Tags
crafts, DIY, Emily Bronte, Game of Thrones, Jane Austen, Literature, Reading, upcycle, upcycling
Oh, the dusty, musty aroma of old books. There’s nothing like it. When I was a child, the library was my favourite place to be. My Grade Five teacher, Mrs. Fogal, wrote on my report card that I “consumed books.” I still do. I love reading, and I’m a fast reader.
My only reading rule is to read for pure enjoyment. This doesn’t mean trashy or cheap novels; in fact, I really don’t enjoy most “chick lit” (I tried to read the Shopaholic book series once. I stopped about three chapters in – the plot was thin, and the main character was a shallow, vapid human being. Ugh.) It means that I don’t make myself read something I feel I should read because it’s popular or important or “literature.” I read Jane Austen and Emily Bronte, but I also read Game of Thrones, and Harry Potter, and The Hunger Games, and non-fiction, historical fiction, and sometimes, I’ll admit it, self-help books (When Panic Attacks by David Burns saved my sanity!)
I haven’t made the leap to an e-reader yet. I probably will someday, but I just can’t let go of the feel of a book in my hand. Besides, how would I thumb ahead to sneak a peek at the end of a chapter with an e-reader? Here’s some things to do with much-loved old books that you desperately need to retire but just don’t have the heart to throw away.
Click on photo for source.




Any up cycle ideas for Father’s Day?
Just for you, Ange, I’m doing a special post later tomorrow. Look for it after lunch!
I flip to the back too, B thinks I’m crazy but sometimes I just want to know if I’m right or not or I’m so anxious I just can’t wait for all the pages to be read in between and guess what it never ruins it for me to know who done it…
Agreed. It never ruins the story for me if I flip ahead. It actually motivates me to read faster.