tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5722735165669239585.post6114844146327837584..comments2023-05-24T23:33:57.516+10:00Comments on My Unwelcome Stranger: My preshussss... my booksDenis Wrighthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12786035137418348609noreply@blogger.comBlogger17125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5722735165669239585.post-12940657007950799122012-10-26T23:31:33.672+11:002012-10-26T23:31:33.672+11:00Maybe as one last gesture you should put them outs...Maybe as one last gesture you should put them outside your fence with a <b>FREE TO GOOD HOME</b> placard on them. What's the worst that could happen?Denis Wrighthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12786035137418348609noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5722735165669239585.post-92145086697211828542012-10-26T12:28:55.665+11:002012-10-26T12:28:55.665+11:00Yes..."What we grieve over is what we investe...Yes..."What we grieve over is what we invested in them, and the pleasure they gave us one way or the other..". I am not usually one to indulge in nostalgia - I prefer to live in the present - but putting your finger on it in the way you have here, Denis - and to recognise the grief and loss experienced as the familiar world of my youth fades away - is a poignant perspective to mull over. <br />Perhaps those handsome, untouched-for-decades Britannicas way up high there on our bookshelves, will come down next week and put in the recycle bin, whilst Dave is in restorative rehab. Now - that's a liberating thought.....shelf-space!! Roshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13339472107640597921noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5722735165669239585.post-89616402819476380062012-10-26T10:14:43.897+11:002012-10-26T10:14:43.897+11:00The simple fact is that all encyclopedic works in ...The simple fact is that all encyclopedic works in print form are obsolete on the day they are published. True, they are full of wonderful information on many things; information that doesn't change [too much!] with time. But now they are more objects of history than anything else – information which represents a slice in time. Social comment on their day. <br /><br />You can read those from 150 years ago on Gutenberg.com. That's why they're there – not for the information but on what people of the time <i>thought</i> was as near to the truth as they could get, and also for what they <i>didn't</i> know, because what you don't know, or your starting point, drives you just as much as what what you do.<br /><br />Second simple fact is that no-one wants to use them any more. They want online information for various reasons I won't go into and you probably know. I won't use them either.<br /><br />The last few articles I published, on women and child trafficking, and women's labour in Asia appeared in print form without my having read a book specifically for them and without a single handwritten note. This is just a statement of fact. Sure, I had established a basis for assessing that online data over many years of reading specialist books by learned researchers,and this is vital. But reading and research methods are changing dramatically, as newspapers have found, often to the horror of their proprietors.<br /><br />Your Britannicas will end up on the tip, not occupying a bookcase. When the whole thing can be loaded on a chip the size of a pinhead, which is <i>right now</i>, that's their fate. <br /><br />What we grieve over is what we invested in them, and the pleasure they gave us one way or the other in print form. There's no grieving over the content.Denis Wrighthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12786035137418348609noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5722735165669239585.post-58505723557107563832012-10-26T09:37:42.224+11:002012-10-26T09:37:42.224+11:00It's quality, not quantity. As a youth I wante...It's quality, not quantity. As a youth I wanted acres of books because it looked impressive to me. Perhaps it did impress some undergrads. So I collected all sorts of things, often rubbish, which I discarded as I got older, and replaced with books that I had read properly.<br /><br />You make me wonder if the regulation heaps of books on academic bookshelves are there simply as a form of assertion of authority, sometimes to supplement power or cover insecurity by 'shock and awe'?<br /><br />I have no problem with either fiction/non-fiction, but can understand the novel's appeal. It allows an author to investigate the nature of something without pretending to create dogma. That's why myths are so powerful and so vital. They can't be turned into a cold slab to be martyred upon.<br /><br />Denis Wrighthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12786035137418348609noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5722735165669239585.post-13019146907898626752012-10-23T11:25:45.984+11:002012-10-23T11:25:45.984+11:00PS My mental ingestion block is with non-fiction b...PS My mental ingestion block is with non-fiction books. I devour fictionDavid Strattonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12984545702812009155noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5722735165669239585.post-42637342620665323352012-10-23T11:24:56.621+11:002012-10-23T11:24:56.621+11:00These are glorious photos Denis. Says so much of w...These are glorious photos Denis. Says so much of who you are deep in your bones. I have always secretly (secret's out now!)loved perusing the titles on other people's bookshelves - like a short-cut to their inner worlds and to understanding where they are coming from.<br /><br />We had a harsh experience recently when we were working out what to do with our 1977 complete set of the World Book Encyclopedia. I had bought it when my first of four babies was a toddler, and I was really quite poor. Took me ages to pay it off but felt I was doing something for my child's future. (Later, also similarly bought beautiful set of Encyclopedia Britannica whilst in "reduced circumstances".) Our small village library was not interested - they already had several sets! I have since tried to find a family to donate them to - no one at all interested. Heartbreaking reality about the world in which we find ourselves. <br />Roshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13339472107640597921noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5722735165669239585.post-76202891831510551902012-10-23T10:58:26.068+11:002012-10-23T10:58:26.068+11:00I, as a Uni computing lecturer, was always in awe ...I, as a Uni computing lecturer, was always in awe of my colleague's book walls. Mine was a single shelf! <br /><br />Even then (now MS is my excuse) I found books hard physically to handle and hard mentally to ingest. What kind of academic was I? The one word answer is "wired" - I love the online access to the stuff I have needed to read.David Strattonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12984545702812009155noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5722735165669239585.post-40515672333881559752012-10-23T10:31:03.451+11:002012-10-23T10:31:03.451+11:00Tantric Art is of course by Ajit Mukherjee.<i>Tantric Art</i> is of course by Ajit Mukherjee.Denis Wrighthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12786035137418348609noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5722735165669239585.post-44593052295717423272012-10-22T22:28:41.281+11:002012-10-22T22:28:41.281+11:00You've got most of them already, Julie!You've got most of them already, Julie!Denis Wrighthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12786035137418348609noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5722735165669239585.post-67966389223848881712012-10-22T22:27:06.906+11:002012-10-22T22:27:06.906+11:00The crying shame is that dealers buy by the kilo. ...The crying shame is that dealers buy by the kilo. The books I spent a week's wages on at Teacher's College you couldn't give away now, even though some classics are timeless. I do understand what you mean about liberating and heartbreaking. I <i>know</i> most of them I'll never open again. We kid ourselves if we think that. It's the sheer joy of possession of our past along with what's in them.Denis Wrighthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12786035137418348609noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5722735165669239585.post-34313831619294741432012-10-22T22:18:04.428+11:002012-10-22T22:18:04.428+11:00:) You'll see a couple of duplicates. I always...:) You'll see a couple of duplicates. I always preferred Huston Smith's <i>The World's Religions</i> as a good start to comparative religions, but religion is definitely something you need more than a manual for. You have to drive the car....Denis Wrighthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12786035137418348609noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5722735165669239585.post-84855447856502138832012-10-22T22:12:55.539+11:002012-10-22T22:12:55.539+11:00If you really mean Asiatic Art as in Asiatic Art I...If you really mean <i>Asiatic Art</i> as in <i>Asiatic Art In The Seattle Art Museum</i> it's by Henry Trubner et al. Seattle has a wonderful collection of Asiatic Art, but that's not surprising considering Seattle itself has a lot of connections to East Asia.Denis Wrighthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12786035137418348609noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5722735165669239585.post-78343552937853038852012-10-22T20:42:47.947+11:002012-10-22T20:42:47.947+11:00You seem to have done pretty well in your selectio...You seem to have done pretty well in your selection, Dennis. We faced the same situation when downsizing last year ... 2500 books but room only for 500. We selected the cream from a wide range of interests, sold a few for a song to dealers, a lot more on a garage sale at around 25 cents, a few boxes to charities, and still wound up with a full trailer load to take to the tip. We still have our favourites, and now ebooks, the Internet and the public library fill the gaps. The rock collection went too, along with the Teddy bears, pictures, ornaments, an under-house wonderland of things accumulated over a lifetime ‘that might come in useful’ (but rarely did), and a heap of memories that linked us to the past. Heartbreaking but, in a way, liberating. A Buddhist philosophy helped accept the loss. Funnily now, having owned, and abandoned, so much, it is hard to think of anything I want for my birthday.Bob Lakenoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5722735165669239585.post-73403046129702669692012-10-22T14:47:46.532+11:002012-10-22T14:47:46.532+11:00I see 'A Handbook of Living Religions' get...I see 'A Handbook of Living Religions' gets two slots. Hope it's not like the manual for my car; which is to say, the first time it has to be used is just before I trade it for a new one.<br /><br />Fingers crossed and all that. And much more as well.<br /><br />kvdAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5722735165669239585.post-78398839865346661952012-10-22T14:34:20.895+11:002012-10-22T14:34:20.895+11:00oh my mistake -your book is called "Asiatic ...oh my mistake -your book is called "Asiatic ART".Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5722735165669239585.post-57770270323990441992012-10-22T14:32:47.337+11:002012-10-22T14:32:47.337+11:00PS Is that "Tantric Art' book by Ajit Muk...PS Is that "Tantric Art' book by Ajit Mukherjee? I can't quite decipher the spine. You can't buy it anymore.<br /><br />Julie xAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5722735165669239585.post-29777608139563922102012-10-22T14:30:31.521+11:002012-10-22T14:30:31.521+11:00That's still a great collection!It mirrors man...That's still a great collection!It mirrors many of my favourites that 'clutter' our house too as arguably the most precious objects:) What happened to the other 90% though? Wish I'd known, if you were selling them!!<br /><br />No news is good news today, so I trust that is how it remains.<br /><br />Julie xAnonymousnoreply@blogger.com