Book Buying Addicts Anonymous discussion
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In Defense of the TBR Pile

I guess posting that article here is kind of preaching to the choir, huh? ;-) We know not to feel guilty, it's our friends, family, etc. who need to learn to stop trying to make us feel guilty! lol




And the remark about the crafter stockpiles hits home here too. Who knows when I'll need that interesting bead, ribbon, piece of fabric, silk flower, cigar box, paint color.......



I occasionally purge my owned books in aid of the booksale at the library. This is also not an occasion of shame,just changed, matured or whatever interests.

I don't often read by mood - sometimes I read my books in alphabetical order or by time period, or just by whats on top on the shelf. I do feel bad for owning so many that I haven't read yet and I'm trying to get the number down before I buy more. When I have a smaller TBR pile I find that I savor the books more, where as when there is a big pile I feel like I need to get them finished. As if I have a responsibly to the books and to the author to not let them lie dormant on the shelves for too long. I might be a bit batty.
But on the other hand I get a real high out of buying books and they do all get read - eventually.

I have been thinking about this for quite some time since it's a recurring topic here and on some other book groups I frequent. It's true that if your collecting does not impinge upon your ability to carry on the life you want to live then it's really not a problem, but I do know that for me there will always be a little self-imposed twinge of guilt in my book-buying because of my tendency to obsess over a subject once I get interested in it - books are just the latest of my serial obsessions, though hopefully along with my interest in nature it will be a long-term one.
Looking at my bookshelves and leafing through the unread books assuages that guilt about not having read the books somewhat but I do feel that with my tendency to go overboard in collecting stuff (a theme in my family) it's not a bad thing to have my conscience on my shoulder and I've often felt that it's made me look more carefully at potential purchases and over time I feel I am now buying a little more wisely rather than just spending on a whim, which I used to do. Guilt is a terrible thing, but it's not 'always' a negative force.
TBR currently 326, including some box sets...
My TBR piles give me something to look forward to. The dishes piled up in my sink, that gives me shame that I will take care of in a few minutes.

And the remark about..."
This is so true. I remember in older days when I just had a limited (to me, was actually a hundred or so) books laying around. They tended be like one or two genres mainly, and if I wasn't in the mood to read those genres, I couldn't find anything to read and would get into a slump.
Of the 4227 works of fiction I currently own, a little over half of them, 2135, are TBR and I have no problem still buying more. I like collecting and knowing that when I am in the right mood I will have the right book.


Depends what you're buying… if it's special priced stuff or books you are finding which are out of print and harder to source then it would be perfectly understandable. Regular mass market books, possibly less so, but as long as they don't turn up to find a whole van load of extra books to shift you should be fine. ;-)


Moving may be happening for me in the next few months and I'll simply have more boxes of books than furniture so I figure it all balances out in the end. I'm getting rid of the living room set so surely the books would weigh less and hopefully take up the same amount of room in the moving van. Anyway, I've convinced myself it would come out all the same.




Love the country though, the flowers are wonderful.







But carnival (Fat Tuesday) was always a blast and the central location for Europe was wonderful. It's really nice when you can say to your significant other, OK, 3 day weekend...Paris or London? and drive there in a few hours.
Loved it.





It was there that I knew I'd never stop exploring the world. 12 years later and I've been privileged to have visited 63 countries, many if those several times. Plus, I live in London now - so travel is cheap and fast.
I still make it to holland about once a year and always find something new.


A lot of my books are still at my parents house, patiently waiting in the basement. Each trip back sees more of them migrate over the pond. When I was packing I wanted to bring my travel related stuff (photos and souvenirs), clothing, kitchen stuff and books. I love my books, I brought over the favorites right away and I've rebought a few that I didn't realize I'd miss so much. At this point there is little but books left to come over. If only they were lighter!

By Amanda Nelson
May 20, 2014
I’ve been diving into the BookTube recently (the community of book vloggers on YouTube) where “hauls” are common- videos about all the books the BookTuber has purchased over the past week or month or whatever. There’s common language across these video channels when it comes to adding these books to TBRs (To-Be-Read lists): language of guilt or embarrassment, “I’m so bad,” language that you see on any blog post/Twitter discussion/comment section about a TBR. It’s not surprising to me that people feel automatically defensive when exposing the books they own that they haven’t read. One of our own recently wrote about her TBR and had to be defended from accusations of being a hoarder,* a term that comes up frequently whenever someone talks in public about having a personal library.
I say: let’s put an end to TBR shame.** Not just the shaming of people who own a lot of books they haven’t read yet, but the guilt from the people doing the owning. If having a TBR stresses you out or your physical TBR is so large that it’s reduced the functionality of your living space or you’re spending money you don’t have on an increasingly large pile of books you won’t read, by all means, re-evaluate your choices and ditch the pile. But if none of those things apply to you, don’t let anyone make you feel guilty about your reading life.
Because here’s the thing: you shouldn’t feel badly about something you enjoy. I have about 160 unread books in my house- enough to fill to overflowing an entire IKEA bookshelf-and I just like the sight of it. Will I get around to reading all of those books? Who cares! It’s an ever-evolving pile: stuff is constantly being culled out and discarded, or read and moved to the other shelves, or being added as I pick up new books I want to read. That shelf is part of the daily rhythm of my life, it’s something that brings me a measure of contentment, and I don’t see why I should feel badly about those things just because someone else (usually on the internet) might express disapproval.
There’s not a number at which a TBR becomes suddenly immoral. You’re not in an objective safe zone at 99 and in the Very Bad Person Zone at 100. You don’t need to apologize for loving an activity and owning the items you like in order to do that activity. A reading life is a rich experience that isn’t limited to the actual act of reading- it’s also wandering through the library and being suddenly aware of how loudly you walk. It’s petting a cover with an interesting texture. Picking a new ereader and a cover for it that has some pun on it. Discovering new reading apps on your phone. Building up a library (or not, if you don’t want to) of editions that make you happy, whether those are digital or physical. Developing a TBR (or not, if you don’t want to), that might *gasp, the horror* contain books you never actually get around to. There is no one-size-TBR-fits-all-readers wrong or right choice. There’s no good or bad book pile. There is only your reading life and what is right for your situation and your preferences.
So (TBR) pile on without shame, my friends. In the wise words of Dave Grohl, “I don’t believe in guilty pleasures. If you fucking like something, like it.”
*And before anyone starts comparing having a library to hoarding, this article about the difference between collecting and hoarding from the Anxiety and Depression Association of America might be of use. Let’s not use a term for an actual mental illness to make self-righteous statements about readers who have different reading lives than we do, kthanksbai.
**Especially if you’re a woman. Not that men don’t feel TBR guilt, but I see this sort of apologizing-for-expressing-joy-in-a-thing more often from the ladies and that’s a whole other post for a whole other site but seriously, stop apologizing.