1. 14 September 2007

    Free Books

    Walking through the student center, I saw that the annual library book sale. I’d meant to stop by sometime, but I didn’t have my wallet. I bought a few books at the sale last year (25¢ per) and it was a good deal.

    Apparently this year for the last hour of the two-day sale, none of books cost anything.

    I discovered this after walking by on my way home, deciding that I had time to spare, and turning around to go back. When I was about 30 feet away from the door, a guy said something loudly about free books and started trotting there.

    Here’s a list of the books I bought, in order of their physical size.

    • Minnesota Sings, Cooperative Song Service. An old songbook with traditional songs and hymns. This is printed by 4H, I grabbed it because it has a lot of songs that are in the book at Danebod (I can’t remember what it’s called), which means it’s probably got some good other stuff.
    • How to breathe right, Edward Lankow. ©1918. In 5/6th grade class our teacher would spend time teaching us to breathe deeply, to relax. I adapted the breathing style, breathing slow and deep ever since without really thinking about it. What better skill to master than the one you use nonstop, that keeps you alive?
    • The philosophy of existence, Gabriel Marcel. ©1954. Had me at the cover: simple white capitals set into bright red. A french contemporary of Sartre, coming at the same general subject (existentialism) from somewhere else (according to the back cover, red printed on white).
    • Evolution and religion, Problems in american civilization (Readings selected by the department of american studies, Amherst College). ©1957. The cover again, but a before-its-time look into the science v. religion arena.
    • The uses of the past, Herbert Muller. ©1952. History, an overlook of the major ancient civilizations.
    • The combined spanish method, Albert de Tornos. ©1867, reprinted 1943. I’ve wanted to learn spanish lately. We’ll see.
    • Language for men of affairs, Vol 2, Business Writing, James Melvin Lee. ©1920. This one had a nice worn hardcover that caught my eye. And c’mon, Language for men of affairs? I was sold.
    • A logical approach to discrete math, David Gries, Fred B. Schneider. I took 1302 From Elena with a huge, new agey textbook that had zen-like stacked rocks on the cover. My friend took it last year from Nic with a littler gray book with a theorem1 on the cover, and their class looked shitloads harder (also more interesting) than mine was. This is that book, I figured it was worth picking up.
    • Victorian ceramic tiles, Julian Barnard. ©1972. Hopefully worth it for the pictures. Hardcover, 175 pages, let’s hope I like ceramic tiles that much.

    Coming to the checkout for a bag to carry all this stuff in the ladies running the place said that they wanted to give kids a chance to build their bookshelves. They looked at the books I had and told me to go back and get more. I said I didn’t want to go overboard, and these were what caught my eye.

    1 Here’s the cover, merci à amazon

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  2. Bye Bye Barclay | Glacier