So much Japanese bondage porn on my dad's computer. I will never unsee that. |
I see your point. We are not getting the books yet, I just wanted to think about it and see what other people suggest. We may move or build a house in the near future, and need to take into consideration whether the books will be in our house or not. |
| Lol if you let those books in the door you will be stuck with musty dusty books in your new home forever! |
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There may be treasure in those books and not just monetary treasure.
Two stories: 1. I have an acquaintance that owns a book store and he related to me that he was able to convert a $500 estate sale book collection (7 books) into $250K worth of book sales/trades over a 6 month period of time. He started with low dollar trades using his personal list of contacts in North America and Europe to repeatedly sell and trade from his estate sale starting point in order to get a couple of very valuable sales at the end. The initial sales were for several hundred then it bumped up to 7/8K then a series of 25K book sales/trades and the last one was around 50K and when it was said and done he had a couple left over that he put in his store. He said that it made his year. These books were old bibles, prayer books, Hymnals, and the likes. Not all old books have market value. 2. I personally have a couple of old history books (early 1900s) and a few old math books (1800s). The history books in particular were eye opening to me in that they provide a perspective on how people though at the time which doesn't align with the modern narrative that people today project onto people of that era. These books are not valuable except that when I found then it brought into sharp focus that modern education is revisionist, watered down, and agenda driven. If you want to know something it is better to get it from the original source than to merely believe a 3 or 4th hand source. On a final note, I have about 24 linear feat of books that consumes 4 book shelves. They are mostly science (math/physics/engineering) books which I use periodically as reference materials. My wife occasionally suggests that I throw them away. She sees no value in the books. She gets her information from YouTube and social media. Our local library is almost exclusively children's fiction and romance novels. |
Yes, because 5,000 is a relatively manageable number that could fit in an ordinary house. I have more than that myself. |
I don't agree with that PP. That inheritance is definitely your business if it means a ton of stuff in your present or future house. Since you live in that house, you get a vote on what goes in it. If you were going to inherit 30,000 pieces of fine china from your mom, your DH would have every right to raise questions about how and where you would store and display it in the house. |
if it fits, it should be kept? |
Not necessarily, but it wouldn't be impossible to have that many actually in the house while you sorted through to figure out which to keep, which to donate, and which to sell on eBay. Anything more than 10,000 and you're talking storage unit, which is more trouble and expense than it's worth. |
Thanks! I am OP, even my in-laws always tell me those books are going to be "you and xx (DH's name)", so yeah, I do think I have a say in this. I respect DH's choice to a certain extent though. Anyway, we aren't getting the books yet. And I hope my in-laws live a long life. And readers, please don't get hang up on the exact number of books, I don't have the exact number. But way more books than I can handle. Plus DH never read them!!! I won't read them either. |
| One last thing OP, there is a Dick VanDyke episode (yes, black and white) that deals with an inheritance the MIL can’t wait to pass down. It’s a funny humorous look at what families do to each other and yet still keep some traditions going. If you can stand it being an old show, you will find it pretty funny. |
| ^ It’s called “The Curse of the Petrie People” |
Thanks! I've seen the show on Amazon prime videos, will check it out! Americans accumulate too much "stuff"! I am only bringing up books here, but there are many other categories that we'll have to deal with too! As a mom, I am trying to minimize everything, I am constantly throwing away things, and DH hasn't noticed a bit! |
Hiring college kids to do inventory is a great idea! It'll be faster for the appraisers to identify potentially valuable books if they're just scanning a spreadsheet as opposed to digging in boxes, so you'll pay for fewer hours of their time, too. |
I am OP, I would actually enjoy inventory the books, if I retired and have time. I love organizing, and labeling things, and inventory. |
This came across my FB feed this morning and it made me think of OP:
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