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Books...yes YOU LOVER OF BOOKS...how arrange them?
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Originally posted by InsideJob View PostI was living on Frankiln, a block up from Hollywood Blvd.,
when the LA riots broke out following the Rodney King trial. Then moved to NYC before the first attempt to blow up the World Trade Center in 1993. Ah, memories of my youth... sigh.
Anywho, I can't believe how much paperbacks cost these days. I'm working my way through H.P. Lovecraft right now. SciFi writers have been ripping this guy off for decades.
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Originally posted by DoYouKubuntu View PostI don't buy/use leather, so I can't participate. That's okay, I still have thousands of books and always find more to buy. My most recent was this really cool book of photos taken on Hollywood Blvd in 1969-1972. Reminds me of my youth.
Anywho, I can't believe how much paperbacks cost these days. I'm working my way through H.P. Lovecraft right now. SciFi writers have been ripping this guy off for decades.Last edited by InsideJob; Jun 12, 2015, 04:10 PM.
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Originally posted by InsideJob View PostI use http://www.amazon.com/Debunking-11-M...+911+debunking as a book end for all the other books.
Seriously though, Barnes and Nobles has a buy one get half off sale on their leather-bound books. Probably won't be able to buy new books like this much longer in America, they can make more selling print-to-order paperbacks for $20.
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I use http://www.amazon.com/Debunking-11-M...+911+debunking as a book end for all the other books.
Seriously though, Barnes and Nobles has a buy one get half off sale on their leather-bound books. Probably won't be able to buy new books like this much longer in America, they can make more selling print-to-order paperbacks for $20.
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Originally posted by claydoh View PostMany reasons, including being kicked out by my step-mother when I was 16 (lol I did buy a book for the bus ride out of town!), then the hard decision on what to keep when my marriage broke up suddenly and I had to decide what I could carry with me when I moved closer to family. Now it is time, or rather the lack of it, among other things.
I have the basics: Heinlein, Varley, Vinge, and Adams.
BTW, I left home at 16, too--my choice. And I wouldn't have it any other way.
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Originally posted by DoYouKubuntu View PostYou've piqued my curiosity--WHY don't you have many books now?For me, the only thing that's going to separate my books and me will be death!
I have the basics: Heinlein, Varley, Vinge, and Adams.
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Originally posted by claydoh View PostI don't have many books anymore, electronic or physical.For me, the only thing that's going to separate my books and me will be death!
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I don't have many books anymore, electronic or physical.
When I had a lot of books, mostly paperbacks, I began purchasing hardcover versions of as many as I could (but keeping the softcovers). I never had any real system of arrangement, though I kept series volumes together, and tried to sort by author, but not in any alphabetical order. Heinlein was above Asimov sometimes, for example.
Thinking back to when I was a wee lad in the 70's and our family had taken half of a very large bedroom to be the library for the 5 of us. I had my own subscription to the Science Fiction Book Club, so I was adding at least 2 to 4 books a month to the shelves, plus whatever Scholastic books I bought at school. Add in everyone else's books, and it was a decent collection. I don't think there was any sort of arrangement by any of us. I do know that I knew where every book was, as did my dad. We just new, so it did have some sort of bizarre organization I guess.
Today, I think I would need gps and nfc tags to navigate a one-shelf collection
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Originally posted by SteveRiley View PostI mash all the bits of my e-books into one great big file and then sort them in numeric order.
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I mash all the bits of my e-books into one great big file and then sort them in numeric order.
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I'm actually surprised this thread hasn't gotten more love by KF members.
Anyway, as far back as the 1980s I've tried, numerous times, to organize my books electronically. Two of my first attempts were in filePro (and, no, I do NOT mean FilemakerPro--I mean filePro, formerly Profile, an RDBMS I first ran on SCO Xenix circa 1985) and via a Bourne shell script I wrote. Both eventually went the way of the dinosaurs...it was just too cumbersome trying to enter all the info, and figure out the best way to do it, etc. I could never hit on the JUST RIGHT formula, so I gave up. Now I have all sorts of nifty apps, both for Linux and Android, that promise to do these tasks very well, but I can't work up the enthusiasm to try them!
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Thoughtful replies all.
Because of turmoil at work, the biology and physics lab assistants both moved elsewhere, I'm now doing prep for both and ..........not being paid for it! lol, but.........I get to use what I prep so........it is a good thing for me! lol
Because of that, and the fact that I have FORGOTTEN where I put books that I wanted to take to class to pass around, like an original copy of Eisnstein's book explaining his theory or a very early copy of Darwin's doorstop! lol
The upper room has all of the "literature" stuff and biology, arranged by "subject, plant ecology, etc," or "type: science fiction or Middle English literature."
Lower room physics arranged by "stuff to use in lecture" "stuff to use to produce home projects and addins to regular labs" and........ "books to take in to show around.
I read all of the books into my phone word processor as single line entries with returns, in the phone's spreadsheet, I then transferred that through KDE connect to the computer and opened in Koffice.
Each entry was something like:
first cell - Biology, next cell right - Darwin's book, return
first cell - Chemistry - next cell right - Modern Chemistry Holt
I could then sort by the term in the first cell and move "blocks" of books into a new spreadsheet.
Those blocks list the books which should be on shelf 1 left one third, shelf 1 middle, etc.
So............actually.................
I can now "open a block on a shelf" by removing the books, in a row, sit them on a table,
Place the new books that need to be there in a row.
Move the previous books to the newly opened shelf.
So it is not "Dewey Decimal" it is "group by use"
And the reason I got there was because of the synergism of the phone's office app, KDE connect (yes I could use a cable but it is a time waster and interrupts flow of thought ) and Koffice on the computer.
KDE connect continues to alter how I do things.
So, thanks for the replies and I'm glad that the OP was "understandable" lol.....
woodlikesKDEconnectsmoke
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I've actually TRIED reading a book on my tablet--and that's a big step, because I had proclaimed loudly and often that I would NEVER do that! It's okay, and I can see how it could come in handy in certain situations, but it's definitely not my preference, and I can't see it becoming my preference.
You know what my favorite place is--and I mean so favorite that after moving back here it was one of my first outings (after the beach!): the main library in Pasadena. It's a BEAUTIFUL, amazing old building that I spent a lot of time in back in my youth. Its smell, that wonderful, distinct "book smell" that permeates the building, is familiar and lovely, and I feel at home there.
I don't write or mark in my books at all. I like to keep them pristine. Textbooks, on the other hand, were different--I highlighted, wrote notes, etc., in those without issue. But just regular books I like to keep looking new.
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