There have been multiple accounts created with the sole purpose of posting advertisement posts or replies containing unsolicited advertising.

Accounts which solely post advertisements, or persistently post them may be terminated.

silver ,

if they are of decent quality a snd hand book store might take them

SirElliott ,

Check with your local library or schools to see if they accept book donations. If not, there are probably a few secondhand bookstores near you that will buy some of them from you.

DonnieDarkmode ,

This is the best way in my experience; I was able to get rid of over 20 filing boxes of books this way while helping my folks downsize their collection. It’s a small way to support your local library system, and I’ve had some excellent finds at thrift book stores/library sales over the years so it’s nice to contribute to that as well

PostmodernPythia ,

Please check first and accept their answer if it’s a no! Do not dump your 1991 NatGeos without asking. Love, Librarians

phillycodehound ,
@phillycodehound@lemmy.world avatar

Especially Nat Geos. Those things are valuable.

BNE ,
@BNE@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

Really? I never knew - are people starting to warm up on collecting Natgeos or has this been a thing around your neck of the woods/world for a while?

T156 ,

I believe that may be sarcasm.

BNE ,
@BNE@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

That’d be right, lol - thanks for the help parsing the context, I really did just assume it was earnest

phillycodehound ,
@phillycodehound@lemmy.world avatar

Donate them to the library or used bookstore

Fartbutt ,

I don’t have a direct answer, but I will say be careful about giving them to Goodwill or what-have-you, or at least check first. I donated a mound of great contemporary books and the guy receiving them said they throw out anything that has marks on the page side or any wear on the cover.

Not to say all thrift shops toss them, but some do.

Edit: Look for local “free libraries”! Some cities will have random little boxes put up around neighbourhoods, and those won’t get scrapped.

BloodSlut ,

Although i think it’s great that secondhand places are concerned about the condition of items, i feel like it’s gotten a bit ridiculous.

I’ve gotten brand new things straight from the manufacturer that were in poorer conditon than some of the things they’ve turned down. And I’m not really comfortable using craigslist or facebook marketplace or the like so i end up feelling bad about tossing perfectly fine stuff.

SJ0 ,

I think a lot of the secondhand places have problems in both directions. On one hand, it’s as you say. On the other hand, I’ve seen places that charge more than new prices for some things. One secondhand store I visited was in the same parking lot as a walmart. I looked at the t-shirts they had for sale (not fancy ones or anything) and they cost more than the brand new ones at the walmart.

AmidFuror ,

Sounds like they are pickier than a Peruvian money changer.

totallynotarobot ,

Goodwill is also … objectionable, to say the least. And many alternatives fund insidious “missionary” work or anti-choice women’s housing. Check your charities closely to make sure they align with your values, whatever they may be.

en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goodwill_Industries

cbsnews.com/…/goodwill-head-who-makes-164000-fire…

socialistworker.org/2017/…/why-goodwill-goes-bad

cracked.com/article_33357_15-impressively-evil-th…

jordanlund ,

Take them to a used bookstore.

ed_cock , (edited )
@ed_cock@kbin.social avatar

it’s bad juju to throw books in the trash right?

The books you are talking about are mass produced commodity items, right? If you don't want them anymore and don't know anyone else who does just treat them like any other print product and toss 'em out. They weren't painstakingly copied by monks, the knowledge inside will not be lost, just being a book doesn't make them special.

Signed, someone who had to deal with a slew of outdated guidebooks, encyclopedias, cookbooks, reader's digest issues, never-read novels and whatever else from a deceased relative because they just couldn't bring themselves to put them in the recycling bin.

mohKohn ,

just … bring them to a library or thrift store… they're better at figuring out what's actually valuable

FelipeFelop ,
@FelipeFelop@feddit.uk avatar

Another vote for charity shops/thrift stores. It’s a good way to raise a little money for charity and for someone to get a book they might no afford at full price.

I don’t know about the rest of the world but here in the UK, supermarkets and businesses sometimes have a little bookshelf. You leave any books you don’t want and people can take them putting a few coins in a collection tin that goes to a good cause.

Another thing to do is take them to work, colleagues might well want them.

ed_cock ,
@ed_cock@kbin.social avatar

If you have one nearby then maybe, but I bet you even they don't want that slightly water damaged, smelly copy of some cheapo 80s encyclopedia.

Around here it's also relatively common to sell old books by weight/volume, either on flea markets or classifieds/Ebay. But sometimes it literally isn't worth the effort.

macrocephalic ,

My local thrifty shop had a pallet of assorted books and you can fill a bag for $5. I think of it like a lazy person’s library, I get a bunch of books, pay my dues, and then return them when I’m done.

SWIM ,

Make a little library on your front lawn and fill it up,before you know it they will be gone and people will have put others in its place.

Bakachu ,

Love these! We have one in my neighborhood and it’s pretty convenient to drop off my read pile in there.

Rosriv ,

I’d definitely recommend just leaving them in a book box. The concept is easy: leave a book, take a book. But there’s nothing saying you can’t just leave book. Don’t have one nearby? Create one. 🥰

RightHandOfIkaros ,

Recycle them. Or call up your local library and ask if they want them. Usually libraries will have an attached used book store, sometimes they put donated books there.

satanmat ,

Do your best impression of a Christian Nationalist and have a book burning.

ThirdNerd ,
@ThirdNerd@lemmy.world avatar

Lots of same for me. First I take them to the local used book store. Whatever they don’t buy I either leave there (sometimes they will take those for free) or take to the library or thrift store. Once in awhile I have one that actually sells for good money. Always a surprise.

ABCDE ,

Depends where you are; in the UK I take them to charity shops or give them to people who would appreciate them (just a few to each person or it gets a bit overwhelming). You can also leave them out on the street in a small box with ‘free’ on the side. There are some places with free ‘library’-type places that you can leave them in, or put them in cafes/leave on trains.

HipPriest ,

I used to volunteer in Oxfam Books and it's honestly one of the best things you can do unless you do know people who want the books obviously.

Everything is inspected and if for whatever it's not fit to be resold (big coffee stains, or missing pages etc) it's recycled. And then any profits go to help people in need. And we came across some genuinely rare things a few times. An edition of Shakespeare which was worth £400 or so from the 1700s was probably the most impressive - this like that get sold online.

Obviously if there's a different charity which means something more to you even better - I honestly think it's the best thing to do with old books these days

PostmodernPythia ,

This is the service the library I used to work at used for discards. services.betterworldbooks.com/individuals/

CoffeeJunkie ,

Recycle them. It’s a bound collection of cellulose (and some ink); cellulose can be upcycled into other paper products. Like insulation, attic blow-in, boxes, etc.

Trashing it is trashing a resource, which sounds worse than it is in reality. It’ll rot & decompose nicely in a landfill.

Burning books…SUCKS…take it from me like it takes FOREVER and it burns page by page, you have to stir it constantly.

Finding a recycling center is so much better for the world, and easier for you. Win-win.

Spacebar ,
@Spacebar@lemmy.world avatar

Good Will

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • [email protected]
  • random
  • lifeLocal
  • goranko
  • All magazines