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Getting Married Without Ruining Your Bookshelves

Organize Bookshelf

  First Posted: 01/30/2012 11:01 am Updated: 01/30/2012 11:01 am

By Rebecca Joines Schinsky for BookRiot:

It wasn’t when we moved in together, or when we got engaged, or even when we merged bank accounts (because we’re crazy like that) and bought a house that I knew my husband was in it for the long haul. All of those choices were significant, sure, but the real clincher–the moment I knew we had committed to the whole “what’s mine is yours” thing for real–was when we decided to merge our bookshelves. The actual process of merging said bookshelves? That was the first test of our soon-to-be marriage.

While I would never consider partnering for life with a non-reader (I dated one once. Reader, he was boring!), I think it’s important to note that hitching your wagon to someone who values books as much as you do is not without its landmines, the Great Joining of the Bookshelves being the first and most perilous. We have to start talking about these things if we want them to get better! So, if you’re not living with a partner yet, or you and your partner haven’t taken the bookshelf-sharing plunge, a few words of advice:

Ditch your old organizational strategies and create a new one together.

This is akin to giving up your old apartments and moving into a fresh, new place where neither of you feels territorial or afraid of stepping on the other’s toes. Unless by a miracle of the universe you’ve met someone who organizes books exactly the same way you do, trust me–you’ll be happier arguing about a new system together than about whose previous system was superior.

Show ‘em what you’re working with.

Spread all the books out on the floor. Move them around. Make piles that comply with your newly-minted system. Introduce your books to each other. Talk about which ones go together and why. Make eyes at one another over the piles. Congratulate yourselves on how well you’re doing with this relationship milestone.

Leave your Judgy McJudgerton pants in the closet.

Better yet, leave ALL your pants in the closet. How could organizing bookshelves pantless NOT be a good thing for your relationship? Apply this rule to all potentially unpleasant household tasks.

Compromise and defer.

If you haven’t already been on the receiving end of myriad well-meaning speeches about the importance of compromise, allow me to be the first. You might not think THIS book belongs in THAT pile, but if it’s your partner’s book, then she’s the in-house expert on it, and she gets to make the final call. Besides, you’ll get her back later when you put That Book By The Politician She Hates and Is Embarrassed You Like in a prominent spot on the “favorites” shelf people first see when they walk into the room. Oh no, I’m not speaking from experience here. Not at all.

Silently remind yourself that you have better taste.

Okay, it’s impossible to resist all judgment, so the operative word here is “silently.” Do not, under any circumstances, suggest out loud that one of your partner’s books isn’t good enough to hang out next to one of your beloved tomes. I repeat: don’t go there. You know you have better taste, and you’ll have to resign yourself to a lifetime of smug–and unspoken–satisfaction about it. Better start now. Some things actually are better kept inside.

Exit strategy? Who needs an exit strategy?!

Like committing to a relationship, merging your bookshelves is an exercise in hope. If you go into the activity thinking about how you’ll separate your books someday in the future, you’re doing it wrong. If you really must have the bookish version of a prenup, write your name in your books so you’ll know whose is whose. Tell yourself you’re only doing this so you don’t accidentally make notes in your partner’s copy.

Know when to fold ‘em.

Don’t beat yourself up if the bookshelf merging gets hairy. This is one time when it’s okay to throw in the towel. Better to decide early on that you’re a “we share everything BUT books” couple than to learn it the hard way years later, right? Of course, those of us who have managed the merge will sit in silent, smug judgment of you, but you’ll be happier, so who cares? Sit back, enjoy the beauty of freshly organized shelves, and remember that even if your books aren’t snuggling, you can.

Now tell me: do your share bookshelves with your partner? Would you? What guidelines did I miss?

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
inkongirl
08:01 PM on 02/01/2012
My husband managed a bookstore for years. We have shelves in almost every room in the house, including the garage. And he has his own bookcase for his philosophy books.
12:28 PM on 02/01/2012
With my wife and I both being published authors, business owners and avid readers, we found a very easy solution to this problem. We made one of our rooms into an office and placed two book shelves next to eachother. We each took a book shelf and when we were finished, it looked like one big shelf. Problem solved. Not that it was a problem. www.alexaheshacatalano.authorsxpress.com
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
flyinghigh0905
09:39 AM on 02/01/2012
Really? Ok look... Ladies and Guys, if you are lucky enough to find a mate who actually READS, even if it something you personally do not like or whatever, get over it!!! you should be happy that you can at least sit and read together. My boyfriend does not read. Do I wish he read more? Yes. Was I hoping to merge bookshelves with someone someday? Yes. It does not matter what they read... just that they read.

With an exception given to Twilight. Throw that crap away ;-)
12:07 AM on 01/31/2012
Oh, come on! If you've ever lived with a person who's had an extensive library of Star Trek novels and every Dune book ever published (who knew there were SO many!), you would understand.
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04:19 PM on 01/30/2012
Is this really a problem for some people?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
signgrrl
typeface geek
05:16 PM on 01/30/2012
i hadn't been aware of it, but apparently i missed the mass emailing.
01:19 PM on 01/30/2012
Oh dear Lord.....

Someone's giving advice about how to share a bookshelf....

My day is complete.
01:55 PM on 01/30/2012
I was personally terrified of going to bed tonight without being able to find something like this.
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12:56 PM on 01/30/2012
Just use the Library of Congress or Decimal systems. Its way easier.