Post Your bookshelf/Library
DrHappyAngry
Member Posts: 1,577
in Off-Topic
The famous quotes thread made me start thinking, I have the most schizophrenic book collection. So show me your library, I want to see it!
I've got a disjointed mix of classics and history, older American literature like Twain and Poe, a bunch of Sci-Fi, some out of print non-fiction by Asimov, with some crazy counter culture stuff like Hunter S Thompson and Ken Kesey, as well as a shelf of Manga from those 2 years I lived above a Japanese book store.
Right now, I'm reading Armageddon in Retrospect, a posthumous Vonnegut book. The last book I finished was the Anabasis by Xenophon.
I've got a disjointed mix of classics and history, older American literature like Twain and Poe, a bunch of Sci-Fi, some out of print non-fiction by Asimov, with some crazy counter culture stuff like Hunter S Thompson and Ken Kesey, as well as a shelf of Manga from those 2 years I lived above a Japanese book store.
Right now, I'm reading Armageddon in Retrospect, a posthumous Vonnegut book. The last book I finished was the Anabasis by Xenophon.
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*edit* forgot to mention a copy of Beowulf. Doh, need to turn in my Christian card. I failed to mention my Bible, sigh. Darn thing is never on the bookshelf anyway.
As you would never, ever guess, I do like mangas.
Also, on the lower shelf are: books that are related to drawing/art, books that are related to martial arts, few of the Witcher books (the latest books are not there, but rather in my brother's collection), some Diablo novels, because gotta love Diablo, Tale from the Perilous Realm by Tolkien and some other rather random books.
Right now starting The Lost Order by Steve Berry
Here you go.
https://www.leue-photo.com/england-complete/source/image/uk-0094.jpg
(I wish. However the couple of over stocked, messy, bookshelves we have in reality is something I would never put on the internet)
It is mostly a collection of short stories, poetry, history, and pop culture studies. It also has a mixture of my roommates books as well. A fun game we have with guests is guess whose books are whose.
High Victorian, modeled on a first class railway carriage, but then with an extra twist of it being in an effing great castle with owners who had a lot of money.
And the descendants still get to live there, all the plebs like me paying money to gaze in awe at their treasures. Could almost make you revolt, but then it wouldn't exist at all, so those are the breaks
I've actually read almost everything that's up on my shelf. There's a small stack in the center that's stacked vertically instead of horizontally, and that's my to read stack (the stack with The Epic of Gilgamesh). Admittedly I do occasionally pick up a book and decide I'm not into it. I hate to say it, but I just don't like Edward Gibbon, he rambles and meanders far too much. I tried reading The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, and he'll go off for like 2 pages about how much Commodus sucked, but not provide any actual reasons in those 2 pages.
Edit: Wondermark is right on the money.
http://wondermark.com/442/
I've only got 2 bookshelves in my apartment, but I've got hundreds of paperback fantasy/sci-fi novels that used to be stacked 3 high and 3 deep on one shelf before I exploded it across my bedroom because of rereaditis, a complete collection of "Great Books of the Western World" that takes up 2 shelves by itself, and is a treasure of, well, what it says on the spines, and yet more books ranging from dictionaries to college textbooks to chemical reference books to DnD gaming books to hardback sci-fi books to children's/teen/young adult books to yet more fantasy novels. About the only genres that I don't think I have ANY books in are (auto)biographies and political BS books. Ain't nobody got time for that. Although I've been mulling about making an exception for "Fire and Fury".
On my dresser is about 8 stacks books ranging from about 1 to 2.5 feet high each.
And then there's all the books I've left behind at my parent's place, probably half again as many books...
So to show you the bulk of my library, I'd have to take a few pictures of my very messy bedroom.
I don't have thousands, but I certainly do have several hundreds.
I'd like to get rid of some of them, I do actually have a box of them that are duplicates or I've read and didn't like. Most of my collection happened at a massive used bookstore, and I'd buy dozens at once and not read all of them before the next visit, causing me to buy duplicates for when I bought them because I didn't remember reading them, or forgot.
But a LOT of them I've read, many of whom I don't really think I'll ever re-read. But still, I don't want to get rid of them, because I do cherish the stories in them.
I'll part with my books when I'm on the ground stone-cold dead. E-books have NOTHING on physical copies. Except storage capacity versus volume, I'll admit. Last June I was on a cruise with my mother around the British Isles. We went to Trinity College, home of the Book of Kells. The Trinity College Library was, while not the largest library I've been in, certainly the one that was most awe-inspiring. It was like visiting a cathedral.
Plus, you know, seeing THE Book of Kells in person.
i have a turn of the 18th/19th century color pilgrims progress. 2nd edition, steven donaldson thomas covenant series, bible, cs lewis stuff, bernard shaw, rudyard kipling, carl jung, ibsen, etc and non fiction crap like grays anatomy, oh yah lots of research stuff for faerun. i know i'm forgetting something?
way back in da' early 90s
that guy^
My friends and I call this the "Shelfie". Like a selfie, but less duck face and more text.
And...and her many knick-knacks and pokemon figures...
And this is just the stuff I have out on the shelves for people to see, let alone the piles tucked away in the drawers or under the desk. XD
For xmas, I gave my friend a beautiful gold leaf copy of The Aeneid. I had a tough time not wanting to keep that one for myself.