Dead Books - Sarah Nicholson
What do you do with books you no longer need?
I’m not talking about more recent paperback novels which can
be taken to a charity shop. I’m an avid fan of searching the bookshelves for a
bargain.
I’m talking about non-fiction books that are no longer
relevant. Or multiple copies of “best sellers” that have fallen out of
fashion.
And what about self-published books that have been printed but then you find too many typos, or formatting errors and releasing them into the wild could potentially damage your overall brand?
This is what happened to a friend recently – despite all the
checks and balances before printing when his novel was republished, he still
found issues that needed to be addressed, so rather than selling the stock that
had already been printed he made the bold decision to throw them away.
“But I still have seventeen copies to sell and an event this
weekend?”
“Just put them in the recycling.” He said.
With a heavy heart I did just that. In they went with the
empty cereal packets, and washed-out plastic milk bottles. Hopefully they will
be recycled into something useful next time around.
Sometimes unwanted books need to be thrown away – burning
them is usually frowned upon - recycling is the best option. Charity shops
throw away copies of 50 Shades and Harry Potter, not just on grounds of dodgy
morals or bad writing, but because so many copies have been produced and it’s
not sustainable to keep them – too few people want to buy them these days.
But recycling doesn’t have to mean putting them into the
blue bin, you could turn them into art. A quick internet search reveals some
very inventive pieces.
You can fold pages, cut out words to makes poetry, reframe
pictures – the only limit is your imagination.
I have even been known to tear up old Bibles to create
something new – that’s where some people really do draw the line, but old
Bibles not being read deserve a new lease of life too – at least in my mind.
This is an art piece I created for a church exhibition. It’s
called Patience. Recycled and repurposed watches represent man-made ways to
measure time and many of the quotes in the papier mache are relevant to the topic.
So, I return to my original question - what do you do with books you no longer need or want?
Comments
There are lots of good ideas here, the artistic pieces Patience and Potential look great in your pictures.
Meanwhile I'll slip a couple of my books into the next Oxfam pile, and hope no-one in the town recognises the name...
Thanks for the blog..