By Helvi Oosterman.
I’m standing in front of our floor to ceiling book cases and I don’t know where to start my weeding; we are moving to a smaller place and I have to select which books to take and which not. I have three milk crates on the table: one for daughter, one for charity and one for the cottage. The ones I want to keep can stay until we actually move.

I take books out at random. ‘The End of Certainty’ by Paul Kelly is the first one. It was a birthday present from Allan, who passed away far too young at fifty. His beautiful hand writing makes me choke at the loss of a dear friend and I want to keep the book. ‘In the box’, says the boss who hasn’t even read it. The next one happens to be a slim volume by Marguerite Duras, a French writer who used live in Vietnam when it was still Indo-China. I start reading ‘Practicalities’; beautiful short essays about life, love, writing, Paris and wasting time. I feel I’m not wasting a minute re-reading this and not sticking to the task at hand: I have to keep this one; it’s only a slip of a book.
On the bottom shelf, out of sight are my yearly diet books; I have bought one every January, new year, new me. Easy goodbyes to all; from Atkins to Scarsdale to South Beach. I count only seven; many of them have already left the house to end up fattening girl friends’ book shelves. Then I pick a stack of yellowed old Penguins, Mishima, Kawabata, Hermann Hesse and Böll, which have escaped the previous throw-out. They are like very old friends now; I put them back on the shelf.
I’m not doing too well, and I decide to take a break and walk to check the cottage collection. I find that most of them are results of previous culls, books that I had not chosen myself. Even so I managed to bring back an armful: a book on Finnish art, a long lost one of V.S. Naipaul and ‘By Way of Sainte-Beuve’ by Marcel Proust.
I have spent some hours by now and not much to show for; maybe the best thing to do is to tackle one shelf daily until the job is done. We have time; we haven’t even put the house on the market yet. Husband walks by and looks at the empty boxes, he can see that I’m getting a headache and am close to tears: Maybe I can help tomorrow? This is not what I want; he’ll only leave his Patrick Whites and some boring stories about Aussies migrating to Paraguay and maybe George Perec’ s ‘Life, the User’s Manual’. ‘You can help with the cook books and the gardening ones’, I say as I have already promised to give them to family members; I have enough recipes in my head by now and my new garden will be very small.
Oh no, I have totally forgotten about dictionaries and other language and reference books in the office and all my favorites in the bed room!
Books are great Helvi especially when the fridge needs stabilising
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Yo, Hung, why don’t you just put your foot under the fridge and save the book 🙂 ,especially as the book you picked is about someone called Bradman…
Who is he?
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Bradman, he’s the bloke that invented the cow
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Oops that was Brahma so no idea H
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If the foot starts hurting, you can use the book on Brahmin cows. No use for it , not farming anymore…
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I can empathise, H. Mrs M bought a lovely antique oak bookcase. Immediately it was filled with books that were ‘desequestered’ from plastic boxes under beds, wardrobes and cupboards. Now, I think we need some more bookcases!
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…and I miss my ratty looking ones most, they were the oldest friends; serves me right for worrying about how they’d ‘look’ on the shelves ! 🙂
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You copped a verbal caning over at Ul. I’m sure you survived.
Yeah, the ratty ones. Need four hands to hold them whilst you try to read them!
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BM, I thanked you and Viv on the PA Leashed for helping this damsel in distress the other day…
FOTRW is harmless, but I have another follower (in different disguises) who loves to hate me…well, each to their own 🙂
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Helvi, when my husband retired he brought back home about 4 trailer loads of books and journals. He spent two weeks or more in the garage sorting it all out, what to keep, what to throw and what to give away. Many readers went to the local primary school, good reference books came to the home library, a small quantity went to the tip and the rest was stored in three newly purchased cupboards which now line one wall in the garage. But, from your description of your books I find it hard to understand how you managed to reduce your book collection. I’d have kept the lot.
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Viv, I gave many of them to family members and to friends, so if I miss them too much I can get them back 🙂
Some went to a seconhand bookshop…the one with the very nice owner, some to charity…
It was very hard and, I’m sorry I let some of them go.
I have three bookcases now, but as I’m busy accumulating more, I might also have to get more shelving…we just arrived back home with three more books.
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What a great thing you had to do though, Helvi. Go through and think about every book. No wonder it took a long time.
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Yes Lehan, those flood victims did not have the luxury of pondering over their possessions, especially in Grantham…now it’s all gone, and many people too.
What was even more horrid, was watching what was happening in Brazil, and here I was in tears when I got some water in my garage!
I’m happy though that I kept the three slim volumes of Margareth Duras, love her writing. Those books look like they been through a couple of floods…
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I’m sure there were moments during your sorting that you’d wished they’d all float away.
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Yes, I did Lehan, then I felt quilty because who wants to tell dear old friends that you can’t see them anymore 🙂
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Of Proust and sayings of love:
“Love is space and time measured by the heart.”
“Those whose suffering is due to love are, as we say of certain invalids, their own physicians. ”
“Like everybody who is not in love, he thought one chose the person to be loved after endless deliberations and on the basis of particular qualities or advantages.”
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Helvi, I have the clearest picture of you and your book sorting plight. Every now and again I face and give up the same fight.
There is a parallel in the Email world too. Right now my Email box has over 900 Emails. Culling those should take something of an eternity – especially when I take time off to respond to ….. say …. this one . Hey, wait a minute ….
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Emm, as I have this idea of a perfumed backyard I have been buying plants which release a nice scent in the evenings,( to enhance Gez ‘ romantic dinners.)
Running out of space I bought packets of Sweet Alyssum seed…to be sprinkled everywhere. I opened one of the bulging drawers to find about six unopened packets of the same…
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