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Books/book club

Book snob

(145 Posts)
GagaJo Sun 08-Aug-21 13:21:43

One of my fellow English teachers, Shakespeare scholar and highly intellectual, has a penchant for rubbishy chick lit. We tease her about it, but it's light relief for her and she doesn't give a sh*t what others think.

mrswoo Sun 08-Aug-21 12:35:46

DH and I used to see which one of us was first to spot the FPlan diet book in a charity shop. Every shop had at least one copy. Nowadays, it seems as if it has been replaced by Fifty Shades of Grey.
I still manage to find books in charity shops that I want to read - not all are necessarily what could be classified as "good". The important thing is whether I enjoy reading them.

Fennel Sun 08-Aug-21 12:16:39

I rarely buy a book but have a small collection of 'humorous' classics which I read over and over.
Also short stories.
I've found that as I've grown older I run out of patience with novels.

Sara1954 Sun 08-Aug-21 12:03:22

I read all kinds of literature, I like detective novels, and a lot of modern literature, I doubt I’ll read any of them again, but I don’t like parting with them.
Also, I like my rooms lined with book shelves!

annodomini Sun 08-Aug-21 11:41:03

If all my Kindle library books were on my shelves, you would find all kinds of fiction, much of it lightweight crime fiction some of it sci-fi and plenty of it more 'serious literature'. As far as books are concerned, I'm an omnivore. During the periods of lockdown, a light diet has been necessary!

Germanshepherdsmum Sun 08-Aug-21 11:39:22

I enjoy detective stories for escapism but once you’ve read them you know how the plot ended so probably don’t read again. I also enjoy academic social history and historical demography titles which I dip into again and again. I tend to keep books (groaning bookshelves) rather than give them away but if I gave anything away it would be the detective stories. What’s the problem? Whatever floats your literary boat. I can’t bear snobs, literary or otherwise.

Callistemon Sun 08-Aug-21 11:39:03

They're probably the ones that are left over in the charity shop and will end up being pulped.

Our local Red Cross shop manager said "No paperbacks and no cookery books, please".

Oldwoman70 Sun 08-Aug-21 11:36:10

I also enjoy detective novels which once read go to the charity shop - the books I keep are those which I will re-read again and again, my favourite being Sorrows of Satan by Marie Corelli. I bought it second hand at a book fair many years ago and I have read it so often that the cover and binding are falling apart!

Namsnanny Sun 08-Aug-21 11:29:10

hollysteers

Thread title not to be taken too seriously, but there is quality in every field in life. Books are the only area in my life where snobbery rears its ugly head. A scan along anyone’s bookshelf (if they have one) tells you quite a lot about the person.
I enjoy many “light” novels, but they too can be judged and detective fiction has an honourable lineage
No one has to become anything they don’t want to.
My own beloved daughter never reads a book, the same with some friends and I still love them.

Thank you for the explanation.
I think zoom is responsible for people stocking their bookshelves with 'intelligent' sounding book titles.
Not necessarily what they would read.
It's a problem when someone feels they must read James Joyce or some other worthy writer.
Reading becomes a chore.

Zoejory Sun 08-Aug-21 11:23:00

How awful that people are judged by book snobs at the sight of chick lit or detective novels.

In my world people can read exactly what they want. As someone said, at least they are reading. Many people have never read a book of any genre.

Jaxjacky Sun 08-Aug-21 11:22:20

I rarely read fiction books more than once, hence I’m an avid library member. Any bought over lockdowns have been passed on, we have a couple of local ‘hubs’ where they can be donated if friends don’t want them.

Blossoming Sun 08-Aug-21 11:10:40

I picked up a lovely art book on Cezanne for £2 in a charity shop. There’s a particular charity shop in a market town near here where I have found some real treasures.

hollysteers Sun 08-Aug-21 11:10:27

Thread title not to be taken too seriously, but there is quality in every field in life. Books are the only area in my life where snobbery rears its ugly head. A scan along anyone’s bookshelf (if they have one) tells you quite a lot about the person.
I enjoy many “light” novels, but they too can be judged and detective fiction has an honourable lineage
No one has to become anything they don’t want to.
My own beloved daughter never reads a book, the same with some friends and I still love them.

eazybee Sun 08-Aug-21 11:07:17

The books on the shelves in charity shops are those that are read once, usually enjoyable but not kept to be re-read. The really good books are cherished; many of mine are forty and fifty years old, and when their time comes will probably end in a skip because of their poor condition.
At one time you could get a good selection of the classics in the summer, some almost untouched (!), following the end of GCSE, A Level and university exams, but now they are sold online for more money.

Sara1954 Sun 08-Aug-21 11:02:26

Yes, these are the books we read and discard as being not worth keeping.
I have hundreds of books, if I’ve enjoyed them I don’t want to part with them, is they have been rubbish, off they go to the charity shop!

Namsnanny Sun 08-Aug-21 10:52:44

Using your thread title as a guide, are you poking fun at yourself?
Or suggesting we have to be more discerning as readers, and become 'book snobs' ourselves?

Sparklefizz Sun 08-Aug-21 10:46:34

Before Covid I ran a book group at the library, and the librarians said that as long as people were reading, even if it was Mills & Boon for example, it was better than not reading at all.

MoorlandMooner Sun 08-Aug-21 10:19:34

These are the books the nation gives away to charity. We keep the good ones ourselves to read again and again smile

aggie Sun 08-Aug-21 10:17:14

One persons trash is another’s treasure , very fond of detective books myself ,
On my Kindle are books I want to re read , once read detective series go in the charity shop !

hollysteers Sun 08-Aug-21 10:14:16

As an avid reader and visitor to charity shops, it amazes me how I can go from shop to shop and see scores of trashy books, chick lit, biographies of ‘celebrities’ and rows of detective stories by the same author.
Is this the standard for our nation? (If they read at all) or do the volunteers decide what’s popular?
It can’t all be on ebooks as so many people like a material book.