
I had a banner day at my library branch’s recent book sale. After I went from shelf to shelf snatching up every British Library Crime Classic I could find (there were three!) I spotted a pretty orange Penguin edition of Umberto Eco’s The Island of the Day Before. Snagged that too, of course. And as I stood in the maelstrom of library patrons elbowing each other aside to get to the $2 hardcover new releases, I thought to myself – I don’t have this one, right?
I knew I had The Name of the Rose, Foucault’s Pendulum, Baudolino and The Prague Cematery. But I was pretty sure I didn’t have this one. Added it to the pile.
After lugging my haul home – all that for $12.00! – I started shelving and… whoops. There it was, right with the rest of the Ecos. The Island of the Day Before. And I think that would be the first time I’ve ever forgotten that I owned a specific book and bought a duplicate copy – unintentionally, at least. It goes without saying that everyone needs at least three copies of Pride and Prejudice and that the correct number of editions of Anne of Green Gables for a home library is “one more” – but that’s different.
Oh, well. An extra $2 for the library is still money well spent.
Have you ever done this? Please tell me I’m not alone.
I have absolutely done this. Sometimes I have put things in and out of an online cart so often I get confused about whether I own them when I see them in an actual bookstore. What a good haul!
Love that I have company! I was pretty pleased with this haul. Especially the BL Crime Classics! 😀