We’re drowning in old books — but getting rid of them is heartbreaking

An article in today’s Gazette which struck a chord, and might resonate with a lot of our members, too.  –CPL

THE FINAL CHAPTER: We’re drowning in old books — but getting rid of them is heartbreaking

Montreal Gazette, 23 Jan 2023
KAREN HELLER The Washington Post*

  GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOTO
“Nobody likes to throw a book away. Nobody likes to see it go into a bin,” says Michael Powell of Powell’s Books in Portland, Ore. The fear that one’s beloved books could be destroyed has been exacerbated by the latest revival of forces that seem keen to ban certain books, resulting in the proliferation of those tiny free-library boxes on the sides of roads.

On a recent weekday afternoon, Bruce Albright arrives in the Wonder Book parking lot, pops the trunk of his Camry and unloads two boxes of well-worn books. “It’s sad. Some of these I’ve read numerous times,” he says.

Albright, 70, has been at this for six months, shedding 750 books at his local library and at this Frederick, Md., store. The rub: More than 1,700 volumes remain shelved in the retired government lawyer’s nearby home, his collection lovingly amassed over half a century. But Albright is on a mission. “I cleaned out my parents’ home,” he says. “I don’t want to do to my kids what my parents did to me.”

He’s far from alone. Books are precious to their owners. Their worth, emotional and monetary, is comparably less to anyone else.

Humorist and social critic Fran Lebowitz owns 12,000 books, mostly fiction, kept in 19th-century wooden cases with glass doors in her New York apartment.

“Constitutionally, I am unable to throw a book away. To me, it’s like seeing a baby thrown in a trash can,” she says. “I am a glutton for print. I love books in every way. I love them more than most human beings.” If there’s a book she doesn’t want, Lebowitz, 72, will spend months deciding whom to give it to.

“I kept accumulating books. My life was overflowing with books. I’d have to live to 150 to reread these books,” says Martha Frankel, a writer and director of the Woodstock Bookfest. She amassed 3,600 — and that was just in the office that she closed in 2018 — “but the idea of getting rid of these books made me nauseous.”

America is saturated with old books, congesting Ikea Billy cases, Jengaing atop floors, Babeling bedside tables. During months of quarantine, book lovers faced all of those spines and opportunities for several seasons of spring cleaning. They adore these books, irrationally, unconditionally, but know that, ultimately, if they don’t decide which to keep, it will be left to others to dump them unceremoniously.

And so, despite denial, grief, bargaining, anguish and even nausea, the Great Deaccession commenced.

“This is the most material flooding onto the market that I’ve ever seen,” veteran Vancouver, Wash., dealer Kolshaver says.

It’s a sentiment shared by sellers across the country. For dealers who survived the pandemic, “the used-book business has never been healthier,” says Wonder Book owner Chuck Roberts, a 42year veteran in the trade, strolling through his three-acre warehouse, a veritable biblio wonderland, jammed with volumes ranging from never-been-cracked publishers’ overstock to centuries-old classics bound in leather.

“We take everything and pretty much what no one else is going to take,” Roberts says, which is how his business accumulated an inventory of six million, with 300,000 more used books arriving every month.

Wonder Book practices “noseto-tail bookselling,” meaning a home or use is found for each item one way or the other through several internet sites (national and international), three brick-andmortar stores, school and charitable donations. Despite the advent of the digerati and ebooks, hardcovers and paperbacks continue to flood the market for readers who prefer the look and feel of physical books, the weight in their hands, the pleasure of turning a page. Three-quarters of trade book revenue last year derived from hardcover and paperback sales, according to the Association of American Publishers. A boom in self- and hybrid publishing has allowed more people to call themselves an “author,” with a juggernaut of titles published annually in print, around 395,000 in 2021, a 15 per cent increase in a decade, according to Bowker, which assigns ISBN numbers and bar codes to books.

What to do with old books is a quandary that collectors, no matter what age, eventually face — or leave to their heirs who, truly, do not want the bulk of them. Old volumes are a problem for older Americans downsizing or facing mortality, with their reading life coming to a close. They’re a challenge that Washington Post book critic Michael Dirda writes about extensively. They’re a backache every time a collector moves. They’re a headache when collectors want to sell their homes: old stuff, the bane of any listing.

Books do furnish a room, novelist Anthony Powell observed, but they sure do crowd a house. With the exception of family Bibles, rare and personal volumes, books rarely remain in families for generations like photos, china or linen. Says Roberts, “Eventually, they’re going to come up for sale.”

In 2004, Don Dales had the novel idea to transform tiny Hobart, N.Y., into a destination for bibliophiles, inspired by Hay-on-wye in Wales.

“All the storefronts were empty. The little village was totally dead. Dust was rolling down Main Street,” he says.

Today, there are eight used book emporiums in the Catskills town of fewer than 500 residents.

Book lovers are known to practice semi-hardish and anthropomorphic tendencies.

They keep too many books for too long despite dust, dirt, mould, cracked spines, torn dust jackets, warped pages, coffee stains and the daunting reality that most will never be reread. Age rarely enriches a book.

“Nobody likes to throw a book away. Nobody likes to see it go into a bin,” says Michael Powell of Powell’s Books in Portland, Ore.

Owners never want to see their hardback babies pulped. Bibliocide seems particularly painful in this fraught era of banned books. Hence, the sprouting of Little Free Libraries everywhere, and donations to public ones for resale, which enable staff to purchase new books.

“We don’t want them to die. I love them. They’re a part of me,” says author and Georgetown linguistics professor Deborah Tannen, 77. She has books in almost every room of her Virginia home, long ago exhausting shelf space.

“Books represent a significant investment of time and intellectual effort in our lives,” Powell says. “They’re more like friends than objects. You’ve had a lot of conversations with the book. You want to remember the experience. They’re echoes of what you’ve read.”

Topher Lundell, a manager at Second Story Books in D.C., admits that “the vast majority of books I own are unread by me. In some ways, books are symbolic of how we want to feel about ourselves. They’re comforting. I have read these books. These are accomplishments.”

Most people haven’t a clue as to how many books they own. Possibly, they don’t want to know. Roberts routinely make house calls to owners claiming to own 2,000 books only to discover a quarter of that. Or vice versa.

Drexel University law professor Clare Coleman thought she owned 1,300 books until her book group reminded her that she owned twice that many, given that her Billy shelves were stacked two deep.

Lebowitz knows the precise number of her collection because, each time she moves, she hires specialty book movers, who tally her holdings. The hunt for each apartment, and the necessity of blowing her real estate budget, is wholly dependent on it being large enough to hold her collection. In a sense, Lebowitz’s books own her.

Owners may experience relief from jettisoning old books. Not Coleman, 60, whose last move necessitated donating two-thirds of her books to the Goodwill.

“I regret it intensely. Those books were like a journal of my life,” she says. “Having those books surround me for all my adult life was a real source of pleasure.”

With the exception of rare and antiquarian collectors, few owners know the monetary value of their holdings. Invariably, they overvalue them.

That well-thumbed encyclopedia? Worthless. Textbooks? Updated umpteen times, probably shifted to digital.

“Very expensive books are a big nothingburger,” book scout and estate buyer Larry Bardecki says, especially coffee-table doorstops.

Bestselling hardcovers from 10 years, 50 years or a century ago? Possible literal pulp fiction.

“Everyone who wants one already has it,” says Bardecki, who makes as many as three house calls daily, often for Wonder Book. “I’m looking for books that not everyone has.”

Authors prized by one generation are not necessarily valued by the next.

“Everyone had a volume of Tennyson in the 1870s,” Roberts says. “Nobody reads Zane Grey.”

Don’t get him started on Dan Brown’s 2003 The Da Vinci Code. Roberts’s Books by the Foot business sells them wrapped as decoration and sold by colour, starting at $10 a foot. At 10 to 12 books a foot, each volume is worth a dollar or less.

Of the design trend, Lebowitz says, “the upside is at least these people know enough to pretend to read them.”

They’re more like friends than objects. You’ve had a lot of conversations with the book. You want to remember the experience.

THE SUN JUST BROKE A COMET’S TAIL

Space Weather News for Jan. 18, 2023
https://spaceweather.com
https://www.spaceweatheralerts.com

THE SUN JUST BROKE A COMET’S TAIL: Comet ZTF (C/2022 E3) is approaching Earth and giving astronomers a better look at its tail. Surprise: It’s broken. A ‘disconnection event’ is in progress, probably caused by a CME hitting the comet. More of these events are likely to be seen as the comet approaches Earth for a close encounter on Feb. 1st. Full story @ Spaceweather.com

Instant X-flare alerts: Sign up for Space Weather Alerts to receive instant text messages when strong solar flares are underway.
[] 
Above: A disconnection event in the tail of Comet ZTF (C/2022 E3) on Jan. 17th. Credit: Michael Jaeger

Post-Meeting Memo: Sitting Club Executive Acclaimed for Another Term!

During the club’s January 14 e-Meeting earlier today, MonSFFA’s sitting Executive ran unopposed for another term in office, and have thus been acclaimed as the association’s 2023 Executive Committee. The recording of votes was, therefore, unnecessary.

Congratulations are proffered to Cathy Palmer-Lister, president; Keith Braithwaite, vice-president; and Joe Aspler and L. E. Moir co-treasurers.

MonSFFA elects annually a president, vice-president, and treasurer—who together form the Executive Committee—and charges them with the responsibility of running the club on behalf of the membership. These executives recruit advisors and appoint officers to assist them in carrying out this responsibility.

Also, the term BoA (Board of Advisors) was retired, replaced with the more fitting GBM, or General Board Meeting.

January 2023 Virtual Meeting, Post 8 of 8: Wrap-Up

This post officially closes today’s MonSFFA e-meeting.

12) THANK YOU!

Our thanks to Joe Aspler, Josée Bellemare, Keith Braithwaite, and Cathy Palmer-Lister for their contributions to today’s programme. Your efforts are very much appreciated! We thank, as well, all of our supporting contributors this afternoon.

And of course, to those who visited with us today, and took in our online get-together, thank you for your interest and attention, and don’t forget to comment!

13) NEXT MonSFFA e-MEETING

We sincerely hope you have enjoyed your time with us these past few hours and encourage you to visit www.MonSFFA.ca regularly for additional content.

As club members are no doubt aware, our hoped-for return to in-person club meetings has unfortunately been stymied by pandemic-related circumstances; we will keep you updated as to any progress regarding our continuing search for a new meeting room!

We invite you to join us again next month, right here at www.MonSFFA.ca, for another MonSFFA e-Meeting, scheduled for Saturday, February 11, beginning at 1:00PM.

14) SIGN-OFF

Until next month, then, we bid you farewell, and include our wishes for your good health and safe travels.

January 2023 Virtual Meeting, Post 7 of 8: What Are You Reading/Watching?

This is our seventh of eight posts this afternoon.

11) WHAT ARE YOU READING/WATCHING?

On ZOOM at this moment, we’re asking “What are You Reading, or Watching?” Give us your quick book report, or your brief review of a film or TV show you’ve recently been enjoying!

For those not participating in our ZOOM chat, today, you may still contribute by submitting your concise book reports or movie and television-series reviews via this post’s “Leave a Comment” option. We welcome your input.

JANUARY 2023 VIRTUAL MEETING, POST 6 OF 8: AGM/ELECTION

This is Post 6 of 8 and will, effectively, serve as the club’s 2023 AGM (Annual General Meeting).

10) AGM/ELECTIONS

Of particular interest to MonSFFA’s membership, we have a couple of official club reports to table, which we will now proceed with on ZOOM. That will be followed by our annual election of the club’s Executive Committee for the coming year.

For the benefit of MonSFFen and in accordance with our practice, we outline here information concerning, and procedures for the election of the club’s Executive Committee:

PRIMER: ELECTION OF CLUB’S EXECUTIVE COMMITEE

MonSFFA begins each year with the election of its Executive Committee for that upcoming 12 months. These elections always take place at our first meeting of the year, in January, and are confirmed and officially announced before or at the following meeting, in February. All MonSFFA members in good standing are encouraged to attend the January meeting and participate.

All MonSFFA members in good standing, having paid in full their annual membership fees, are eligible to cast a ballot. Members are asked to be present at the designated place and time in order to exercise their right to vote. Proxy voting is not permitted, except under special circumstance and by approval of the chief returning officer (CRO). Out-of-town members unable to attend the vote in person, for example, may have their ballots cast by the CRO in their absence. Potential candidates are encouraged to advise the CRO of their intention to run for one of the three specified offices as soon as possible in advance of the election.

This year we again find ourselves in unusual circumstances requiring that we adapt our procedures. As we are, for the moment, carrying out club meetings exclusively online, this year’s will be a cyber-election. Our 2023 Executive will be selected during today’s ZOOM session by those club members present online. The vote will be conducted by a show of hands, excepting those participating via a non-visual connection, who will be able to either verbalize or indicate in the text/comments field their choices.

For the benefit of any members taking in today’s meeting at a later time, the names of the candidates and the positions for which each is running will be posted on the club’s Web site at 6:00PM today. Check the site for this post, make your choices, and e-mail your votes to us at webmaster@monsffa.ca before the end of this month, January. Your votes will be added to the tally recorded during the Zoom session.

In the event of a candidate, or candidates running unopposed, the names of the acclaimed candidate, or candidates, will be posted. Post-Election Day voting will not, then, be necessary with regard to that candidate, or those candidates.

All votes received will be tabulated, confirmed, and the election of MonSFFA’s 2023 Executive Committee officially announced either before or, at the latest, during February’s virtual meeting.

MonSFFA elects annually a president, vice-president, and treasurer—who together form the Executive Committee—and charges them with the responsibility of running the club on behalf of the membership. These executives recruit advisors and appoint officers to assist them in carrying out this responsibility.

Our sitting Executive is as follows: Cathy Palmer-Lister, president; Keith Braithwaite, vice-president; Joe Aspler, treasurer. In addition, L. E. Moir sits as the club’s financial auditor and a member of the Executive.

Any MonSFFA member in good standing who is responsibly and reliably able to carry out the duties of office may run for any one of the Executive posts. Candidates may nominate themselves, or accept nomination from another member in good standing. Nominations are received by the CRO, usually just before the commencement of voting on Election Day.

January 2023 Virtual Meeting, Post 5 of 8: More Special Cameos in SF/F

This is Post 5 of 8 this afternoon.

On ZOOM at this time, we discuss and take a look at more cool cameos in SF/F film and television!

9) MORE SPECIAL CAMEOS IN SF/F FILM AND TELEVISION

This presentation, by Josée Bellemare, is mostly on ZOOM, but here are three examples for the Web Site. Enjoy!

Highway to Heaven, Halloween episode, S4-E5
I was a middle age werewolf

The episode title is a sly dig at the film I Was a Teenage Werewolf (1957) which starred Michael Landon. Clips of it are shown throughout the episode, and Mark Gordon even says “This guy looks a lot like you.”

Ghostbusters/Star Trek episode S2-Ep47
Ain’t NASA-sarily so

The Ghostbusters are sent to outer space to the space platform Galileo. They must capture a particularly scary creature, while Peter is overjoyed about working under a government contract. The space platform is named “Galileo,” a reference to the shuttlecraft Galileo from Star Trek. The character “Yeoman Whitney” is a reference to actress Grace Lee Whitney who played “Yeoman Janice Rand” in “Star Trek The Original Series.”

 

Meatloaf & Barry Bostwick /Glee
Rocky Horror Picture Show

Barry Bostwick and Meat Loaf, who star in the original film, appear in cameo roles in this episode.

https://www.tiktok.com/@_batouttahell/video/7008279709330984197?is_from_webapp=v1&item_id=7008279709330984197

January 2023 Virtual Meeting, Post 4 of 8: The Break

Get your Bheer & Chips!
It’s time for the break!

NEWS

Meetings: We are still looking for a home! The current plan we are kicking around is to continue with zoom, but sprinkle a few social events into the mix. Bowling? Butterflies? airplanes?

WARP: Danny is waiting for your submissions! (and mine, too, come to think of it)

Membership: A review of our roster shows we still have a few members whose payments are overdue. We are reviewing our membership rates and benefits, and there may be a few small changes as a result.

 DISPLAY

NOTHING? Holidays are over, time to get crafting again! Send us photos of your projects, complete or in progress!

RAFFLE PRIZES

Click the thumbnails to view full size image.

Sturmovik Neko Girl, Japanese Capsule Toy, donated by Brian Knapp.

From Sylvain’s legacy, Starlog Photo Guidebook: Fantastic Worlds

From Sylvain’s Legacy, Star Wars Pop-Up Book

Terminator BluRay, New and sealed, donated by Joe.

The man in the High Castle Pages have yellowed a bit, but otherwise in good shape. donated by MonSFFA

Vernor Vinge: Tatja Grimm’s World, excellent condition. Cover by Tom Kidd

Alan Dean Foster and Eric Frank Russell: Design for Great-Day Good condition

Boris, series 1, from Sylvain’s legacy, box of 90 cards, each card described on the back

First of a duology by Ben Bova & A J Austin, dust jacket a bit scuffed, otherwise looks unread.

Montreal Science Fiction and Fantasy Association