My bookshelves have long since reached the point where a book has to be somewhere removed from the shelves before I can add any recent acquisition. And even then, it’s still a matter of shifting books around until a spot opens up in the appropriate section of my shelving. I’ve even tried the periodic book-purge in which I’ve found new homes for ten or twenty books at a time, but that method almost always immediately sends me out book-shopping again until all that wonderful free space is filled.
So, in practical terms, the rule around here is “one book in, one book out.” And that’s gotten harder for me to do because the individual choices are getting to be more and more difficult to make now. It's beginning to cut too close to the bone. Rather ridiculously, my answer - despite my aversion to buying e-books from Amazon - has been to buy e-books from those vendors that allow me to download backup copies to my computer, vendors like Kobo and a few publishers that sell directly to readers. (More on this later if anyone is interested.)
Shelf space problem solved. Whole new problem created.
Since the Year of the Plague (2020), I’ve bought more e-books every year than I can possibly ever read. As of this moment, there are 1,659 e-books on my Kobo reader, with a paltry 335 of those actually having been read. A handful of others have been abandoned after failed efforts on my part to find them readable, but that still leaves something over 1,300 unread books on the reader.
And I keep on buying them, and buying them, and buying them.
They are not all new books; in fact, well over half of them are back catalog choices that I’ve gotten at really good prices. (Is this starting to sound more like an addiction now and not just a harmless hobby?) I see that I purchased over 30 books in January, and already this month, another 10. The best that I can say about them, is that they are a fairly diverse bunch of books - and that I’ll never, ever, run out of things to read. 2026 purchases include:
- Eight books from Peter Robinson’s Inspector Banks series
- The new Michael J. Fox memoir, Future Boy
- Maggie O’Farrell’s Hamnet, historical fiction about the death of Shakespeare’s eleven-year-old son
- The Impossible Fortune, Richard Osman’s fifth book in his Thursday Murder Club series
- Michael Connelly’s eighth Lincoln Lawyer book, The Proving Ground
- Elizabeth George’s latest Inspector Lynley book, A Slowly Dying Cause
- The Land of Sweet Forever, a collection of Harper Lee short stories and magazine pieces
- Nobody’s Girl, Virginia Roberts Giuffre memoir of being sexually exploited by Jeffrey Epstein, Ghislaine Maxwell, and Prince Andrew, among others
- Clown Town, Mick Herron’s latest Slow Horses book, along with six earlier pre-Slow Horses books from his back catalog
- Eleven books from Martin Cruz Smith’s back catalog
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