(I have been wanting to use this clickbait-inspired post title for ages, and now that it is the ten year anniversary of my blog, I think it is time....nb. #6 is not actually any more exciting than anything else.)
So in my twenties, I didn't have anything to read. Sure there were books for grad school, and a couple of hundred favorites from my youth, but I would go to bookstores and libraries, and not find much of anything that appealed, and it was sad and I whined a lot.
Here's how I changed my life, so that now my Book Needs are met.
1. In the late 1990s, I joined an online group called Girls Own, thanks to my sister who found it first. It is a group of fans of primarily British school girl stories, with lots of recommendations of older girls fiction thrown in. This was wonderful; it gave me lots of authors to look for, and lots of books to buy, especially when small publishers sprang up (like
Girls Gone By) who were reprinting some of the scarcer titles. It also gave my sister lots of books to lend me whenever she visited.
2. I married a fellow bibliophile. This resulted in me reading, in the early days of our relationship, books he had lying around that he recommended to me even though he hadn't read them himself yet (I didn't know that until I had read
Angle of Repose and
River of Traps, with no enjoyment whatsoever, sparing him the pain of having to do so himself). On a more positive note, it also resulted in him building lots of bookshelves in our new home (the bedroom shelves are shown below; couldn't get them to fit in one frame, so the splice is awkward, with half the chimney cut off), and lots of visits to used bookstores in England when we went to see his family there.
3. Amazon was founded in 1994, and Ebay started in 1995. Ebay was especially exciting, because rare books could be bought rather cheaply....(does anyone else remember making rash purchases of random old books just because one could?)
4. The Library card catalogue became available on line. Placing library holds became a source of much comfort in the first decade of the 21st century, especially when I realized, admittedly rather late in the game, that authors I liked might have written other books.
5. I started running booksales for the local library around 2000. Not only did this give me first crack at donations, but the library was also just starting to weed the children's books, which had been stagnant since the 1950s, which I also got first crack at.
6. And then the thing that made my book piles explode--I started this blog back in February of 2007. I started reading blogs the fall of 2006, after successfully selling a first edition of Newbery award winner
Kira-Kira on Ebay for $300, and realized that Newbery Award book speculation was a sure fire way to untold wealth. The first blog post I ever read was one by Linda Sue Park on what would win the Newbery that year, and that led me to other book blogs, which meant recommendations galore.
7. And when I saw that publishers would send you books to review if you had your own blog, I knew I had to do it...And it worked (except for the untold Newbery speculation wealth part). Hundreds, possibly thousands, of review copies have come my way, and I (and my local library, where many of the finished books have ended up) am very grateful. I have written almost 3,000 reviews. I now review for the B. and N. Kids Book blog too, which has added to my review copy piles.
(Here is my first post to get over 1000 views, on
Women's Sufferage Fiction. You will notice there are no hyperlinks. It took me almost a year or so to learn how to do those, because I lacked Confidence, but I can now, and that's all that matters. I am a much better blogger now). Incidentally, the book by Geraldine Symons I mention was discarded by the library the next year, and is now safely on my own shelves (proving that my cunning plan to get all the books is working).
So now, twenty years after my horrible time of book drought, I will never be hungry again (imagine a book in Scarlet's hand instead of a potato which is what I would have done if I had decent photo editing capabilities. Although I also have lots of potatoes that come up year after year because of my poor harvesting skills, which is also fine).