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- Newsgroups: rec.arts.books
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!uwm.edu!linac!att!cbnewsc!cbfsb!cbnewsb.cb.att.com!colten
- From: colten@cbnewsb.cb.att.com (marc.colten)
- Subject: Re: Making notations in your books?
- Message-ID: <1992Dec21.204009.4090@cbfsb.cb.att.com>
- Summary: Marking up books
- Sender: news@cbfsb.cb.att.com
- Organization: AT&T
- References: <BzFx87.E1p@world.std.com> <DOOM.92Dec20163844@elaine36.Stanford.EDU> <3179@devnull.mpd.tandem.com>
- Date: Mon, 21 Dec 1992 20:40:09 GMT
- Lines: 46
-
- In article <3179@devnull.mpd.tandem.com>, rspence@mpd.tandem.com (Russell Spence) writes:
- > In article <1992Dec21.024845.22015@mercury.unt.edu> jacob@ponder.csci.unt.edu (Tom Jacob) writes:
- > >> What are your feelings about making notes, highlighting, etc., in the
- > >> books that you own? Although I wish I could do so in my books (it does
- >
- > Uck. I would *never* make notes or highlight in any book that I own
- > (unless it was designed specifically as a workbook). I think of a
- > book as a work of art. I would never put a mustache on the Mona Lisa
- > or add extra bits to a Van Gogh. In the same vein I wouldn't change
- > a book. The book should contain the contents of the creative output
- > of the writer, not the reader or anyone else (I hate introductions
- > too). If I feel the need to mark part of the book or add a comment,
- > I use a slip of paper that can be inserted between the pages of the
- > book or make an entry in my notebook (noting the page and line).
- >
-
- I never make marks in books. Over the course of years I found I
- even stopped putting my name on the cover sheet. Perhaps it's some
- kind of reverence for the book. It's certainly not economic as I
- NEVER sell my books. I think it's a kind of ego thing with some people
- as I occasionally get a second hand book with notations - an arrow
- pointing to a sentence and the comment "right!" or "wrong!" or whatever.
- I hope when I see this that they did it for school as I can't
- conceive of any reason why they think a future owner would be
- interested.
-
- There are exceptions. I do find it interesting when I see the
- previous owners name, perhaps a date, or an inscription (if the
- book was a gift). Gives it a sense of time and place. I don't do
- that myself because I can't imagine any 50 years from know caring
- who I was.
-
- One incredible exception. Bought a copy of "Around the World in
- Eleven Years" at an antique store. The book was written by three
- children who had lived in several countries (including Hitler's
- Germany and Stalin's Russia) in the 30's. They must have been
- well known, since the book had articles torn out of magazines between
- the pages. On the inside of the front and back cover were comments,
- almost mini-reviews, by six women who had read the book, apparently
- in sequence, in March of 1937. Must have been a reading club or
- reading circle. Never saw that before and wondered if more of
- them were floating around. Anyone else see this?
-
-
- marc colten
-
-