Wednesday, April 9, 2025

The affliction of "tsundoku"

The English language has borrowed staggering numbers of terms from other languages and incorporated them into everyday usage. Modern English is heavily derived from both Germanic and Latin roots, but we've borrowed words from such far-flung places as Icelandic ("saga"), Indonesian ("guru"), and Polynesian ("taboo"), among much else.

Despite this linguistic flexibility, there are endless extraordinarily specific terms used in other languages that have no English equivalent. According to this article, "Have you ever felt a little mbuki-mvuki – the irresistible urge to 'shuck off your clothes as you dance'? Perhaps a little kilig – the jittery fluttering feeling as you talk to someone you fancy? How about uitwaaien – which encapsulates the revitalizing effects of taking a walk in the wind? These words – taken from Bantu, Tagalog, and Dutch – have no direct English equivalent, but they represent very precise emotional experiences that are neglected in our language."

This is what came to mind when I read about the Japanese term tsundoku, and you're gonna love it. Yes, the Japanese have coined a term to identify "the art of buying books and never reading them."

I'm sure every bibliophile suffers from this to some degree. Specifically the term "describes the intention to read books and their eventual, accidental collection."

My standard requested Christmas gift each year is a gift card to an online used-book seller, so whenever I see a book I'm interested in reading, I can order it without angsting over the price. (The penalty for living extremely rural is a library system that is almost guaranteed (a) to not have the book you want in the system, and (b) be unable to find it in inter-library loan.) However this usually means if I'm interested enough in a book to order it online, I'll follow through and read it.

The same can't be said (ahem) when it comes to things like library sales or other in-person second-hand resources. I mean, c'mon ... who's going to deny themselves the pleasure of purchasing an armful of books for pennies on the dollar? Under such conditions, I'll admit that sometimes we get carried away and purchase books with the good intention of reading them, and which then pile up. So yeah, tsundoku.

Fortunately, apparently the term does not have any connotations of criticism in Japan, nor does it carry any overtones of stigma. (Yet another example of things the Japanese do right.)

In my current situation, visiting my parents in Southern California, I am so tempted to visit an excellent used bookstore Older Daughter and I discovered a couple years ago. But I've resisted. Not only would it be impossible to schlep twenty extra pounds of books with me on an airplane, but our new dedication to extra super-dooper frugal living hasn't waned just because I'm traveling. (Knowing I would be visiting my parents, we put aside a travel budget before I got laid off.)

In fact, frugal living simply gives me an opportunity to start going through our selection of unread books and dip into them. Maybe I can reverse our tsundoku.

So is it just me, or do others suffer from this affliction?

11 comments:

  1. My face is red...I'm guilty as charged. Some women collect shoes, or purses, whatever. But with me it's books. It is PAINFUL to get rid of them...like leaving a child behind. Some of them are very dear friends...read over and over. One of those books waiting to be opened just might be a new friend. I owe it to them to give them a chance.

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  2. Patrice, I truly make an effort now to put books on a list for purchase and if I buy anything, it has to be from the list. I also try to manage the pile by my bed to a reasonable size that will not raise an eyebrow - try being the operative word there....

    I have actually been considering a sort of buying fast after this list is complete. It is not like I could not read for the next 5-10 years straight just on what I currently own.

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  3. Absolutely guilty of this! I have a hard time walking out of a thrift store without a book or two for pennies!

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  4. Books, is there such a thing as "to many books"?
    That's like asking a Prepper if 600 rolls of TP are to many HAHAHA
    So, as one that disconnected TV 15-18 years ago (completely worthless programming anymore, I do get Information 'News etc.' off the net) Books have taken over my quiet entertainment world, I do not however just buy and stack, I read a LOT, and not just fiction for the entertainment value, but a HUGE number of Non Fiction informational media.
    Sounds foolish, buy a book on Gardening or Home Repair and actually read it ???? How about other things such as Canning and Preserving Foods for future use?
    And no, I'm not one of these "Survivalist" but I strongly believe in the idea of being prepared for ohhhhh, lets say a Hurricane coming through the neighborhood...
    I digress, back on subject.
    A lot of people have gone to "I-Pads" Kindle and the likes, Not me, I LOVE the feel of a good book in my hands, the feel of turning the paper pages and the weight of knowledge in hard form (Book).
    And to be honest I feel that reading a book allows one's mind to visualize the contend as one reads, rather than watching some actor or listening to someone read to us.
    Back to the Gardening Book, when one reads the information you can visualize your Garden taking shape in your own mind. Or reading an adventure book, your not looking at someone on that Flat Screen but your imagining yourself in the action.
    Yes Books are an essential in life, in my opinion, As far as buying and stacking, nawwwwww, I'm going to buy a book, I'm going to dang well read that puppy and keep it for reference of a re-read in a year or so.

    I will add one clarification, Yes there are some, SOME, good informational programs on TV, but at what cost? $120 a month for TV, I can do a LOT of searching the net for exactly what I'm looking for AND buy a heck of a lot of good reading material for that kind of money.

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  5. You can always ship books via UPS........

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  6. Find out the weight limit of your luggage that you can take for free. Southwest used to have a 70 pound per suitcase limit2 suitcases. I once did that and one suitcase was over the limit and one under. I had to repack them at the airport I usually only travel with a carry one. If you only carried a carry on maybe your parents have an extra suitcase that you could borrow. Just a thought. About books, guilty as charged.

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  7. You just reminded me of a conversation several weeks ago with a store clerk who gave me the name of a books on line service which you can subscribe to for free. We had started talking about this subject. I thought I'd just remember and didn't write it down. Out of sight, out of mind!

    There is a reason for this kind or service. It's not Kindle. Anyway, enjoying the feel of books aside, sometimes you just want to read and don't want to buy the book!
    I've got to go back to that store now.
    Everybody needs a free subscription for online reading, especially me.

    I'm getting too old to keep acquiring "stuff". Time to cave to more technology. Too much stuff already needs paring down.

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  8. We have book-crossing selves in libraries. You can donate your old books and take "new" ones, return them after reading or keep them. They also put old library books there, you can take them for free.

    I DO donate some books. Occasionally. Usually when I decide that I really, really do not need two copies of "count of Monte Cristo", even if they are different translations. Or "Moby Dick" on two languages.

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  9. It’s all your fault Patrice😁! When my husband and I first moved from our long term home, thirteen years ago, I got rid of almost all my books. Then, a few years ago as I started reading your blog, including your older posts, the book collection “affliction” took hold again. I acquire books (including books I previously gave away) with a sort of prepper mindset. There might come a time when I won’t have access to any book I desire. It is very comforting to have a stash of print books that may contain the perfect antidote to a rainy day, boredom, lockdown, illness/affliction, or provide an answer to a problem. Thank you.

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