New Life

in The MINIMALIST8 days ago

I did something unusual for me yesterday. I sold books. Not my books, but books I owned, which is perhaps peculiar for me, since I am someone who has always enjoyed having a big library. When I moved here, I built a wall-long shelf to house all my books. Well, the men from IKEA built it, but at my behest, so that ought to count. And while I love gifting books, and no gift is complete (in my opinion) without a book, no matter how small, inside, I'm not much one for giving them away. I like lending them, but not giving them forever. They're comfortable to me, and I like the thought that I could, in theory, go through them again if I so wished.

It took me years to amass a proper Anne Rice collection. Ever since I saw Interview with the Vampire as a little girl, I fell in love with the series, and loved Rice as a writer. I read them all, or as many as I could get my hands on here in Romania (no easy task since about half were never even translated).

I remember, still the excitement of finding a new one, the frustration of seeing Volume 2 from some series of hers on the shelf of a bookstore, but somehow, mysteriously, never the first one. When she died at 80 some years ago, I was so sad, and felt it in ways like a personal loss. I always said I'd go back to the series, but in time, I lost my interest. Even now, whenever I see an ad for the new Netflix series, I half-heartedly think to myself I'll watch that sometime.

But the truth is, it's no longer part of who I am.

And here at home, it had a whole shelf dedicated to it (some 20+ books take up serious room), but sat collecting dust behind the door.

So the other night, spur of the moment, I decided to sell them.

To clarify, I'm not opposed to giving things away, and often do, but books are quite difficult here. Most second-hand bookstores tend to be picky about what they take, often causing a mess picking through your collection and not even taking them. I figured I'd list them on Vinted instead, as I've sold a bunch of stuff there in the past and generally have had good experiences.

I didn't sell them for much. Some 2 Euro per book, I figured it'd be a price I'd be crazy about if I ran into them in a secondhand bookstore ten years ago. I listed each book individually, and figured if they're meant to go, they'll go.

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To my surprise, within the hour, 14 books off the 20-something had sold, most of them to fans. I chatted to some about how hard it is to find them in Romania, how happy they were to have found them on the app. In a way, it was nice, connecting with these people, sharing an appreciation for this kind of writing.

I enjoyed it. Besides, when the last couple of books that are now left sell, it'll be about a week's worth of groceries. I was quite pleased. I'd turned, within an hour, something useless into something very useful.

I've meant to write about Vinted a bunch of times, but always hold off for some reason. It's been very useful to me. For one, I like knowing the stuff I sell on there (mostly clothes) is gonna have a new life. I still leave plenty of little parcels and bags of things outside for people in need to take. Just the other week, I threw out a bag of old boots and shoes, still wearable.

But I do think it's alright, especially with high-end products, hardly worn, to sell them for a couple Euro. Given the market, it's still wildly accessible. I went shopping the other day for a friend's gift and was surprised at how pricey everything suddenly is. I kept wondering, who's got 40-50 Euro for a sweater, probably identical to three you already have? But to each his own.

I'm also struck by how quickly everything is devalued once you purchase it. You could be selling a brand new pair of pants, unworn, with tags, and you would still only get about 50%-75% the cost. If that. It's a valuable lesson, and a great way to curtail impulsive shoppers. As soon as you're out of the store, this will lose most of its value. I don't know, perhaps for "big brands", it's a different situation, but still worth noting. Is it really worth all that money to get bored of it in a season, and try to resell it in six months' time for less than half?

Anyway, all in all, I'm happy with the books I sold. I'm happy that the books aren't sitting behind the door there, gathering dust. I admit I very much enjoyed the sense of shedding, of getting lighter, that typically comes with getting rid of things you no longer need.

Have you had experiences selling online?

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About Books - at my apartment I have two big bookshelves, and I lost count how many books I have. Some are really old, I got from my grandfather. Some I bought myself since my youth. Some were given to me. I have a studio elsewhere in Vienna, with a large shelve, mostly books about art, and catalogues. The owners of the building (which currently houses over 40 artists) decided not to renew our leases, so after expiry March 2026, we have to move out. The place, formerly a office building, will be torn down. What I do with my artwork stacked up and all thse books, I don't know yet. No room at my residence. So I will have to look for storage, unless I find another studio someplace that is affordable. One thing for sure: I won't give my books away. I read most (but not all) and re-read some of them several times.

 6 days ago  

Oh, I'm sorry to hear that! I knew some artists here who were recently in the same situation - difficult stuff. I hope you find a place, preferably a studio (better than storage, no doubt). Do you think you'll let go of some of the books given the present circumstances, or is that out of the question?

I sometimes cry inside giving books to charity, and I give some to my brother just to ask them back later, but space it is an issue, until I built my house with a 3 walls bookshelves office, that's it.

 8 days ago  

I feel ya!

Yes, I sold DVDs a lot, back at the times when there was no video streaming :)
But books I hardly ever sell. I just keep them.

 8 days ago  

I know, I have the same tendency. I think these are the first books I've given away. The days of selling and buying DVDs, good times.

I think it is good that you are aware of having too much things and doing something about it. You can give them a completely new life by selling them. I use vinted too, but sometimes things don't sell for months and it is frustrating, maybe there are other ways to sell them faster.

 8 days ago  

It's true. I lower the price if something's been on sale for weeks and isn't shifting. Also, I'm trying to put them up for sale ahead of time. Like maybe I don't need the space or even the cash rn, but rather than being stressed on the spot about something not selling, I'd rather put them up early...

I've been decluttering and selling some stuff online recently. Mainly my collections of Swatch watches and Swarovski crystals, handbags and some old clothes. Most sell for pittance which is quite heart breaking as some were quite expensive when I bought it, but it's worth nothing if it's just sitting in my wardrobe.

It feels good if you know it's going to someone who appreciates it

 8 days ago  

Ah wise of you! I'm sorry to hear they're not selling for much..what do you use to sell them? I'm surprised, as you'd typically expect these to go for some money at least. I was thinking about Swarovskis, mostly wondering, but if you say they don't sell....

Yes! It's a nice thought that someone will enjoy these books!

Have you had experiences selling online?

One time some woman saw my art in one of facebook art groups and made a custom order. I did the painting she wanted but she disappeared. So I gifted that painting to a day hospital. Years later that woman reappeared and wanted to buy that painting again. So I painted that piece again. This time all went well.

 8 days ago  

That's peculiar. Did she explain where she disappeared the first time? And did you ask for some kind of deposit ahead of time the second time?

No she just said that she likes the painting and then disappeared. I did not ask for any deposit the second time. I figured that if she will not buy it I will just keep it for myself. Once I was done painting a second time I send her photos on facebook. She sent the agreed sum to my bank account and then I send her the painting.

 8 days ago  

That's really nice! I'm glad it worked out for you in the end ;)

I got double the money than I asked for the first time. So it worked out well.

Omg another loved of literature who doesn't hoard books and isn't precious about selling them! You get it! Tbh twenty years ago I would have been horrified by the idea. But you often only read things once and then they gather dust. And a weeks worth of groceries can't be sniffed at.

It appalls me how little books are valued though. I have some mint books 📚 that cost say $30 at the store brand new but I can't sell them for $10. Wtf??

 8 days ago  

Everything devalues like crazy, apparently. No luck even at used bookstores? I mean I know a lot cost a pittance, but there's some that cost 50 Euro for a used book in great condition....especially rarer stuff. It's a real shame, though, I agree. I saw some people were selling books for about 3x my price, which is still only half of the market price of most new books. Don't know if they sell though.

I'm baby-stepping it, honestly. Some books, I'll never part with, but also because they were such an experience getting. Lugging them from the UK, or searching for them across multiple countries, finding them in some improbable tiny English bookstore somewhere...
But I'm learning to let go of the things that really serve no purpose anymore. Even good books. Especially good books, actually. Someone else might want them.

And a weeks worth of groceries can't be sniffed at.

My thoughts exactly. Sell them now, or put them in a box 6-8-10 months from now whenever I decide to leave this place for good again, and let them gather more dust. I'll take the food, thank you :)

I'm selling everything at the moment for foodlol.

Yeah i put books in the sell pile only to take them out again due to sentiment. X

I've never heard of vinted. I am not sure if it is available in Australia, but I will have a look when I get through the books that I don't want to keep forever.

Here I am buying books, and here you are selling them. It's an economy!

I also have some oooold CD versions of truly classic video games. They'll clearly only become more valuable with time (yeah, right) - but when I get a bit more head space, I will take a look and see if Vinted is available in Australia and then make an inventory of stuff to get rid of.

I could use Facebook Marketplace, but yuck. I'll be off that platform by the end of the year - as it will no longer be useful to me.

 8 days ago  

If not, maybe there's something similar? I think we have 3-4 similar platforms here (though I think most of them are heavily clothes-oriented). And hey, if the games still run well and they're some I dunno rare or "vintage" edition, then you might be onto something there ;) I don't know what the situation is for gaming laptops, but I see most laptops no longer have a CD-reader (something I personally regret), so might be worth considering if you wanna sell them.

I've never tried FB Marketplace, but I have used it to donate stuff - furniture, china, all sorts. Might donate some clothes if they don't sell. Might I ask how it is useful now?

They make nice pieces of nostalgia, if the physical media is stable enough to be read after all these years, that's another question. My wife's computer still has a disk drive, and each of these "legacy games" I talk about all have "remastered" editions released in the last decade or so.

Maybe they'll be like vinyls someday.

The local buy nothing group has people try to offload the strangest things, which really should be rubbish. The most interesting one I've seen is a rusty old chain (it would have made a great photo prop, but someone else got it before me (probably to rust up a gate) - and literally, some door hinges :|

Comes with the benefits of living on the fringes of suburbia.

I plan to de-platform myself from Meta's stuff after my exhibition and late this year - because honestly, I do not get engagement or prospects from there. I fear that means I will need to dive a little more into SEO for my own website (and perhaps take away some of my own voice) - but I just want to do what I do without needing to play the "Game" to do it.

Sorry for going off topic, it is my natural way.

I just hate ridding my shelves of books, but did it last year. I finally had to only to make room for more. Most of the books I had were reference books I had used for work I no longer do (retired now). Now I can let recreational reads gather and collect dust. However, I only read certain authors, so you can say I collect them.

 8 days ago  

That's different - I understand keeping books by a special author, I do too and probably will continue to do so ;) But as you said, some books no longer reflect where you are in life anymore, then why not let them go? And if you can make a bit of pocket money on the side, that's not bad either!

Oh I agree, as soon as I retired I figured I no longer needed the old books I had and donated them. They were pretty worn so doubt I could have sold em. Good on you for cleaning out and making room for more .

That bit about turning 2€ per book into groceries really landed. It’s such a clean swap from dust to dinner :)
In my spreadsheets, the way things lose value the moment you leave the store is definetly real, and you captured it so simply..
Letting the Anne Rice shelf go feels like you honored who you were, then made room for who you are, and the fans who grabbed them will carry that thread.
Small wins that lighten the house and the head, groceries' and space both paid for.

Books are very difficult for me to let go of. I've sold a lot of things on eBay and Facebook Marketplace over the years. eBay has been more lucrative but FB Marketplace is great for getting rid of things quickly if you don't mind making much from them. I used to restore old vintage American watches and resell them on eBay but the vintage market fizzled out around 2015.

 8 days ago  

I know what you mean. I'm the same. That's why I tried it with ones I no longer felt attached to in any meaningful way. Some shelves, I can't even imagine letting go of. I suspect restoring the watches was also a hobby, no? So maybe its own reward in a way?

My wife and I used to have a lot more books too, but we have kind of been in a "simplify" mindset over the past decade or so. We tend to either sell books back to Thriftbooks or we give them away to other family members or friends. My brother in law also manages a resale shop that takes the profits and buys food to give to needy families, so we donate a lot of stuff to that too.

 8 days ago  

Oh that's very handy (and sweet!). It does feel like overcomplicating life a bit with all this stuff, doesn't it? :) I always wanted that kind of service - buy (used) books, then sell them back to us for store credit or such. Could keep me happy for months.

Yeah, we have a few small shops that do it like that. There is one fairly close in town that we can sell them back to if we want. We haven't visited it yet though.

Hi,

It’s a pleasant feeling, and it’s not about money—I understand you very well. It’s comforting to know that someone else will also find them valuable. And as you rightly said, you lightened the load, made space for new things that will surely come. I congratulate you on that decision.

I guess those books are happy to live another life again. I understand how you feel passing those books to different people because you have lived with them for long years. I believe the idea and wisdom of those books will spread now because you already made a good decision. The story, message, and change from the books will travel but it is still in you, the lesson you have learned made you the book. I hope I make sense of it.

I'm glad you are able to sell them. It is more delightful that they were also bought by people that value them.