I've finally gotten all the fiction put away, and have got the next three groupings staged and ready to unpack. First is my collection of writers' journals and letters, in which I've always had a slightly prurient interest; then my literary criticism; and then poetry. That will bring me to about the two-thirds mark, and then I'll pause to just enjoy them for a while.
My latest conundrum came yesterday as I struggled over what to do with my series of New York Review titles. It's one of several wonderful series I keep, including others from Hesperus, Penguin and Canongate. If I were truly anal retentive, I suppose I would place each book where it belongs alphabetically. Zweig's Beware of Pity would go with the rest of my Zweig. But I confess a fondness for the look of those beautifully designed books all lined up so neatly on my shelves, and so I made one decision based on aesthetics alone and kept them together. I also have a near photographic memory for the books I own, so I'm confident, for example, that I won't forget that my copy of Simenon's Tropic Moon will be found amid its NYRB brethren.
I anticipate the opprobrium of the purists. Lord knows, I feel it myself ...
I am DEFINITELY one who keeps the imprints together, then alpha by author within the imprint (NYRBC, HarperPerennial, Penguin Classics, B&N Classics, etc.)
They just look prettier on the shelf that way.
Posted by: MelissaW | September 07, 2011 at 04:00 PM
As a bookstore owner I also like to shelve these wonderful collections together by publisher in our store. The Penguin Classics, Modern Library, but especially the NYRB and Europa Editions have a special place on our shelves.
Posted by: Joni | September 16, 2011 at 08:19 PM
I like the nyrb classic's design and finish. I personally prefer to read premium-feel paperback, even over hardcover, and these definitely fall into that category, with thick, matte covers and quality moleskine-like paper. They're not exactly luxe, but for reading, they're just right: not too shabby, not too precious. I hesitate to buy Penguin Classics, for example, if I can help it (of course, content always trumps design or manufacture, in the end) because the paper is stinky and thin in the wrong way and it just feels terrible to hold...
Posted by: Em Dash | February 13, 2012 at 02:28 AM