Hello! I appear to be taking my time off quite seriously.
One of the useful things I’ve been doing is organising my books. After my stroke, when I could no longer carry on as an academic, I had to get rid of the majority of the books that I owned. This was one of the most difficult things I had to do in those very difficult months: we were living in a small flat in Edinburgh at the time, and there was no room and no alternative. But then, I moved on with my recovery and my life: things got better and I began to read and think and work again. I read an awful lot, and, me being me, I of course then began to acquire more books: instead of books about 18th century history, I bought books about knitting and textiles, books about art, design and colour, books about the brain, resourceful disabled bodies, and creative practice; books about the different parts of Scotland in which I was enjoying spending time. I read an awful lot more: with each new project, the books expanded into every single room of our Carbeth house. We made more shelf space, acquired more shelves, but as time and me and my ABE books habit went on, the books ended up as double – and in some cases triple and quadruple – stacked in different places around the house. My desk was positioned in the middle of several teetering piles, and there was no form of organisation to speak of. Any “system”, such as it was, relied on the moment of first encounter, and finding an individual book became an activity akin to archeology. That is: to locate a book, I’d have to remember exactly what I was working on and thinking about during the days and weeks of its first reading, and then dig back – way back – through the shelves and strata of deep time.

Here in the mill, we and my books finally have a bit more space. I’ve been able to dedicate one room as my library, or labyrinth, and thanks to a strategic intervention by my friend Rob and the IKEA kallax shelving system, have now devised a very nifty layout. There are corridors and recesses, in which my books can face each other, and the depth of the shelves maximises double stacking, access, and visibility. Win win!

There are two windows in the labyrinth, and each book corridor is also illuminated by a lamp . . .

. . . allowing light to filter through between each shelf (so that I can – you know – actually see the books I need to find) . . .

. . .and for particularly big or tall tomes (hello books about knitting, art, and colour), there are dedicated single-stacked spaces in shelving units positioned against the walls.

I love this space so much. For the first time in almost fifteen years, I actually know where everything is and – what’s more – I can actually find it.
And so, I have spent several happy days arranging my books. There are 200 individual kallax recesses in the library: I’ve numbered each, and produced a sort of map.

Each numbered square represents a kallax recess, and each different colour or pattern on the squares represents a different book genre or category. These categories are fairly broad – “Knitting” “Scotland”, “Poetry” “Writing in translation” – and, of course, the choice of which category a particular book belongs in is fairly idiosyncratic, since only I am making that decision. In fact, this whole process has made me think a lot about the arbitrariness of taxonomies, cartographies, and systems of classification and organisation. I’m generally not much of a fan of the latter, but I confess I am rather fond of the colourful map of my library which, now it’s completed, quite unintentionally reminds me a little of the work of Nigel Peake.

This process has also made me think about my obsession with arranging pebbles . . .

. . . but most of all, I have been thinking about Borges’s hilarious On the Analytical language of John Wilkins

yours, happy in my arbitrary emporium of knowledge.
Kate x
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May we all come and spend time with your books?
Laura W.
I would like to be a ‘tall tome’ when I grow up:) seriously though I really enjoyed this post
👌
What a beautiful library. I completely understand ending up getting more books :)
What a fabulous source of information you are!! I am searching for information on Nigel Peake. How to apply his ideas for landscapes, especially rural Canada, to embroidery? I’m so glad to hear you are happy in your new home and with your books.
Such a beautiful pebble collection! I love how different the colors and patterns are. Do you know if Scotland is particularly varied geologically? Or are you simply an excellent curator? :)
I’m a retired public librarian and loved how you came up with a system that works for you. Just be careful that you don’t accidentally push books through to the other sides, with the open backs!
Awesome what an amazing space to lose yourself in
Please note change of email address: Helenfeltlikeit25@gmail.com I don’t want to miss any wonderful stories!!! Old address was helen.feltlikeit@xtra.co.nz Cheers and thanks Helen Lawson Nww Zealand
I have hundreds of books, and now that my partner and I are retired and the kids have flown the nest, she is talking about moving to a much smaller house. I am ok with this but the thought of getting rid of most of my books is horrifying! I have too many to take with us, and I never know when I want to read one again! I took a few boxes to a charity shop a few years ago to stop her nagging and the ones that I want to read again I have unfortunately got rid it…I should have kept them and put up with the nagging.
Beautiful library!
And I thought I was a bookaholic! Gotta, admit I’m a bit jealous.
Interesting how you organised your books. We had the same problem buying books we already had in our library. We then used a library system on our smartphone. The problem is that the free library systems can only take about 10.000 books. Unfortunately, we have to use two systems to avoid paying quite a lot for using these programmes.
Kb is spending half of his time keeping our library in order. Like you, we ordered our books concerning topics and within the topics alphabetically. But what to do when running out of space? Then we have to re-order. From every holiday we bring back piles of books and that means work. We see our library like children, you have to care for it constantly.
Here you can see one of our smaller library rooms
https://fabfourblog.com/2024/06/01/dusting-the-shelves/
Wishing you lots of fun with your books
The Fab Four of Cley
:-) :-) :-) :-)
The room, photos and maps are beautiful and as a knitter, owner of endless books on fashion, textiles and knitting as well as being a librarian in an academic art library I appreciate the work that has gone in this.
I’m planning on sharing the post with my colleagues.
Loved your comments on your library (as I have loved all your previous comments on whatever it was you commented on).
I love reading your writings.
Since I love books as well, I thought I would comment: well done you! Enjoy your new space.
❤️
I would love to spend time in your library such a magical space. I am planning a wall of books in my sitting room possibly with a ladder someday.
A ladder! Yes!
So happy to get news from you , Merci , vous nous avez manquée !
How wonderful to get to really organize your books and have a proper library!
You have my dream library, Kate! I still have several stacks of books in my apartment, despite having several bookcases. I do try to thin things out a bit here and there, but there are sooooo many books (many of them available used), and my reading hours just don’t keep up with them. Luckily too, we have a very good library nearby, and I do a fair job of keeping them busy too.
I love your pebbles! I love and collect pebbles with lines through them. Your are gorgeous and your arrangements are perfect! Thanks for sharing. A kindred pebble spirit.
There’s something therapeutic about seeing books arranged so neatly according to our requirement. This I’d the first time I’ve read about a kallax recess. Lovely work.
Oooh do I ever love your new library. I’ve only seen those Ikea shelves used with baskets/bins filled with wool of every variety.
This reminds me of my high school library where I would spend many a lunch hour perusing the aisles to see what books I would sign out next. Seeing through the shelves and seeing friends in the next aisle or a handsome young chap you or your girlfriend might be sweet on. It was my favourite place to be. I can just imagine your happy rediscovery of your much loved books. Your space is really lovely!
delighted to get an update from you, particularly as I love nosing through other people’s libraries. Pre-pandemic, I had windowed mine down to about 200 beloved or impossible-to-replace volumes. I’ll read anything, so I just checked 4-5 books a month out of the public library as they caught my fancy, returned them when read, and felt smug about my (relative) minimalism. During the pandemic, though, SEVEN Little Free Libraries popped up nearby (these are wooden boxes that operate on a take-a-book-leave-a-book kind of system). Now every time I leave the house, I seem to come home with a new used book that I just cannot leave behind…. We should all have such problems!
those books obviously want to come home with you!
Thank you Kate and I’m so happy for you that you have reached this milestone (not millstone) in your life. Your home looks just wonderful and you have an incredible collection of books.
I’m working my way through the Cowal Cowl Kit that I purchased a while ago from you and I’m thrilled with the yarn, the pattern, and the feel of the cowl which will be a Christmas gift. I did have a problem with gauge vs. actual knitting and ultimately used a US 7 and US 8 to get the proper size. IAnd it took a while to figure out the pattern but in the end it was very “potato-chippy” to knit (in the words of Corinne Tomlinson or The Woolly Thistle). I’ll send a picture of the finished cowl. So happy with the results.
Wishing you and Tom and the dog(s) a very joyful holiday season. I appreciate so much your emails which provide a travelogue of sorts to places that I most likely will never be able to visit in person. Sue Sharpe, Mashpee, Cape Cod, MA, USA
I have a mug with pictures of bookshelves which says “I have no shelf control” but really I have shelf envy! I recently had to give away over a thousand dictionaries. (They were part of my work.) Giving away any book is like parting with a little of myself. Keep those books!
I just love this!
Reading this post was a very bright spot in my day. Thanks Kate, for taking the time to take us on a tour of your beautiful book space!
Of course you numbered each book shelf cubic
That was a fantastic description of a book lover’s recent journey. Loved every happy moment of it and in particular the superb plan of your new space. It certainly is your very own, and very personal, library.
Thank you for sharing! This is really inspiring!
So envious of your shelving system. Love from burried in books.
How exciting to have an actual Library room in your house! I love it! And I’m also a big fan of IKEA for organizing things.
I also love to collect odd pebbles/stones I found on the shore, whether it be a lake or ocean, etc. And group them in unexpected places.
So glad you are enjoying your time off!
Good for you dearie. I love to be organized!
This makes my librarian heart so happy. I don’t know if you’re a fan of the Richard Osman/Marina Hind podcast “The Rest is Entertainment” but the recently had 2 segments on home library arrangement. You might enjoy them.
Ooh! Thank you – I’ll give that a listen
Laughed so hard re your book ‘problem’…..I had 640 cookbooks and gave tons away to a rummage sale and last night I was looking for one of them……. You solution and emporium is fabulous. The envy of all of us……… Your pebble collection is lovely, could go under glass.
your bookshelves remind me of my own shelves at home. They are overstuffed and double stacked – to my husband’s dismay. I will have to thin them out to be able to find them. Certain craft books will go as I know I wont use them. I do love books and hate to get rid of them. The ones that get recycled are fiction – if I know I’m not going to re-read them and some knitting books of patterns that I am not going to make.
Loved the essay by Borges – led me to find another (rather different) humorous Borge at the piano. Thank you for a detour that made me smile. (I may also have to pinch your book storage idea).
How nice to have this interesting post, Kate. It would be great to be able to have a separate room just for books. I love the pebbles, too. Glad you’re back.
As always, your messages are inspirational, make me smile, make me think and marvel at your creativity
Lovely to be hearing from you again Kate. Love your library and the way it’s been organised.
Waving from Kintyre, Pauline x
What an interesting and humorous article on arbitrariness and language. Thank you for presenting it along with your discussion on organizing books. The photos of the rocks show their beauty. Somehow all of these items tie together. Is life amazing?!!
This is so impressive Kate. I have been very good this year about reading my books and passing them on and I have only brought about six back in to the house.
I do have bookshelves and they were organised by shelf categories…..gardening, cooking, knitting & crochet, sewing of all types, crafting etc etc. But I am a clutterbug and find myself pushing articles from magazines on top and between the books. The end result is messy once more.
But it is refreshing to look at your space and read about how it is defined and works for you. ❣️
As a previously academic, and now public librarian I highly approve of this post! Enjoy your knowledge emporium 😀
Oh my, I am green with envy of that book Utopia, I too have stones everywhere, including all the “lucky” stones my children and grandchild would bring to me.
My “stacks” fill the garage, and the walls of the house are lined with Ikea Ivar shelving, and there are STILL stacks of books everywhere. . . . I try to cycle those I don’t need out of the house, but somehow the incoming always > outgoing.
SO with you on the incoming > outgoing ratio, Deb!
Oh how I envy you – and congratulations on your organisation – here we always joked how well insulated we were – books and wool…..it’s true…… now we are one – more books, more wool……and I love archeology and the forgotten surprises that come from a dig …….. may be I should “take a leaf from your book”! – – – If
I
Trust there is a comfy chair readily available too – looks like a great space!
I really love this post! Thank you!
Wow! This must have taken you absolutely ages. I have a lot of books too and I have no idea about half of them. So much so that I quite often buy a book that I already own. I suppose that is justification that I really wanted it but it does make me feel a bit stupid!
I love, love, love this Kate! I have so many books, lying stacked on the floor in piles. I’ve been itching to get them on shelves and organized, but I haven’t the space. It is a real pain to dig out a book at the bottom of a pile. I wonder how your IKEA shelves are stabilized since they aren’t against a wall?
The stones and pebbles! I also have piles of rocks around my house. What do you do with your stones to keep them “organized”?
Much love,
Laura S.
I’ve written mine down in a spreadsheet so I don’t do that anymore.😊
My first thought on seeing the library map was that it resembled a complicated colour work pattern. 😂. Your next assignment!?
Eek! I love this! Both the library itself and the map!
I tried so hard when we moved to our new flat to actually have better organization (the Tolkien shelf, the Folio Society shelf — alphabetized for the first time ever! — and so on) but of course events (and more library sales) have taken over, and the shelves are overflowing again.
We have Kallax shelves too and it never occurred to me to put them in the open so that the double stacking could actually work in favour of visibility, what a great idea!