Collecting books since I was ten —

in Hive Collectors3 months ago

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This is a post to go with monthly challenge from #Hive #Collectors community. BOOKS!!!
I've already touched this topic; more about my library in other posts here: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. Its always a pleasure for me to talk about books — I can look at it from various points of view: evaluating book's layout and printed quality, whether the design is beautiful or lame, whether this book deserves to eternity or whether it would be better it never saw the light of day, etc etc etc.

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I was born and raised in the USSR (known as "the most reading country in the world"); those who didn't live there during the late Brezhnev era may be surprised, but it's a fact: despite the multi-million book print runs and the enormous amount of literature produced, good books were in short supply; there was never enough for those who wanted to buy, the capitalist law of "supply and demand" didn't apply here. I try to explain why I developed a passion for books from my young age.


So, from my teenage years I read and collected books. (Besides books, I collected stamps, badges, audio recordings, and chewing gum inserts—but that's a totally different story.) Of course, I was in the know of public libraries and even used two of them, but I repeat: good books were a magnet for me and they were a deficit, impossible to get. Thus I better liked to see books on my own shelf, being able to reach out for it any time I would want, and reread it whenever I wanted (rather than having to run to the library for it). Like any teenager, I consumed classic children's and adventure literature, and a little later became obsessed with science fiction (the 'fantasy' genre at the time was terra incognita).

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An exception to the common distribution became my interest in biology and marine subjects - it developed after reading a popular science book, "Ocean World" by Donat Naumov, my mother one day granted to me. It literally sparked my interest in the ocean thema — and the bibliography given at the end of the book became a beacon and guide for my book collecting for the next 10 years.

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That bibliography (hehe) consisted mostly of old books — which, of course, no way were available for purchase and could only be acquired as 'used' ones. Thus I momentarily became acquainted with the idea of second-hand bookstores and became their regular visitor for many years to come.

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I wish my library looked like the photo above (and had a separate room for it, too!) – but alas. The photo was taken at a public library, thats not my collection :)

Its a good time to mention that I started collecting paperbacks issued by 'Mir Publishing House' in their famous SF series, "Foreign Science Fiction" — these old editions, of course, could only be found on the shelves of second-hand booksellers. On the right you see what were the covers and dust jackets of the series 1965-70s editions. Frankly speaking, not all of these books were engaging reading; among some excellent authors, there were also some trashy ones... butmy heart still flutters when I look at these treasures, so coveted by me back then.

I was spending on books and audio cassettes all my pocket money (and the first rubles I started earning on my own after graduating from school). I kinda turned into a hunter, regularly patrolling my hunting grounds — I got to know a few second-hand book stores having these books coming. I still remember two of them: a store at Old Arbat street, and a store at Kotelnicheskaya Embankment in a Stalinist sky-scraper, the one where the Illusion Cinema was located. I lived in Moscow at the time... Of course, neither of those book stores exists today.


Science fiction was my primary interest. However, as I grew older, my interests broadened (as inevitably as an expanding universe) — first and foremost, I became interested in history (thanks to my high school history teacher for that!). I wasn't omnivorous; I was obsessed mostly with several specific topics, such as 19th-century history, modern history, imperialist wars, the history of Latin American countries, and the Russian Middle Ages (today I'm interested rather in medieval European history in general). Sometimes I'd also explore classics and modern literature.

In my room, I built a substantial bookshelf along the entire wall, which I filled for several years; there was plenty of space...— that's what you see in this photo. After graduating from university, my life's trajectory led me to move to another city, and my teenage library remained at my parents' house.

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This is what the shelving looks like today; of course, when I left the library it looked different - now all the books are in different places and mixed up, many new ones have been added... the library is alive - my grandchildren actively use it. Yoy may notice on the shelves the full collected works of Conan Doyle, Remarque, Vonnegut, Borges, Cortázar, Kipling, London, Lem, Zelazny, Heinlein... all of them remained in my parents' house. Moving to another city, I borrowed with me my PC, the monitor, some clothes and literally two shelves with books. I had to make some tough choices — and chose to part with most of sci-fi writers, except of my very fave ones.

In my new home, alas, there was less space for the library. Naturally, I continued to grow my book collection — or rather, my wife and I continued to do so. My collection merged with my wife's, who had inherited some of her parents' books, books from the first half of the 20th century. (I forgot to mention: I inherited nothing of the sort from my own family—both my grandparents were peasants... unlike city dwellers, they simply had no family inheritance or heirlooms, let alone books — not even old family photographs survived.)

<< The new bookshelf is starting to fill up with books and boxes.

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I've given you a brief history of my book collection—and now I'll touch on other aspects. You might want to know the exact numbers: how many books exactly the collection contains. Here's the simple and easy answer: I have absolutely no idea! 😂 I once wondered a bit about this, and I tried to estimate at least the "order of magnitude"—and the estimated figure was around 2,000 books, but of course, a lot of water has passed under the bridge since then, and the number has changed. It's certainly not 10, not 100, and not even 10,000 books.

What will happen to them after I die? I'd like to think the books will remain treasured family property and will be carefully preserved, like a number of other things that are precious to me (I highly value old papers!). I'd like to think my daughter will pass them on to her children, but... I know that won't happen. I won't delve further into this particular topic, but you get the idea.

Yes, of course, not all books are of such value. Frankly, some deserve to be recycled or given away to good owners. But the majority of books—on history, design, architecture, children's books—certainly deserve to be "family heirlooms" to be passed down from generation to generation.

My books are not marked with an exlibris mark. When I encounter (very rarely!) books with someone else's bookplate, I feel envy and feel the urge to make my own, but over time, this impulse fades without achieving this goal. This failure stems from mental issues in my head—probably partly because I recognize the limited historical value of these books and the lack of integrity in this collection. Nowadays, books are no longer produced as stunning works of art and are not as rare as they once were... and therefore don't deserve exclusive treatment, the special bookplate of the collection's owner, etc. But that's not certain.

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I've already mentioned that my collection is almost entirely free of antiques and vintage books—I didn't inherit anything of the sort from my family. If you were curious, I'd name the oldest book in my library: "Parnassus on End" (1926). It was published half a century before I was born! It's a collection of poetry in the literary parody genre; it was given to me by one of the editorial offices where I worked. I don't treasure it much (simply because I don't value or collect poetry highly), but I do know that it's a true gem and an interesting book that would enhance any specialized book collection focused on a particular topic or historical period.

A facsimile of the book is available online. Link.


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From the very moment my collection merged with the collection of my wife, it can no longer be considered as the oldest one.

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Look at the "Bible" in the 1904 edition of the Synodal Printing House. A family heirloom.

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My book collection has a unique section – books that no one else has! Simply because only a few copies, a handful, exist... these are the books I made myself in the 2000s. See, I'm a long-time DIY fan, and more than once, various literary works have inspired me to have them on my bookshelf – in an alternative book format, different from how they were published; or some pieces were simply impossible to purchase as individual books (and one of these texts never existed as a book at all. Thus my handmades are unique!)

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The photo above shows three such books, all of which were typeset, printed, and bound by me personally, in print runs of 3 to 5 copies (all of which were given away to friends).

  • S.O. Rockdevyaty. "The Zvirmarillion" (a parody of Tolkien's "The Silmarillion" by A. Sviridov. I highly value this book! I recommend it to anyone who never intended (or couldn't) to read the original text.
  • Victor Pelevin. "The Lower Tundra" (a curious story about a Chinese emperor who traveled to our time through spirit travel).
  • "A Post about Postmodernism" by crrazycoyote (a delightful, dazzling example of online literature on postmodernism, including the BBC's Sherlock Holmes, which my wife and I wanted to turn into a book—some things simply don't deserve to disappear into the ephemerality of our digital age).
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Books come and go... a separate and interesting topic would be a story about losses. I remember several instances as if they happened yesterday! Yes, you're probably aware of how strong emotions are a great stimulant for memorization; it's the best form of imprinting. One book stayed with my ex-girlfriend, I loaned another to a student friend for a research project, and then couldn't get it back for several years; I lost another book in the most stupid way: I took it with me into the woods to read, forgot it on a stump, and didn't bother going back for it when I remembered it the next day, as the night's rain had already killed it. (The reason I remember all this so well after all these years is the intense emotional background that accompanied the forced farewell to these books.)

It would be great to mention the different ways books come into my collection. I used to simply buy new books at the store—now that almost never happens, very, very rarely. Sometimes I find discarded books and take a couple of copies for myself—rescuing those books I deem unworthy of destruction and the trash heap. Sometimes I rescue books from oblivion—I bring them home (you could even say steal them!) from my employer's office if I'm convinced they're of no use to anyone there and are considered trash, junk that will inevitably end up in the trash someday (or I just happen to catch them as they're being carried to the trash heap). Sometimes I borrow books from friends and acquaintances, then never return them—because I can't meet them again. Such instances are rare, but I admit that several books in my collection have precisely this origin!

Sometimes I find interesting things at flea markets and buy a book or two when the temptation to buy them outweighs the lack of storage space. Last year, for example, I stumbled upon Hal Clement's "The Fire Cycle," a 1970 edition—from the very same vintage "Foreign Science Fiction" series I collected as a child. It had a ridiculous price tag of 10 rubles (about $0.12) and seemed odd, random, and out of place among the other books at that seller's. I'd already bought that book once before as a teenager, and that book is still on a shelf at my parents' house...

But of course I bought this copy too. I felt like a savior; I saved the book—it's now in my library, completely safe.


My typical book collection process goes something like this: from time to time, I learn about good books, new or old, that appeal to me because of their subject matter. I search for free ebooks and read them. Not every book in the world has been digitized yet—sometimes I can't find a digital version. Sometimes, a digital version of a book is pointless—downloading it only makes you realize it's meant to be read as a paperback. Sometimes, after reading a book, I realize it's important and deserves to be on my bookshelf (or I just want to be able to pull it off the shelf at any time to read it). From time to time, I make such book connections—and I'm grateful for each one.

The next step is to add the title to my 'wanted' list and periodically check online flea markets and secondhand stores. When I find a suitable, cheap offer, I buy the new book (even one I've already read). This is how it happens for me.


Well, now I will list the main topics of my book collection, and I will also add some pictures to my post. 😉

Sci-fi used to be the hot core of my library, but not anymore.

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This shelf contains books from the aforementioned "Foreign Science Fiction" series. Since 1965, over 150 books have been published in the series. I've collected about 70 of them.

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Over the years, the collection has been significantly expanded to include other interesting sections, such as:

— Contemporary Literature;
— Classical Literature, Russian and World;
— Fairy Tales (my wife is a big fan of this kind of literature!)
— Poetry;
— History;
— Local History / History of St. Petersburg;
— Art Books and Albums;
— Music Publications;
— Bibliology, Publishing;
— Books in Foreign Languages;
— Magazines (not really a thematic section at all);
— Last but not least: Children's Literature.


Books for kids

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My child is reading Andersen's lavishly illustrated 'Snow Queen'.

We have three different editions of 'Alice', 'The Secret Garden' by Burnett, 'Treasure Island' by R.L.Stevenson in a deluxe entertaining edition, 'Winnie-the-Pooh' illustrated by Boris Diodorov (he created the best illustrations for this book!), and a huge number of others that we acquired so that our daughter would love reading from an early age. Over time, we had to dedicate a separate bookshelf to these books. Here they have sat for the past few years, quietly collecting dust. The phone and the internet have replaced reading and books for my child. Amen. RIP.


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Fairy tales and Folk tales.

We don't have a separate shelf for fairy tales, but we have quite a few: my wife has been fascinated by this genre since childhood. And I should clarify that fairy tales aren't necessarily children's literature, as is commonly believed. The collection includes, of course, Russian fairy tales (more than two dozen books), Chinese, Korean, Kazakh, Tibetan, Tuvan, Finnish, Scandinavian, African tales... One of the most notable editions is "Russian Fairy Tale" published by the 'Academia' publishing house in 1935.


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Art albums

Art books, like art albums, always cost more than you're willing to pay for them. I'd love to read (and own!) a mountain of books about artists, sculptors, and various art styles—alas, my wish hasn't even been 1% fulfilled. In the 2000s, I managed to come to an agreement with my wallet and invested some money in a light version of Taschen albums; and still, I could only buy a dozen books: biographies of Alphonse Mucha, Edvard Munch, Paul Klee, Amedeo Modigliani, Antonio Gaudi, Wassily Kandinsky, Picasso, a collection dedicated to DaDa—that's all.


Books on architecture and the city history

My wife and I share a love for St. Petersburg, the city where we live, and over the years we've devoured a fair number of books about the city's history, its architecture, the interesting people who lived here, and various other fascinating aspects of its life.

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In the photo below, you can see two of my favorite books (each could be written in its own post, quite long). One tells the story of the city as it was in the early 20th century... and the other is an album by photographer Antoshchenkov dedicated to the courtyards of St. Petersburg (I participated in the publication of this book).

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I will mention the most interesting photo albums about the "Moscow Triumphal Gate" (a competitor to the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin), built by Nicholas I, and a book about the history of floods at St.Petersburg - I took significant part in design and layout of both.

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Books on typography, design and printing arts.

I have a special - small but very cool - section of books dedicated to the printing arts field. Making grids, fonts, lettering, logos and brands, typography, book layout, etc etc etc. One of less 'useful' in practical terms but very enjoyable and memorable personally books, is Eric Gill's classic 'Typography' from 1930. You see it's Russian edition in the photo above - I took part in its publishing (as a crowd-funder).

I have a special — small but very interesting — section in my book on typography. It covers issues of grid construction, fonts, lettering, logos and brands, typography, book layout, and so on. Another book, less "useful" in practical terms, but very enjoyable and memorable for me personally, is Eric Gill's classic 1930 book "Typography." In the photo above, you see the Russian edition — I even participated in its publication (through crowdfunding).


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Books on music

I love to read read music biographies — generally I prefer electronic editions that won't take up valuable shelf space, but I make exception for a few particularly important ones. I have music biographies about Radiohead, Depeche Mode, Auktsyon, Leningrad, Aquarium, Sergei Kuryokhin and his Pop Mechanics, a collection of Tom Waits interviews, DJ Laurent Garnier's memoirs "Electroshock," and Andrei Gorokhov's mind-blowing treatise on contemporary music "Muzprosvet" (I bought two different editions).

...and many other interesting books in digital format. I'm saddened that not a single (!) book about Jeff Buckley has appeared in Russian. I also dream of an authentic biography of Owsley Stanley (Grateful Dead sound engineer, legendary creator of LSD) – but one doesn't even exist in English, as far as I know.


Books in English

Most of my books (ofc) are in Russian — I prefer reading in my native language and translations. But I do have exceptions for some of my fave authors, like Tolkien and Robert Heinlein.

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Also, thru years I was consistently collecting books dedicated to the famouse Oxford band Radiohead - some of them I eventually decided to get rid off, but still a dozen have stayed with me. (And a few boxes of magazines, not speaking of numerous clippings, as well).

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Have much more books to speak about - but I have to round up my endless blog somewhere, right?

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All images taken by me, copyright (c) @qwerrie
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This is fascinating! How wonderful for your family, your grandchildren, that you love books so much. I'm afraid that, soon, humans won't even be able to read. I love books too, but have nothing like what you have. I rescued a box of old books that had been left in a family home, my sister wanted to sell them. I've been reading them instead. When reading older literature, I can better see how much we have changed, culturally. Seems to me we've been dumbed down.

Your photos are lovely. I can smell the old books from the USA.

soon, humans won't even be able to read.

yeah... it all goes there. sad but true.

sounds fascinating that you saved a box of your family books. respect!

one of my friends showed me a convolute book (a set of old magazines bound together) containing a news report about the Titanic sinking! This book has been passed down in his family.

That sounds very interesting! I'd love to compare the reports from then with the stories we are told today about that event.

Today's ones are more detailed, I guess.

I doubt that. I'm curious as to where the stories differ. The one you saw is closer to a primary source, might have primary sources in it. I like primary sources.

I can't tell you how much I love this post. It's a window into an entirely different world, growing up in USSR coveting books that weren't easy to get, which was worlds away from my childhood in the west where books seemed to be everywhere, not just librarys, but on my parent's bookshelf where I glutted on Heinlein, Asimov, Wyndam, Clarke and other more modern sci fi writers, starting a life long love of scifi on the other side of the world to you.

What blows me away is that it never occured to me to think there were Russian science fiction writers, which is rather west-centric of me, but of course there would have been, and now I'm just annoyed that they never entered my orbit, so to speak. Are there any you'd recommend that I could hunt down or read about?

I lvoe that photo of your kid reading as well - it's such a fantastic photo of a child immersed in books. Raise a kid with them and they'll fall in love with them too. God help the new generations that are raised on screens. I think she'll probably go back to books one day - a lot of young adults are, in protest, in a kinda of vintage vogue longing for something they don't have kinda way. I know my son and his partner try their best to read even if the internet creeps in. Speaking of which, I should get off Hive and read a chapter of something.

Thanks for this fabulous, passionate, interesting insight into your world.

Yeah. My way to Simak, Sheckley, Heinlein, Asimov, Wyndam, Clarke and others was not that simple and full of roses xD 'the harder you get it -- the more you value it', that rule still works. And Stanislav Lem in those years replaced Kafka (and Philip K. Dick) for Russian readers.

Sure thing i can give a few recommendations, just give me a hint what do you value more in SF? oh, and I have no idea which novels got EN translations and which have not.

I'm really happy my blog entertained you in such a positive way 🙏

Read the Strugatsky brothers' story "Hard to Be a God." It's something I'm ready to reread.

Thankyou!

What a wonderful and thoughtful post about collecting and the love of books! It’s a great example of collecting not just things, but the knowledge those books carry.
You can even see how the shelves are bending under the weight of that knowledge.

Soon, the internet might let AI rewrite all history and data, and no one will know the truth anymore )) — only you, as the keeper of reliable information, will hold the real knowledge :)
Hope my attempt at a joke worked 😄
!BEER
!PIZZA

Fascinating reading about your enormous collection! I have collected books since childhood and also inherited a few from family. I homeschooled my son and with the addition of those books, I guessed I had about 5000. When my husband died and my son was in his 30's I went through and got rid of many of the books bought for homeschooling. Almost all of my books were bought at tag sales or book sales. I seldom paid more than 50 cents for a book, or 25 cents for a paperback.

I don't know how many books I have, though they are all cataloged in notebooks that I used to take with me to the tag sales, etc. I also have a collection of National Geographics that go back to 1914 that were also collected from tag sales. My son liked them when he was small. It's not complete from the 1950's back, but after that it is.

Loved this post!

National Geographics - thats a great great stuff! dont sell it, unless theres room and opportunities for the safe dry storage.
My family spent every summer season in our small summer house outside the city - and its exactly the time when my teen babygirl start reading (mostly illustrated magazines, we have this 'Round the world'- analogue of N.Geo).

I am happy my blog entertained you. Have a great day, and a Hive !PIZZA

Wow! That's a lot of books! 😱 It's obvious that books are your life! Or, your life is a book? 😃

I spotted in the photos some of the authors I read, but I don't have my "personal" library at home, as you do... 😃 Not sure if I have more than 5 books in my collection (excluding comics 😃)

On the other hand, I do remember my high school days, when I was visiting a public library multiple times per week, reading books like crazy... I can clearly remember my "book" journey... As my older sister introduced me to the library, my first books were "detective niche", standard Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes, Agatha Christie, and later on some French writers, whose names I have forgotten (Fantomas series, and a few others)... After that, I moved to SciFi, with American writers... When I finished them, I remember reading a few Russian SciFi writers, which were on a completely different level than Americans... (level of SciFi imagination 😃)... The next stop was some "local" (ex-Yugoslavia) drama/theater pieces... After that, I fell in love with Russian novelists after reading Anna Karenina by Tolstoy... Fyodor Dostoevsky's pieces The Brothers Karamazov and Crime and Punishment...

When we moved to Spain, I became a member of the local library, with the idea of learning the language by reading books in Spanish... As it was hard to understand Spanish authors (usually using broader vocabulary), I went with translations of popular "classics" as they would be easier to understand in Spanish... So, I read most of Hemingway's books (in Spanish), trying to understand the "Spanish way of living" as he spent some time living in Spain...

Anyways... I'm planning to visit the library in the city where we moved recently, but somehow, I can't find time for it... It will happen eventually...

Thanks for this post... It reminded me that the "reading flame" is still in me... :)


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Which names/ titles do we happen to have in common? Curious.

I remember exactly the very 1st time my older cousin introduced me to Sherlock Holmes stories - it was 'The case of the Boscomb valley'. I was over excited! So many good memories.

I am truly happy to hear the flame is still in you.
Reading is so much fun! ofc, there are good books and mediocre ones.
Rn I am reading Çaptain Alatriste'series by Peres-Reverte.
What I am supposed to enjoy especially is not the story line but the certain sort of Old Classic Spanish Language, haha... but I am not convincced I like it -- it is too... It's too 'pathetic and ornated' to my taste. I prefer things simpler. Spanish is one of the most beautiful languages ​​in the world! And I really regret I can't read/understand songs lyrics in Spanish.

Perhaps now the time has come for modern literature?
I would recommend you the novels of Viktor Pelevin. He's not a science fiction writer at all - he is much more; he's a very intellectual and he has a gift of dark vision — he can see very well the abyss our world is heading toward, and in his stories displays some terrible shapes of our possible future. I can name specific books, if you wanna go with this.

!BEER

I spotted Remark in one of your photos, which was part of "one of my read phases" in the past... :)

I would recommend you the novels of Viktor Pelevin.

Hmmm... I don't know why I'm hesitating with modern literature, but I should try it...

Sorry for the late reply... Currently travelling...


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Wow! I’m really impressed – it’s amazing what you’ve collected and are still collecting; you’re a real collector. The photos accompanying this post are lovely.

Have you really read all the books you own? @qwerrie 😊

Well, not at all - but some of them I've read even 4-5 times!
The ones that my wife obtained, or were inherited in some alter way - no, I dont plan to read all of it, but those I got myself and I'm intrested in, yes, have read them. Dont feel scared looking at that huge pile! xD
!PIZZA

Знатная у вас коллекция! 👍
Я конечно тоже люьлб почитать, и дома шкафы заставлены книгами, но у меня все ближе к классике, ну и плюс подборка журналов Из серии Наука и Жизнь, Всемирный следопыт, Радио и даже где-то в загашниках должен хранится Мурзилка 😉

на самом деле не коллекция а все же библиотека или даже свалка, гибрид, равноудаленная между двумя этими понятиями точка. Журналы - такие винтажные - со временем становятся только лучше! не выбрасывайте их никуда. Есть надежда что внуки внуков будут им сильно рады. Но где все это хранить по дороге времени?
!PIZZA

Вот по поводу хранения согласен, тут уже и на чердак часть транспортаиповали, часть аккуратно сложили. Да иногда и самому интересно пошуршать страницами и стряхнуть пыль с былого. Особенно интересно посмотреть на то как на одни и теже проблема/задачи смотреши тогда и сейчас)

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I'm impressed by how many books you have. When I moved, I had to get rid of a lot of them.

Meow! I have some ebooks too, besides that -- they require less space :P but paper books do not demand gadgets or electricity, hehe. 😉

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Hive Power Up Month Challenge - March 2026 Winners List
Be ready for the April edition of the Hive Power Up Month!
Hive Power Up Day - April 1st 2026

Congratulations @qwerrie! You received a personal badge!

You powered-up at least 100 HP on Hive Power Up Day! This entitles you to a level 3 badge
Participate in the next Power Up Day and try to power-up more HIVE to get a bigger Power-Bee.
May the Hive Power be with you!

You can view your badges on your board and compare yourself to others in the Ranking

Check out our last posts:

Hive Power Up Month Challenge - March 2026 Winners List
Be ready for the April edition of the Hive Power Up Month!
Hive Power Up Day - April 1st 2026

Hi @qwerrie

Your post is not forgotten, ie I saw it but I was really unable to comment on it (hell working hours, packing for a trip, surviving my worst ever migraine episode and travelling in the meantime..) but my husband did it 😉 and asked me: Did you see Qwerrie's post? 🤩

A thousand thanks for your awesome collection! 😇🙏

😘 yeah, the job. have a nice day!