Bookalcoholics!!!!

Hoodoo

Full Member
Nov 17, 2003
5,302
13
Michigan, USA
Schwert said:
Is obsessive knife purchasing covered?

I don't believe there is such a thing. I think most people just lag behind. :rolmao:

Credit for Dangerous River has to go to Jimbo. That's where I first learned of it.

Cache Lake is certainly in my top three. The Tao Te Ching is right up there with it. For me personally, perhaps the most influential book I ever read was Animal Physiology by Knut Schmidt-Nielsen. :lol: It made the difference between me being a microbiologist and a physiological ecologist. Personally, I think everyone should read it, but then, that's just me. :rolmao:
 

Schwert

Settler
Apr 30, 2004
796
1
Seattle WA USA
My Comparative Animal Physiology text (unknown Author) is about the only non-Chemistry text I kept after grad school. I still have it somewhere, I wonder if it was by Knut Schmidt-Nielsen.
 

Andy

Native
Dec 31, 2003
1,867
11
38
sheffield
www.freewebs.com
books and knives can still work out cheeper thena night out drinking
books that spring to mind
*C++ How to program
*C++ in the lab
*An Introduction to System Analysis Techniques
*skills for success

*sharpes havoc
*sharpes escape
*sharpes enemy
*sharpe sword (a few more sharpe books)
*stone henge
*rebel
*battleflag (lot of bernard cornwall isn't there)
*high hikers guide to the galaxy (and others though non of them are really mine)
*dirk gently books
*zero option
*fireball
*some other andy Mcnab book

back home I have an animal biology book
*greys anatomy (my dads)
*I had the narnia books
 

tomtom

Full Member
Dec 9, 2003
4,283
5
38
Sunny South Devon
My name is TOM and i am a bookaholic! and proud.. i think its one of the better --aholics to be!

i think it is close to the stage of muggin.. beaking in to cars and selling my mothers jewlery to feed my habit!
 

JakeR

Bushcrafter (boy, I've got a lot to say!)
Jan 18, 2004
2,288
4
37
Cardiff
Schwert, he writes about health behaviour change. So if you feel your knives are damaging your health, get reading!

:lol:
 

jakunen

Native
Oh god! Don't get me started on this one! Please!!!
I can't pass by bookstores....

600+ cookery books.
30 gardening books.
10 boxes of sci-fi/sci-fan/thrillers in the loft.
Loads of travel books/phrase books.
A collection of herbals.
Calligraphy books.
Reference books for my plantlore...

Hi my name is Martin and I'm an incurable bookworm. Please help me! (Send any donations to...)
 

Womble

Native
Sep 22, 2003
1,095
2
58
Aldershot, Hampshire, UK
History books,
Books on folklore and mythology,
Books of maps,
Books on language,
Reference books,
Fiction,
Humour
Graphic novels*

Heaven help me, this is worse than confessing about kit!


*ok, comics...
 

jamesdevine

Settler
Dec 22, 2003
823
0
49
Skerries, Co. Dublin
The day before I got wed I moved my stuff from my perants to our first home. My cloths were in my 50ltr pack, other bits and bobs in a medium sport bag and books came in three large Waven Pipe AJ boxes(these are the junctions in outdoor plumbing outside your house) they are about 4ft square.
:wink:

I have since reduced this to six banana boxes and am currently on cold turkey enforced by my wife. :cry:

James
 

Tantalus

Full Member
May 10, 2004
1,065
149
60
Galashiels
maybe it is just the way my mind works, but i rarely read a book a second time

in fact i can only think of one book i have read twice and that was lord of the rings

i have a few reference type books and of course the internet

mainly if i really enjoy a book i will give it to someone who i think would enjoy it too

a lot of them end up in second hand stores because i get tired of them taking up space and know i wont read them again

Tant
 

JFW

Settler
Mar 11, 2004
508
23
55
Clackmannanshire
I must admit to being a bookaholic,
Reference books on Standing Stones, astronomy, bushcraft, ancient civilisations, Scottish history, world religions, castles, nature and folklore are my biggest downfall.

I also have all of R.M Pattersons books, thanks to Schwert's reviews on OMF.
Most of Carlos Castenedas early books and a whole host of others.
Fortunately my wife is a bookaholic as well.

I don't need help, just a bigger house to establish my library in.

Cheers

JFW
 

Justin Time

Native
Aug 19, 2003
1,064
2
South Wales
No apologies on this one.... I'm a bibliophile and proud...
Sci-Fi +++++
Bushcraft+++
Natural History +++
Scottish History
Politics (Left, of course)
Cookery books +++
Terry Pratchett ( and some Mary Gentle after recomendations here)
Gardening
Loads of work related stuff (even got one by Jake's Dad!)
Modern novels
Scottish Poetry
Languages (teach yourself stuff...)
Military History

Can't walk past a book shop, even when I'm on hols abroad!
 

Moonraker

Need to contact Admin...
Aug 20, 2004
1,190
18
62
Dorset & France
The more time goes by, the more I come to realise I brought my books as a way to 'gain' knowledge. Why? Because truthfully many I never read. Maybe it is because I am a sucker for good graphics on the sleeve or just have to have this book or that on a particular subject. I have enough recipes to last many life times :) ( not sure I get close to 600+ though :shock: ) but again I rarely actually try them. Out of say, 150 cookbooks costing lets say, average of £20 a pop that's £3,000 just on cook books :yikes: That is an aweful lot of decent restaurant meals there :roll:

I actually use around 10 of them all the time. And cook books are just an example.

I realise that by buying books I was literally 'buying knowledge'; if I have a book on the shelf then I 'own' or am 'imbibed' in some mystical way by that books/ authors knowledge. I a sure it is part of the hunter - gatherer instinct and those dusty book shelves hold the 'trophies', the tokens of a good foray into today's urban jungle.

In fact I also see that I do not actually buy books for reading at the time which was it's purpose, but I tend to come back to the book some years later when 'it' is ready.

I am seriously considering selling the lot except for the 5% I read all the time, freeing up 20% of the usable floorplan of the house and using the money to buy a small patch of woodland. At least that way I can recycle some of the forests used in their production :)

What REALLY p**ses me off though above all else is when I visit the Amazon web site and it states quite blithly on my welcome page:

A S Lisney, make £173.66. Sell your past purchases at Amazon.co.uk today
When they bl**dy well know I spent £10,000 to buy them from Amazon in the first place :roll: :)
 

maddave

Full Member
Jan 2, 2004
4,177
39
Manchester UK
Adi007 said:
I don't have a problem at all. Really, I don't ...

Kath...... Wanna jump in on this one ?? :lol:

I love books, I have 4 bookcases with allsorts from Native American Shamanism through to Zen and the art of motorcycle maintenance Not forgetting that all time bestseller "Best wines for under a fiver" by Rob Parker :super:
 

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