Easy and Safe Bookshelves for Kids

We love books, and so do our kids. However, I was tired of trying to keep them on regular bookshelves. The kids had trouble replacing them, so they would pile them up. I also don’t like the idea of kids climbing or pulling on bookcases. I wanted an easy, inexpensive solution, and we found one.

easy kid bookshelves

We created easy bookshelves that face the books toward the kids. Now they can easily see the fronts of the books, as well as return them to the shelves by themselves.

We went to Menards, bought plastic rain gutters, end caps, and brackets. We cut them in even lengths, and attached them to the wall!

Swaptree.com

I was recommended swaptree as a great alternative to paperbackswap, so I decided to give it a try.  I have to say that I don’t think its quite a right fit for me, but I can see why people love it.

It’s a pretty simple concept.  You make a straight trade with another member.  No counting credits, no sending out all your books without anything coming in.  It’s like this:  Members make lists of things they’re offering for trade, and lists of things they want.  Then, when two members make a match (I’ll give you my High School Musical DVD for your hardcover of Breaking Dawn…) they exchange information and mail each other their items.  If you’re not sure what you want for your Kingdom Hearts game, you can browse the list of things people are offering.  As you browse the list, you say “Oh!  The Labrynth on DVD.  I love David Bowie!  I want that!”  See?  Easy.

This system is much better than paperbackswap for people who want to barter a greater variety of items.  It also helps that the things you want are much less likely to be taken, since only people who meet the offerer’s trade requirements may claim it.

The reason this system doesn’t work very well for me is because of my binding snobbery.  For example, I am trying to collect Hardcover versions of my Harry Potter books.  However, even though I only listed hardcover ISBNs in my wishlist, my offers come sometimes without information about the bindings, or saying they’re paperback.  And since the ISBN number doesn’t show up in swap requests, I can’t be sure I’m not just being offered a  paperback of HP and the OOP.  Furthermore, I can’t seem to find any way to contact the offerer to ask.  So, I have let at least two trades go because I don’t want to waste a trade on a book I don’t want.

I have recently traded away a book for a dvd, which was a great trade for me.  The only part that makes me nervous about the trade is that I have no idea if the person I sent my book to actually received it.  You report when an item doesn’t arrive, but as far as I can tell, you can’t mark it mailed or received.

Also, as a side note- if you do use both swaptree and paperbackswap, keep in mind that you will have to keep track of your books on both sites.  If you swap out a book on swaptree, make sure to take it off your pbs list, too- and vice versa.  That can get to be a bit of a pain, but its worth the effort if you have your heart set on shaking up your bookshelf.

All in all, swaptree is definitely a great site for  people looking to swap dvds, cds and games, and for those book traders who aren’t picky like me about which binding they get.  I’ve pulled books from my “i want” list, and am just hoping someone is looking to trade a season of Gilmore Girls for my copy of The Princess Diaries.   And I’m just trying to ignore that nagging feeling that the book I mailed is lost out there in postal service limbo.

Confession: I am a book snob. Sort of.

BooksSo the other day, I’m staring at my bookshelf, deciding which book to re-read, and something just feels…wrong.  Like, a nice middle-aged suburban couple are standing against the wall at a Fall Out Boy show. Except, replace Fall Out Boy with something edgier.  There, that’s it.  So, I’m looking at the books and wondering.  I’m singing the sesame street song “three of these things belong together, three of these things are kind of the same…”  And it hits me.  The Name of the Wind, The Lovely Bones,  American Gods… they’re all great books, except you wouldn’t know it because they’re *gasp* mass market paperbacks.  I know-  who cares, right?  Apparently, I do.

In case the the term mass market paperback is a foreign one to you, let me explain.  You know the racks of paperbacks at the grocery store?  At the airport?  The small books- that either have a shirtless Fabio embracing a swooning maiden, or have the fancy scrawling gold lettering- or both.  Those.  The books that, when I’m book shopping at a thrift store, I don’t even glance at because I assume they’re terrible.

So what do I do with this incongruence?  Simple.  I rush over to the computer with the mass market paperbacks in hand and I start making requests on paperbackswap.com.  I put in a request for a replacement copy of each, except in a trade paperback or hardcover or anything other than the ones in my hand.

Then, to top it off, I start to get a little particular about my Harry Potter books.  I have paperbacks of the first six, hardcover of the seventh.  “well, that’s not very symmetrical” I say to myself and put in a request for hardcovers of the first six.  A while back, I gave away the first book in the Midnighters series, and now I want it back to fill out the set.  Unfortunately, I can’t find one with a matching cover.

What I want is for my bookshelf to look…intentional.  Not like a haphazard hodgepodge of books scraped from the bottoms of many odd barrels, but like a book collection.  In my natural disaster of a home, I want one little corner of stuff that looks like I actually meant for it to be there.

So there it is: my version of being a book snob in two parts.  I no longer want to litter my shelf with mass market paperbacks, and I have decided to try and create a cohesive and attractive book collection.  It could be worse, right?

The Name of the Wind by Patrick Rothfuss

The Reader
First, I have to admit that my tastes run a little out of line with the typical mom.  Sure, I may have been instrumental in ushering in the Twilight craze among local moms, but generally speaking…  well, lets just say that I’ve never read a word of Jodi Picoult or Nora Roberts, and I don’t really intend to.  I am a lover of young adult fiction, of fantasy, and admittedly some “chick lit” (I loved The Lovely Bones)

That being said, I just finished reading The Name of the Wind, and I loved it.  It is the story of how a brilliant young boy thrived in the face of adversity, and grew to be an epic hero.

I have to admit that I didn’t like the main character, Kvothe very much at first.  I thought he was arrogant and smug as he recounted his intellectual prowess.  But as the story progresses, and life crushes in on him, you begin to see the man he becomes, when being a clever little boy is no longer enough.

The Name of the Wind is the first (an only published, so far)  book in a promising new series by author Patrick Rothfuss of Wisconsin.  I found it thorough and brilliantly crafted,much like the Harry Potter novels.  Only The Name of the Wind is meatier, designed for adult readers who are looking forsomething more substantial to gnaw on.  If you are any sort of fantasy fan (note that my fantasy fandom doesn’t stray past J.R.R. Tolkein, C.S. Lewis, Neil Gaiman and J.K. Rowling) I think you will thoroughly enjoy this book.