Alan
Bennett once said that “a bookshelf is as particular to its owner as
are his or her clothes; a personality is stamped on a library just as a
shoe is shaped by the foot”.
An unkind observer would take one look
at my book collection and deduce that I am messy, disorganised, erratic
and flaky: that I struggle to stick to a genre, an author, a trend or
even a shelf. They would be absolutely right. There is no system - there
are no rules or regulations - and books are free to roam where they
like: under the bed, into the bathroom, tucked into a jumper in the
airing cupboard. As much as I love the calm order of a library or a
bookshop, I run a kind of crazy book safari. I like my books all over
the place and mixed up. It feels like it gives them a chance to breathe
and get to know each other.
I read anything that sparks my
imagination, and my bookcase reflects huge inconsistency (although I
moved house recently, so a lot of my collection are still in boxes
waiting to find somewhere to go). I am not sentimental about books I
don’t care about, and frequently cart them to charity shops. It’s like
relationships: if I don’t love them, I take pleasure in knowing somebody
else might. I have an MA in Shakespeare, so I over the years I have
collected an unecessary amount of his work. I also adore travel guides.
When I need a break from stories, I’ll often just settle down with a
Lonely Planet guide and pretend I’m somewhere else.
As higgledy-piggledy as I am, though, I know exactly where my favourites are. Breakfast at Tiffanys is always within grabbing distance in a pile next to my bed, as is To Kill a Mockingbird, Anne of Green Gables, Matilda, Where the Wild Things Are, 1984, Works of Shakespeare, The Bell Jar. I’m
generally free and easy with my books, but if they’re particularly
precious to me I would rather lend a stranger my underwear.
Comments
My shelves are similiar, books just haphazardly in disarray except for a few shelves which are set for specific reads (my favourite sereis, favourite authors, etc) but even series of books aren't always near each other. It's more fun and exciting that way!
Thanks for sharing Holly's shelves with us Kirsty! :D