BOOKS ABOUT BOOKS – 1973-2025

Check out my updated header, where I’ve changed the photo to showcase my current collection of BoBs (Books of Books).

Please excuse a bit of self-indulgence as I share my journey of journaling books.

In May 1973, when we moved to Salem, Oregon, I started keeping track of the books I read, using an old steno pad. I quickly graduated to composition notebooks, finally settling on green stone paper notebooks in January 2020, which, while not particularly attractive, house wonderfully smooth writing paper. (I have a thing for smooth writing paper and pens, but that’s a post for another day — bet you can’t wait, eh?). It’s a task I have never regretted, and as soon as I close the cover of a book (or turn off my Kindle), I immediately add the title to the notebook, along with a Goodreads entry. I estimate that I have over 5,000 books noted in this collection of BoBs. It’s great fun to look back over what I’ve read and how my reading tastes have evolved, although upon reflection, they haven’t changed too much (looking at you, gothic novels), except by adding some new genres and topics.

It’s also amusing to see how much my handwriting has changed. Below is a photo of my first page in August 1973, and on the right is my current page. I am always surprised by how much I can remember just by seeing the book title, along with an occasional note about where I was while reading it (I still remember reading Flowers in the Attic on a beach in Lake Tahoe).

If you don’t keep track of your reading, start doing so; you will never regret it, and it’s a valuable tool for refreshing your memory on what you enjoyed over the years.

And taking a page from readers’ advisor extraordinaire, Joyce Saricks, I put them in the fireproof safe when we travel. One can’t be too careful with critical historical records.

1 thought on “BOOKS ABOUT BOOKS – 1973-2025

  1. Love the header photo, Robin, and the history of your Bobs. I started listing books when I turned 50. I agree that no regrets are involved. In fact satisfying memories reside within. In the 12 years I was companion and then caregiver to my mother I read aloud to her and since I coded our read-alouds with a star I could count that I read 205 books with her. Afternoon tea and reading together was our ritual in those years. Miss Read books hit the sweet spot for both of us–re-read many of those. West with the Giraffes by Lynda Rutledge was the last and I had to finish it without her. Thank you for providing this chance to reminisce. Very glad you are blogging again…

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