My book art gallery


I was browsing in a bookshop on Saturday which of course can have me lost for hours. People have been known to send out search parties for me or to send in survival packs of food and water. But it struck me how much my book buying habits have changed since I bought my Kindle. I have a library full of books in my house and those are just the ones that I could fit into my office. Books spill out of every drawer and on top every table in my house. I bought an extra bedside table just so that I could have one bedside table for my books that I am currently reading and another bedside table for bedroom things. There is not a place in my house where you will not find a pile of books.

On top of always being a book buyer I also have that most old-fashioned of things: a well used library card. So there is also a special place designated in each room just for the library books so that they don’t get confused with my own books. I love borrowing books from the library. There is something about the smell of the pages as I open the covers that is like an aphrodisiac to my senses. I love imagining who has read the book I am reading. Reading a library book is like a reading two stories: there is the story in the book and then there is the story of the book’s travels and whose hearts and minds it touched.

When the Kindle first came out I was determined that I was not going to get one. I could see the advantage of less packing space for books when traveling but I could not imagine curling up with an electronic device. But eventually I succumbed and bought a Kindle. I bought it mainly because I was doing a lot of traveling in my job and also as a confirmed travel-junkie I thought it would be an intelligent purchase.

I used it very sparingly in the beginning as my mind had to get used to reading on this device. But it did not take long and I was addicted. Now my Kindle has pride of place alongside my books on my bedside table. But owning this Kindle has changed my book buying habits. Before the Kindle I spent a lot of money on all books of all genres and styles, whether fiction or non-fiction. (Um…you did get the fact that I am book junkie from the beginning of this post, didn’t you?) But after the Kindle I am still buying books but the type of books I am buying on the Kindle and the type of books I am buying from bookshops has changed.

Now I am turning my library and bookshelves into my own personal art gallery. I am buying beautifully illustrated hardcover books. I am perusing second-hand book shops and hunting out leather-bound early editions. I am searching out books by my favourite authors and building collections of their published works. I am buying more art books and “coffee table” books. This is all thanks to my Kindle.

For the Kindle naysayers (I was one of them not too long ago) the Kindle has not stopped my book buying. The Kindle has refined and cultivated my book buying to book art now. I am hunting out expensive one of a kind editions and buying the more expensive hardcover books now. Before the Kindle I bought indiscriminately like a junkie would. Now I consider myself a connoisseur.

The books that are turning up on my book shelf now are no less artworks than a framed Picasso or Monet. But unlike those artworks, these artworks of mine are interactive and invite perusal. You have to pick them up and open the covers to appreciate them even further. The indiscriminate book buying is still there but it is now reserved for Kindle purchases. But those books that I can read over and over again and the ones I love looking at are still bought for my bookshelf. My personal library has now become my own art gallery. But in this art gallery you must touch the art, feel the art and explore the art.

Owning a Kindle or other ebook reading device does not need to mean you have to choose between ebooks and books. Instead buy a Kindle to refine your book buying tastes. Become a book connoisseur. Build up a treasure trove of limited editions and beautifully illustrated hardcover books. Buy illustrated leather-bound books. Turn your library into a book art gallery. You can have the best of both worlds when you own a Kindle. Owning a Kindle does not mean the death of printed and bound books. Now your books can become collectors items.

How has your book buying changed with the advent of ebooks?

All images (except the Kindle image) are borrowed courtesy of Fuck Yeah, Book Arts on tumblr…Do yourself a favour and visit this site for beautiful and unusual posts on Book Arts. 

10 thoughts on “My book art gallery

  1. All I have to say is thus: as it should be, as it should be. I’ve got a Kindle as well…surely doesn’t mean I’ve stopped buying literature in its good old-fashioned printed manner. Don’t think I ever could. There’s just something to the feel of having a real book in your hands…

  2. I have bought less real book since starting to read with the Kindle and Stanza app on my iPhone. But, as you said, it hasn’t stopped me from buying real books. I’m just chooser about what I decide to keep for “real”.

    Ditto on the photos for this post. I really liked Read This and the human bookshelf.

    1. It’s wonderful to have your cake and eat it and have the best of the ebook world and the book – art world….They are great pics, aren’t they…could not resist…definitely check out that tumblr site 🙂 I think you will enjoy it.

  3. I’ve always said I’d never get a Kindle (I love real books too much) but it’s interesting to see that it hasn’t stopped you buying real books, just changed the type you buy.
    I’m not sure it’s made me change my stance on Kindles just yet, but it’s certainly made me want to own more pretty illustrated books! Thanks very much for the Book Arts link 🙂

    1. I love it when one of my posts makes a reader think differently…that is the ultimate goal 🙂 Oooh I love beautifully illustrated books! Like candy to a toddler…I am there! Pleasure to link to you 🙂

  4. I love it. What a different take on this topic. Maybe more people should look at it this way. I was originally against the Kindle as well, but now the only reason I don’t have one is more of a financial justification as an underpaid teacher 🙂 Plus I still have quite a back catalog of physical books to read first.

    I’m going to tweet this one. Worth spreading around.

    Paul D. Dail
    http://www.pauldail.com- A horror writer’s not necessarily horrific blog

    1. Thanks Paul. Thank you also for the tweet 🙂 I am happy now…I live in the best of both worlds…my Kindle is for my indiscriminate book junkie addiction but my library and my wallet will now be given to the joy of beautiful and rare books…The trick with modern technology is to make it work in your world….I could never stop buying books but now I buy thoughtfully – building an art collection of books 🙂

    1. Hi 🙂 Nice to see you here. I love the pics too…borrowed them from a great tumblr site…Glad you like the blog 🙂 Always like meeting new people in the bloggosphere.

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