebay. They're not   
   >>rare.   
   >>   
   >>>   
   >>>=46ind a cash-starved grade-school library that has space on its shelves   
   >>>but no Hardy Boys and donate it..   
   >>   
   >>Would modern students find the mysteries compelling, tame or   
   >>ridiculously dated? (those students that (1) can read and (2) do read).   
   >   
   >I don't know about anyone else, but I found /The Sign of the Crooked   
   >Arrow/ to be quite deliciously frightening when I read it.   
   >   
   >Of course, times have changed, and they probably /are/ dated,   
   >technologically at least.   
      
   I think the one with the mad scientist and his trap house was the best,   
   but I can't recall the name right now.   
   --   
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   What's not in Columbia anymore..   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   
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