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Hello Neil, I have a question that I never have gotten a satisfactory answer to from anyone that is book sphere related.
In a lot of older books, and some newer ones, one of the first pages will have a little warning that says "If you purchased this book without a front cover it may be stolen. Please contact (phone number, email, or mailing address depending on age of the book) if you believe this may be the case."
Most people I asked did not know why but one librarian told me it was for special editions of books that had been stolen or something like that, which was still weird to me because if it is printed on every book how will you know? and also a lot of books lose their cover page when they are loved because it is the part that is opened the most, even more than any of the pages, so it has always seemed like a very good way to get a lot of false positives and not find very many stolen books.
do you know why this was and in some books still is done?
You'll find it in paperback books, not hardbacks. It's because it isn't financially viable for a publisher to have a bookshop post back unsold copies of books, so a publisher would require a bookshop to tear the covers off unsold paperbacks and post back the covers for credit. The publisher trusted that the bookshop would throw away or otherwise dispose of the coverless books, and put the bit in the front of the book to warn people not to buy a book without a cover, and to let bookshops know that selling the coverless books (they had already been given credit for) cheaply was risky.
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Hey guys! New blog to the community. So I’ve gone through my library and made lists of all the books that I have yet to read - now what?
We’re a week into the new year and I would really like to start reading something but I have no idea how to choose. The last book I read was one that my dad gave me and I read it right away. The books I read last year were either due to watching a movie adaptation or something I randomly picked up off the shelf.
Maybe I’ll enter everything into a generator and let that pick.
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Books not on my shelf that I would like to read
Fiction
Girl Made of Stars by Ashley Herring Blake
Into the Drowning Deep by Mira Grant
Leah on the Offbeat by Becky Albertalli
The Class novels by various authors
The Conference of the Birds by Ransom Riggs
The Desolations of Devils Acre by Ransom Riggs (releasing February 2021)
The Scandalous Sisterhood of Prickwillow Place by Julie Berry
The Torchwood novels by various authors
The Upside Down of Unrequited by Becky Albertalli
Nonfiction
Karamo by Karamo Brown
Love Yourself, Love Your Life by Antoni Porowski
Naturally Tan by Tan France
Over the Top by Jonathan van Ness
Postcards from the Edge by Carrie Fisher
Shockaholic by Carrie Fisher
The Best Awful by Carrie Fisher
The Princess Diarist by Carrie Fisher
Wishful Drinking by Carrie Fisher
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Books on my shelf I have yet to read: Nonfiction
A Gift of Music by Betty Carlson and Jane S Smith
Aspects of Wagner by Bryan Magee
Beethoven by William Kinderman
Chanting by Robert Gass
Classic and Romantic Music by Friedrich Blume
Folk and Traditional Music of the Western Continents by Bruno Nettl
Gregorian Chant by Will Apel
History of Music by John Russell
If It Ain’t Baroque by David W. Barber
Leonard Bernstein by Humphrey Burton
Ludwig van Beethoven ed. by Joseph Schmidt-Görg and Hans Schmidt
Music A Living Language by Tom Manoff
Music, The Brain, and Ecstasy by Robert Jourdain
Musics of Many Cultures by Elizabeth May
Night Music by Theodore Adorno
Talking of Music by Neville Cardus
The Age of Mozart and Beethoven by Giorgio Pestelli
The Inextinguishable Symphony by Martin Goldsmith
The Music Lover’s Handbook ed. by Elie Sigmeister
The Music Within You by Shelley Katsh and Carol Merle-Fishman
To The Stars by George Takei
What Makes Music Work by Allan B. Novick, Paul Harmon, and Philip C. Seyer
What to Listen for In Music by Aaron Copand
Who’s Afraid of Classical Music by Michael Walsh
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Books on my shelf that I have yet to read: Fiction
20, 000 Leagues Under the Sea by Jules Verne
Artifact by Gregory Benford
Death Comes to Pemberly by P. D. James
Goldfinger, For Your Eyes Only, and You Only Live Twice by Ian Fleming
Hard Times by Charles Dickens
Ivanhoe by Walter Scott
Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell by Susanna Clarke
Jurassic Park by Michael Crichton
Little Dorrit by Charles Dickens
Magic for Marigold by L. M. Montgomery
Moby Dick by Hermann Melville
Practical Magic by Alice Hoffmann
Remember Me? by Sophie Kinsella
Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe
The Book Thief by Markus Zusak
The Children of Hurin by J. R. R. Tolkein
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button by F. Scott Fitzgerald
The Devil in Vienna by Doris Orgell
The Flute Player by D. M. Thomas
The Great Train Robbery by Michael Crichton
The Hunchback of Notre Dame by Victor Hugo
The Pickwick Papers by Charles Dickens
The Scarlet Pimpernel by Baroness Emmuska Orczy
The Swiss Family Robinson by Johann David Wyss
The Terminal Man by Michael Crichton
Unfinished Tales by J. R. R. Tolkein
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