Sunday, February 26, 2012

Mini-progress

So over the last three days I've spent several hours culling books, dusting them off, and packing them into boxes. We will deliver them to the Urbana Free Library, which my friend Barb informed me has three book sales a year. They accept donations any time they are open. It feels so good to have a place to give our books where they might have a chance of being reused.

Ready for the Urbana Free Library!

Progress, even if it is only 6 shelves
Bill and I are both bookaholics. Included in the books going to the UFL are collections from three ex-University of Illinois professors, two of whom I know are deceased. Being graduate students at the time, we just could not resist acquiring their collections. Some of the books date back to the early 1900s, and may be worth something. If so, more power to the people who purchase them. Some of them had collected so much dust I think I could have planted small seeds on top of them and had them germinate.

About these wonderful bookshelves: When we moved into this old farmhouse almost 30 years ago, we already had a couple of hundred books and knew we'd be acquiring many more as the years went on. So we decided to install bookshelves all along the north "library" wall, 13 feet from floor to ceiling. It was a big job that we did ourselves, and we did a very nice job of it. A year or so later, though, we noticed the shelves sagging, and that meant putting reinforcement blocks of wood under the vertical braces. That also was a big job, as of course we had to take all the books and tchotchkes off the shelves for the shoring up process. No problems since then.

Before we had children (back in our hippie days), we found in a recycle bin in Urbana a complete collection of National Geographic magazines dating back to the early 1940s. We dug them all out, loaded them into our little Datsun truck, and took them home. They made the trip from Champaign to Mahomet with us in 1983, and every month we'd add the current issue. It was a heart-rending decision to finally part with them (thank you, C-U Freecycle!), but it did free up three entire shelves. (Though I did notice recently that about three dozen had escaped our detection--they will be joining the donations to the Urbana Free Library very soon.)

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