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Give Your Old Books A New Lease on Life

This is not so much a blog entry as it is a plea on behalf of people in desperate need of escape. As a book critic for several publications I receive, on average, eight-to-twelve books every month. It goes without exaggeration that books have a tendency to pile up. Stacks in every nook and corner of our small home quickly escalate from evidence of a moderate reader to hoarder status. A couple of decades ago when I first started reviewing books I simply gave them to friends or - forgive me - tossed the not-so-great ones into the recycling bin. Occasionally an editor would send me the first edition of a book that I had reviewed pre-publication, and I started donating these to my local library. I still do this, but for some reason I get sent fewer follow up first editions these days.

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What a wonderful idea! I have a big box of ARCs & they don't take them
at the library &, of course, are "not for resale". The cancer center sounds ideal.
Thanks!
# Posted By Thérèse | 5/30/14 12:00 AM
The Veterans Administration hospitals and senior citizen homes are also great repositories for books.
# Posted By beverly mindlin | 6/19/14 2:06 PM
We often take our extras to the local jail and/or corrections facilities.
# Posted By S Carter | 11/12/14 11:05 AM
I am in the process of weeding my collection--and boy does it hurt. Many of my books go to our local Friends of the Library. I will also contact our local VA hospital and homes for the elderly. Most of them have in-house collections for those in the nursing wing and in assisted living.
# Posted By Sandra H | 1/15/15 12:58 PM
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The Familiar