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To Be Read Stack

The author’s official, partial to be read stack.

I threw in with a group of readers, writers, artists, and photographers when I joined Threads to replace my X account. There is a lot of discussion about books to be read stacks. You know what I mean: that pile of acquired books that grows and eventually might be read. What is the right number to have? 100? 200? More? Less? There is not a right answer. I have a completely full bookcase in one of the passageways leading to my writing room. When it’s time for the next book, I browse it like I am in a personal book store. To be read stacks got me thinking about how to select the next book.

Book selection is a hodge-podge process in my world. I diligently read at least 25 pages per day. When it’s time for the next book, sometimes I know what to pick up ahead of time and sometimes I don’t. I can be like a dog chasing a squirrel. There is little interest in being disciplined here. Less than there should be. I tend to pick recently acquired books for next.

At the same time, there are books I own I want to get to. For example, I’m building a collection of books about Florida, Virginia, Minnesota and other places important to my family history. Those are maybe 50 books organized on shelves for easy grabbing for research. Somehow those need to be worked into the rotation.

Referrals are the most important part of the process: referrals from friends, social media (Threads and Facebook mainly), from the footnotes of other books, and from what my pals on Goodreads are reading. I used to just buy those books and find a spot for them.

While I have more than a thousand books in my library to be read (maybe two thousand, who’s counting?), I slowed the purchasing process. When I find a book to read from any source, I put it in my Amazon shopping cart and remove it to save for later. That builds a reading list without buying a book. In the past, when I filled my cart, I used to just place the order. No more.

I have a Goodreads account with a few friends. The Goodreads to be read list exists yet I don’t find it as useful as the Amazon list. I use them both when I’m stumped.

When the next book is up, from any source, and I don’t have a copy, I check availability on the online catalogue at the public library. This is a new process. We are in a small community so sometimes they have it and sometimes they don’t. If they have it, I place a hold and pick it up on the next trip to town.

I keep nine shelves of more than 400 books of poetry. I use them to palate cleanse or for inspiration. There are so many unread poems they could keep me busy for a long time.

In terms of filling my life with reading, I would never have to leave the house for the 14 years left according to government life expectancy tables. Nonetheless, I want to stay current and as an avid reader of online publications I frequently encounter a new book I should read.

My bottom line is I like the hodge-podge of my to be read stack and its extensions online. With so many good books in the world, I don’t want to miss many. I don’t have enough perspective to know whether I have and a to be read stack is no answer to that problem.

2 replies on “To Be Read Stack”

My physical To Be Read pile sits next to my bed, supplemented by a overstuffed single bookshelf. Long-form reading of physical books, something I previously enjoyed throughout my life has tailed off for me. When I have some extended block of time, it tends to go to writing, research, or music composition/production. When I have shorter slots of time, they seem too small to devote to a 300-page book. I no longer am physically able to read sprawled out however in bed as I did when younger, and large volumes or smaller type can be cumbersome to read in a chair.

I’m often reduced to reading on a tablet, which helps with typesize and the tablet’s light weight and adjustable lighting, and the Internet Archive’s collection of scanned poetry books that are now in the Public Domain has been a blessing.

I keep reminding myself of your 25 pages a day thing. The trick would be to be able to schedule that minor amount of time each day, and to keep at it.

That pile of to be read books comforts me and taunts me!

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Thanks for reading and commenting. You are not alone in your long book reading habits. According to a recent Economist poll, 46% of Americans did not finish reading a single book in 2023. IDK what that means but it begs the question, why do we read books?
I hear you on the tablet reading. This may be one area where technology serves humans. Eventually that is where I’ll land as well. Cheers!

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