Tuesday, September 22, 2015

My Bookshelf

Credit for this idea goes, I suppose, to my little sister, who posted about her bookshelf on her blog. I have little interest in tracing its antecedents any further, but I understand she got the idea from a different blog. I've added a few questions, and subtracted a few, but many of them are the same.

My bookshelf: (the top two shelves, the books piled on top, and the right half of the bottom shelf.)

Do you have any special or different way of organizing your books?
Yes, I organize them in height order, and the non-fiction books are on the top shelf, while the fiction ones are on the second shelf. Why height order? I got the idea from Hercule Poirot, Belgium's most famous methodical detective. It does give the shelves a neat appearance, does it not? The effect is somewhat spoiled by the stacks of books piled on top of the others, but this was necessary to fit all my books onto the shelf. 

How many books do you own?
103, to the best of my knowledge. And counting.

What's the thickest (most amount of pages) book on your shelf?
That would be one of my Western Literature books from college—2660 pages


What's the thinnest (least amount of pages) book on your shelf? 
Hardly even counts for a book—47 pages.


Is there a book you received as a birthday gift?
One of my cousins gave me this. It's a humourous book, but pretty interesting.


Is there a book from a friend on your shelf?
My brother gave me this book, knowing how much I like WWII history.


Most expensive book?
Probably my leather-bound ESV Bible. You can tell it's expensive because it has two bookmarks.


The last book you read on your shelf?
This book isn't actually mine; I have a stack of my brother's books on my shelf right now because he's leaving all his books in storage for the next couple years, and there were several that I wanted to read.

Of all the books on your shelf, which was the first you read?
Oh, boy, I don't really remember, but most likely this one.

Do you have more than one copy of a book?
I have three copies of Jane Eyre, and five copies of the Bible. Two ESV, and three NKJV.


Do you have the complete series of any book series?
A few, yes. Probably my favorite series that I own is Winston Churchill's The Second World War.

I also have two sets of Edith Nesbit's children's books:



What's the newest addition to your shelf?
These two that I bought a few months ago at a used book store. History books, no surprise. But hey, only one of them is on WWII. I'm branching out.




What book has been on your shelf FOREVER?
None of them. I don't even know which one I've had longest, but since I've started putting dates in, maybe this one that I got in 2008:


What's the most recently published book on your shelf?
The 3rd edition of The Lie, by Ken Ham, published in June 2013.



The oldest book on your shelf (as in, the actual copy is old)?
This book was printed in 1877. I must admit, I got it just because of how old it was; I haven't really read much of it.

A book you won?
I got this little biography on Isaac Watts as a prize for memorizing 1000 verses. 



A book you'd hate to let out of your sight (aka a book you never let someone borrow)?
I have no picture for this one, because I did let someone borrow it. Now it is somewhere in Oregon. Hopefully someone else who loves Captains Courageous found it, and is now enjoying it. Loosing a book is sad; it's even sadder when it's one of your favorite books from your childhood that you've had for several years.

Most beat up book?
Definitely my Bible. I take it everywhere, and it has stood up to a lot of abuse over the last four years. You can see the torn cover, but not the pen scribbles and blood on the pages, courtesy of various younger siblings.


A book from your childhood?
I've always loved Twenty-One Balloons, so when I started collecting my own books it was one of my first purchases.

A book that's not actually your book?
This book of Milton's poems actually belongs to my eight-year-old brother. When I started teaching him how to read, I'd always tell him it was so he could read Shakespeare and Milton. I'm keeping it for him until he gets a little older.

A book with a special/different cover (e.g. leather bound, soft fuzzy cover etc.)?
Again, my ESV Bible. Lambskin leather smells so good, and feels amazing.

A book that is your favorite color?
I have a couple grey books, but the other one has pink on the cover as well, so I'm going with this one:

Book that's been on your shelf the longest that you STILL haven't read?
Most of the books I haven't read are from the last couple years, but Jesus Freaks I got when I went to the National Bible Bee in 2009, and I've only glanced through it. Maybe when I finish all those WWII books I'll get around to reading it...

Any signed books?
I co-authored this book with my brother and a friend, and we all signed it. Does that count?





5 comments:

  1. Oh I LOVED seeing all the books on your shelf! Hahaha you seem to have the same interest in WWII that I have. ;) Though I have to admit that hands down my favorite era is the Cold War- soooo many things are unexplained and left to be delved into that most people don't seem to know about. :) But your books look sooo amazing. I may have to get a couple of them. ;) My absalute favorite WWII book is "Agent 146: A Nazi Spy in America". I think there's about four or five bad words in it but other than that it's clean. I am fascinated with Erich Gimpel's story and I have the entire collection of books and DVDS I could find on him.

    By the way, I'm Emily, your younger sister Rebekah's friend. :) I read the post she shared of yours about turning nineteen and the courtship/dating topic and decided to subscribe to your blog. We're the same age. ;) God Bless and nice to kinda "meet" you!

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    1. Yes, I do love WWII. :) I also like pretty much all British history. I'll have to look up Agent 146...intelligence books are my favorite type of WWII books.

      Nice to "meet" you too. :)

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    2. Hopefully we'll all ACTUALLY meet at some point. ;)
      Emily, when I first was figuring out how to get us altogether (though it turned out that God had different plans) I though to myself, and told Sarah, "You are going to really click with Emily since you both love WWII history so much!"

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    3. Hahahahaha yes, I can talk for hours on different aspects of WWII history.Sounds like you can, too, Sarah! :D British history, eh? I specialize in Eastern European history (mostly Russia), but I find Britian's history fascinating as well. Well, basically, history in general is the best. B-) Particularly anything that you have to learn some foreign words, I love languages, cultures and history! And on the topic of books by the British AND on WWII, you might enjoy Operation Mincemeat, a real story that took place in the MI5 during WWII. I can't remember if there was some language in there or not, and there very well may have been (it was written by the British and they do tend to swear) but it was pretty good. Very informative. You might like that one as well.

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  2. I loved seeing all your books! And you enjoy reading about WWII! I love WWII and a lot of those books looked amazing! I'll have to see if our library has them, although I probably should finish the ones I have first. At any time I normally have between 5-10 books checked out, most of them about WWII. :)

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