You lend books — sometimes freely, sometimes begrudgingly. You assign return dates and issue stern reminders. Even then, you have discovered books of yours donated to a local sale, or returned in tatters, or never returned.
In your many, many responses to my column about my reluctance to lend some books, it's clear that you are passionate about sharing — but also about getting back — beloved books.
Anne Ulmer of Cannon Falls, Minn., lent two of her favorite books to a friend, first "giving her the hard stare you mentioned in your column," she wrote. "I asked, 'Are you reliable about returning books?' She assured me that she was."
A few months later, another friend found one of the books among donations for a sale. "It had my signature in it!" Ulmer said. After a bit more digging, she found the second one. "I bought it back," she said. "I never did hear whether my friend enjoyed them."
But Mark Rosenbaum, who teaches in South Korea, is glad when students take his books. "I really don't mind them stealing a book they like," he wrote. "If they enjoyed it, then I'm OK with it." One book that consistently disappears, he said, is "The Bad Girl," by Mario Vargas Llosa. "So now, I own a digital copy on my Kindle, but I have kept three printed copies 'just in case' in my classroom this year. One went missing yesterday. Hope they enjoy it."
Lending books is baked into Nancy Battaglia's DNA — she was a librarian for 35 years. "I love sharing the joy!" she said. "I keep a stash of books I've finished in my laundry room and my daughter-in-law checks out the offerings when she comes over. I take a stack when I meet up with a group of friends."
But even Battaglia, who lives in Eagan, has her limits. She will not lend her copy of "Gone With the Wind." "I have read it about five or six times," she said.
The other problem with lending books, of course, is that the borrower might not love the book.