Blending Libraries: How To Organize Books with Your Sweetheart

Posted on: February 12th, 2024 by Julie Bestry | 18 Comments

Did you know that in addition to February 14th being Valentine’s Day, it’s also International Book Giving Day and Library Lovers’ Day? As someone who’d much rather receive a bouquet of books than flowers, this makes sense to Paper Doll. And February 20th is Clean Out Your Bookcase Day!

The literary and the romantic will always be tied together. I mean, watching or hearing someone declare their love is nice, but being able to read (and reread) the declaration more than two hundred years later? Jane Austen knew what she was doing when she had Persuasion‘s Captain Wentworth’s write this to Anne Elliot. 

I can listen no longer in silence. I must speak to you by such means as are within my reach. You pierce my soul. I am half agony, half hope. Tell me not that I am too late, that such precious feelings are gone for ever. I offer myself to you again with a heart even more your own than when you almost broke it, eight years and a half ago. Dare not say that man forgets sooner than woman, that his love has an earlier death. I have loved none but you. Unjust I may have been, weak and resentful I have been, but never inconstant…

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Reading can be romantic. But let’s face it, there’s nothing romantic about organizing books.

Or is there?

What could be more romantic than your sweetheart making sure you don’t fall and break your neck tripping over their pile of unread books? What could be a finer proof of your love than moving your books off of the kitchen counter so your darling can actually make lunch?

Other than commingling finances, what could require more love and trust than combining your personal libraries?

ORGANIZE YOUR PERSONAL LIBRARY FIRST

Organizing, downsizing, and protecting your personal library (and your reading time) involves a great deal of thought and planning, as I’ve written before in various posts over 17 years, including:

Of course, you don’t have to take my word for it. For example, you could read what Martha Stewart and her favorite peeps have to say about How to Organize Books in a Way That Works for You

Conversely, you could review what the Washington Post says in How to Organize Your Books, According to People with Thousands of Them

And, of course, even though I’m a professional organizer, I’m a reader first, and I know that there’s much more to a personal library that just arranging books. To that end, I invite everyone to read Freya Howarth’s How to Nurture a Personal Library.

If your own book collection is sprawling, full of duplicates and titles you’ll never read again (or read at all), outdated college textbooks, or other book clutter (did you gasp at “book clutter”?), you can find ways to hide your biblio-addiction in your own, private space.

That works for hermits. However you choose to organize your own books, organizing books when you live with your significant other adds multiple layers of complexity.

WHAT TO CONSIDER WHEN BLENDING PERSONAL LIBRARIES

First, you have to decide whether you’re going to try to blend your books, or keep them separate. Then you have to embrace the difficult work of culling your collections. (If you came to blows trying to figure out whose air fryer or toaster oven you’d use, that was mere child’s play.)

When friends ask me if they should blend book collections with their sweethearts, I say, “Don’t. Books are intimate. Mixing your books is like mixing your toothbrushes. Blech!”

When clients ask me the same question, I am more sanguine, or at least more practical.

When friends ask me if they should blend book collections with their sweethearts, I say, 'Don't. Books are intimate. Mixing your books is like mixing your toothbrushes. Blech!' When clients ask me the same question, I am more… Share on X

Space Invaders — Introducing One Library to Another

We love our book collections. Our personal libraries say something about who we were, are, and hope to be. Exposing our private collections may be awkward or embarrassing, less like when your parents share “baby on the bearskin rug” photos and more like when they show photos of you, all braces-and-bad-perm, at the junior prom.

So, let’s imagine that you and your beloved have just decided to cohabit.

  • Are they moving into your space?

How will you keep from feeling like your terrain is being invaded? If you’ve previously shared an apartment with a friend or just a sub-letting housemate, it’s probably been very clear whose space belongs to whom. Perhaps the division was congenial and you easily divided everything equally; perhaps not.

Will you resent reducing the space available for your carefully curated collection?

It’s one thing to give up space in your closet, bathroom cabinet, or even your underwear drawer, but if you guard your bookshelves fiercely (as most avid readers do), how will you welcome your sweetheart and fellow reader into your space?

  • Are you moving into their space?

Any time two people move in together where one has already been residing, there’s an implicit turf war. How will you feel at home in a home without adequate and fairly representative space for your books, which you may love as much as someone else loves their Labradoodle! You don’t want to feel like an invader, but neither do you want to feel like a guest in what should become your new home.

Divide Without Conquering — How to Share a Space When Both of You Have Custody of Books

Maybe you’re moving together to a new home and get to start fresh. Or, it’s possible you’ve been living together for a while. Whether the two of your are married or otherwise, your home has the potential for a “yours, mine, and ours” problem in the book department.

Separate but Equal, or Joint Custody?

Even couples who enjoy a hot romance may prefer a cool detente when it comes to blending books. You might decide to keep your personal collections completely separate, or only blend books related to your mutual interests or things related to the family as a whole.

If you decide not to mix your collections, you’ll need to at least designate space for who gets which bookcases and shelves. But this leaves questions:

  • How do you achieve fairness?  

Do you opt for parity?

Your instinct may be to just start unboxing your books wherever you’ve identified as a good space for you, like how the first college student to arrive picks the bed and gets the nearest shelf. That’s fine in a dorm room, where each item has its mirror image, but whose apartment or house has truly equal (and equally appealing) space?

If you decide to choose parity, is the solution equal shelf space or equal number of books? What if one person has hundreds of thin volumes of cozy mysteries but another has far fewer titles but they’re all thick and leather-bound?

You may scoff, but I’ve seen married couples who otherwise seem sane and satisfied in their love come to verbal blows over one having more books taking over their joint space. Leaving aside that all but the mildest scuffles might be better suited to the marriage counseling couch than the organizing session, it’s better to anticipate the problem and talk out the solutions.

If you do blend your collections, either partially or in total (notwithstanding your bedside table To Be Read piles), you’re still going to have a lot to consider.

  • How do you deal with duplicates?

First, there’s the issue of when the two partners own the same book. In the name of organization, Sweetie may want to keep the pristine first edition of The Sun Also Rises, but Darling has a bent copy with every margin filled with the wisdom gleaned from a much-loved college literature course (when Darling went through a beret-and-Gauloises-smoking phase).

Typically, when professional organizers work with clients who have duplicate skirts or screwdrivers or spatulas, we focus on what’s in the best condition. However, weighing the value of something that is “the same but different,” like a book that has financial value vs. one that has sentimental or intellectual value, is more difficult.

Before shelving, Sweetie and Darling need to decide how they’ll move forward. Will they purge based on monetary value or let sentiment win?

As Emily Dickinson said, the heart wants what the heart wants. If one partner pushes to purge by discounting sentiment, what will the other partner’s heart want if forced to give up too much?

This doesn’t even take into account when one member of the couple has what the other considers an excessive number of duplicates all on their own. Maybe Sweetums has a copy their first sweetheart gave them, then a refined leatherette copy, and maybe even a 50th anniversary edition? Whether it’s Stephen King or F. Scott Fitzgerald, you’ll have to come to terms regarding how much one “gets” to keep.

  • What organizing system will you use?

Will you shelve randomly, just getting everything out of boxes and onto your bookshelves, figuring you can always organize them later — or perhaps one of you doesn’t care about organizing them at all? (Yes, that was Paper Doll you just heard go, “eek!”)

Will you be systematic, perhaps by author or title or genre? Is it enough for you to separate your fiction from your non-fiction? Or must fiction be chunked into historical eras and then by author, with non-fiction classified by Dewey and his (sexist, racist) decimal system or Library of Congress

What if you want to organize by genre and your Honeybunny painstakingly orders (and reorders) books in the order HB intends to read them? Readers have quirky preferences. In Anne Fadiman’s famous essay Marrying Libraries (linked below) she proposed to organize American authors alphabetically by last name, but put British authors chronologically, and then their works chronologically by their publishing date! 

How to organize books is hotly contested. A You.gov survey a few months ago asked more than 29,000 Americans how many books they owned and how they organized them. The results shows a variety of preferences; what’s the chance your Romeo or Juliet organizes books exactly as you do?

(I’d like to refrain from judgement, but — have you met me? I understand the 28% who don’t organize their books, but the 5% who don’t have books? Please, dear readers. Don’t fall in love with serial killers or people who don’t have books.)

  • What role should aesthetics play, particularly with books in public spaces (like the living room or den)?

Should crumbling (but well-loved) books go on the home’s fanciest library shelves? What if one person wants to organize by color, while the other is nauseated by anything too removed from the Dewey Decimal System?

If you share a library with someone who organizes books by whether the cover is red or purple, will you start re-thinking your commitment to the relationship?

What about rules for home library organizing? If you (like Paper Doll) are the type to bring all books up to the edge of the shelf, how will you share your library with someone who pushes books all the way back of the shelf so that the fronts aren’t smooth and picture frames and knickknacks get piled in front of them, or worse, overflow books get double-layered in front of the books in the back and … OMG, I’m hyperventilating!

  • What about the inherent public-facing messages related to content?

What if your partner is embarrassed by your middlebrow tastes? (Maybe they shouldn’t be such a snob about your collection!)

Perhaps you’re cringing at the political leanings reflected by your partner’s books? (You might start wondering if you shouldn’t be with someone whose politics give you “the ick.”) 

  • How will you organize the finances of growing your mutual libraries? 

This is part of a larger discussion in your household. If you’re “just” cohabiting, then you may each buy whatever books you want with your own money. But if you’re married, this is a whole other marriage counselor/financial advisor/professional organizer triple-threat conversation. Will you have “yours, mine, and ours” bank accounts and purchase books accordingly from those accounts?

What about digital purchases going forward? Having one unified Kindle account can be a mess, not only for organizing your digital libraries, but for dealing with ownership if the relationship sours. 

The Ugly Truth

The sad truth is that not all relationships last. The Gotye song Somebody I Used to Know is heartbreaking and universal, especially when he says,

No, you didn’t have to stoop so low
Have your friends collect your records and then change your number

Nobody wants to think about the end of a relationship — of pre-nups and post-nups and dividing community property. But other than personal photos (and the alluded-to music libraries), what could be harder to disentangle than a couple’s library of books?

  • How will you de-blend your book collections in case of a breakup or divorce?

In the mid-1990s, I lent my (now-former) boyfriend my copy of Sophie’s World: A Novel About the History of Philosophy

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The end of the relationship stung. Time heals, but I still seethe over the loss of the book.  

Which is more misery-inducing? Haggling over whose signed copy of To Kill a Mockingbird this is, or playing keep-away and refusing to take ownership of The DaVinci Code or Atlas Shrugged or Eat, Pray, Love?

If you do blend your libraries, perhaps take the precaution of putting your initials on the inside cover of your books. Maybe that little insurance policy that you won’t lose your books will give you the confidence to keep working together through the tough times?

BLENDING BOOKS: THE ONGOING DEBATE

This post was supposed to be about love, and now I’ve shared all the troubles I’ve seen in my professional (and personal) capacity. Maybe you’d like someone else’s take?

This 2018 piece from Minnesota’s Star Tribune, Bookmark: Should newlyweds combine their book collections?, offers a sweetly messy take.

The truth is, though, there’s no one right answer. Even the popular blog Book Riot can’t agree. In 2012, Book Riot published How to Say “I Do” to Shared Bookshelves Without Ruining Your Relationship; nine years later, it published, Don’t Merge Book Collections.

The thing is, they were both right.

The earlier, more optimistic post focused on the how-to advice: work together to create a new, joint organizing system; display your books so you and your partner can operate from a position of strength and wisdom; “Leave your Judgy McJudgerton pants in the closet” (which is quite possibly my favorite piece of organizing advice, ever); and compromise. The author, Book Riot’s Chief of Staff Rebecca Joines Schinsky, acknowledged that if things got hot (and not the good kind) over the discussions, you might just decide to blend everything except books.

But Schinsky ends with, “Like committing to a relationship, merging your bookshelves is an exercise in hope.” She eschews the idea of an exit strategy. 

A different Book Riot author, Associate Editor Danika Ellis, was less optimistic in 2021, giving four reasons not to blend books: personal libraries are a reflection of our unique, personal selves; our sorting systems are similarly personal; our systems should work for us; and, as I’ve already noted, relationships end. More cynical than her colleague, Ellis ends with:

Your books will outlive you, and they’ll certainly outlive your relationship, no matter how charmed. So make the right call: prioritize your books. You’ll thank me later.

ORGANIZE BOOKS (WITH YOUR SIGNIFICANT OTHER) WITHOUT BLOODSHED

Romantic or cynic, you can’t keep the books in moving boxes piled up around you. (Well, as I’ve seen with many clients over the years, you can, but I don’t advise it.)

A few years ago I wrote Paper Doll’s Pop Culture Guide to Decluttering with Your Valentine. It reflected my definitive approach to organizing with the love of your life. Before you think about organizing your mutual libraries, read that. (But I’ll now always look at my comment, “Purge the judgement and toss the guilt,” and wish I’d written, “Judgy McJudgerton pants.”) 

Beyond that, communication is key. You may have a history of long, romantic discussions over favorite books, authors, and genres, but have you ever talked about organization? Go through the issues I raised above: about resentment over invasion or not feeling at home, about parity and systems, about aesthetics vs. function, about finances. And yes, about how to have an insurance policy so the books don’t suffer if the relationship doesn’t make it.

Compromise is hard. I advise creating a system that requires as little compromise as possible. The best relationships are the ones where you are able to maintain a sense of your personal identity as you grow a mutual identity in a couple. You will face enough compromises in other areas of your relationship; do what you can to keep your relationship from impinging on your reading comfort.

Pare down your individual book collections, and then start with them separate —  your shelves and their shelves. You can always create shelves with books for family-specific topics like travel, cookbooks, or household care, and if you grow your family, books for any tiny humans who come along.

That said, be open to reversible experimentation. Getting rid of out-of-print books is hard to reverse, while a new organizing system causing confusion is easily remedied.

Look for helpful alternatives. If you’re both willing to blend libraries but not willing to cull duplicates, consider putting them on a bookshelf in your guest bedroom. Your guests can easily find something to read on sleepless nights. 

Create a library inventory. There are so many apps and online options, like Libib, Goodreads, Library Thing, for documenting what books you own and where you’ve organized them. Just scan your books’ bar codes and the information will populate in a database. Most let you create a field for who brought it into the household (a high-tech version of penciling your initials inside the cover). It will also help you identify duplicates if your collections are large and sprawl across rooms or even floors of the house.

LOVING ESSAYS ABOUT BLENDING LIBRARIES

No Valentine’s Week post on the romantic blending of libraries would be complete without sharing two seminal essays on the topic:

Marrying Libraries by Anne Fadiman, excerpted from her excellent book, Ex Libris: Confessions of a Common Reader. (My favorite essay in the collection is My Odd Shelf, but the whole book is a reader’s paradise.)

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The Books by Alexander Chee for The Morning News with this: 

It’s hard to explain how moving it was to me to sit down with Dustin’s books on the night I combined our fiction. It took me completely by surprise. I had truly thought it was an ordinary exercise. But it never is with books, I know now.

I began by carefully lifting them off the shelf, dusting them and taking them into the living room.

In some way that wasn’t apparent to me before they sat on the side table, waiting to be sorted, I could see these were the books that had kept him company in those years before he knew me, the books that had helped him turn into him. This hadn’t quite been apparent to me before I took them down to move them.

but also this bit about duplicates, which sums up the whole discussion:

You don’t keep the doubles because you believe you may not stay together. You keep the doubles because the one you own, that’s your friend. The one he owns, that’s his. To only have one, it would be like sharing an email address.

Not everything can be shared. And that isn’t a crisis. It’s how it should be.


If you share your home with a sweetie-pie, how do you organize your mutual book collections?

18 Responses

  1. Books! I grew up in a house of books. My parents had thousands of books. And many of our trips to NYC were to visit bookstores. Whenever they traveled, they always brought home more books, especially art books. They organized their books by category. So one room had travel books, another art books, etc…

    My husband and I also have a lot of books, although not as many as my folks had. After 40+ years of marriage, we have co-mingled most of our books. However, we each collect different categories. So truthfully, while the books mostly cohabitate, we have designated shelves for specific categories. And for the most part, the ‘interested party’ is the one who has organized those corresponding shelves.

    I have done book-organizing projects for clients. At least for one project, the client wanted the books organized by genre and then alphabetically by author. That was quite the task but satisfying.

    There are a lot of ways to go, but leading with love sounds like a good one.

    • Julie Bestry says:

      I love hearing how your family of origin and your created family have organized books. In the house where I grew up, there are two two-story built-in bookshelves flanking the fireplace. Almost all the books were my father’s; big, honking collections of Will & Ariel Durant histories, or Churchill’s books. Old, stolid, never looked at. Then there was one shelf of photo albums and one of my mom’s cookbooks. But my mom reads a lot; she’s better about paring down once she’s read something, but all of her “keeper” books are upstairs. No co-mingling.

      And I have to admit, all of my books (except the ones on my small desk-side shelf from which the above photo was taken) are organized by genre and then alphabetical by author. It’s easy when they’re your own books and you know the genre; not so easy when a client’s title is mystifying and you have to check the publisher’s stated genre on the back cover!

      Thanks for reading and sharing your thoughts!

  2. Great post! I have divided my books on one shelf and my husband’s books on another. It makes it easy to find what I am looking for.

    We also have different log-ins for our digital books, so we have our own books on our own devices. I don’t mind because we have such different tastes regarding books.

    And, if we do have one we need to share, we can easily share those books, particular books, with other family members.

    • Julie Bestry says:

      I love your approach, Sabrina. I think it’s the most logical and the least likely to cause confusion. And I feel doubly so for the way you handle your digital books!

      Thanks for reading!

  3. What a great idea for Valentine’s Day! I’m also an organizer and book lover, and I can relate to everything that she talks about. My husband and I have separate shelves for our books, as well as shelves for some we both love. Thanks for all the tips!

  4. Seana Turner says:

    This whole post has me laughing. I just worked with a client this morning where books was a big part of our conversation. She and her husband are both lawyers, smart, big book people. They have books everywhere. She was sharing a story about giving advice to friends who were taking their first European vacation, wondering about the suitcase weight limit. She suggested that they try and spread their books evenly between their bags to avoid last minute “overweight” issues at baggage check. Her friend laughed and said, “I think we’re fine on that one,” meaning not everyone goes to Europe with suitcases full of books. 🙂

    My husband has a home office, and his books live there. He keeps way more than I do. During COVID, he agreed to work with me on organizing his office, and ended up getting rid of a lot, so I’m at peace with that. I don’t really keep many books, so not an issue for me.

    My daughter, on the other hand, is a voracious reader and keeps them all. She has a dream of having a big personal library someday.

    When I work with clients, I suggest we talk about why they are keeping the various books (to read, to re-read, for reference, for sentimental reasons, to display, etc.). This helps determine what should go where.

    I love your idea, though, of tucking your initials into the inside cover of your favorites. Sadly, might come in handy someday!

    Here’s to love of reading and love of books – the good old paper ones, which are still my preference!

    • Julie Bestry says:

      If I made you laugh, Seana, I’ve performed my duties well! And I’m laughing about the books, because when I was a teenager, I used to fill my suitcases with books, but they were paperbacks and I was going to my grandmother’s condo in Florida, not someplace exciting like Europe.

      I read a lot of library books, which keeps my personal library from getting excessive. But I’d love to have a library like the one at Twain’s house, or the AD White Library at Cornell. https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/the-a-d-white-library-ithaca-new-york

      And yes, there’s nothing like the weight of a good book in your hands to keep you both grounded and elevated! Thank you for reading and sharing your thoughts!

  5. I am so loving this post. Parts of it really made me chuckle.
    My family is very book oriented. My home growing up was filled with books and my boys got books as rewards for good grades. Books are still favorite gifts.
    My husband reads but does not like to read long. He prefers short stories or inspirational pieces.
    He keeps his books in his office, and I keep my books in my office with the exception of one smallish bookcase in the kitchen that is mine.
    We each do a yearly purge to keep things under control.

  6. Blending book libraries is serious business! I’m of the mindset of at least partially blending books. While it’s an intimate act to reveal what books are part of your collection, isn’t intimacy part of being in a relationship?

    I think your book collection can reveal a deeper level of yourself to your loved one, and their reaction can be pretty telling. In fact, maybe one should reveal their book collection before finalizing decisions about cohabitating or marriage. LOL

    Maybe I’m just lucky that the person I married has a taste in books that, while not reflective of mine, piqued my interest. He’s introduced me to worlds I would have never thought to investigate on my own. I can’t say he’s ever read any of the books I’ve introduced into the household when we began cohabitating, but he also never bristled at my collection, either.

    Anyway, I’m rambling a little bit, but what a great topic to ruminate on!

    • Julie Bestry says:

      “Isn’t intimacy part of being in a relationship?” shouldn’t be controversial, but it is, at least when it comes to blending two things: finances and books. Our books may be more a part of our identity that our relationships. The books we keep have earned our trust; let us hope (but perhaps doubt) that the same is true of people’s partners. So yeah, it’s complicated. 😉

      And oh, yes, how someone appreciates your books (or doesn’t) is very telling! Thanks for reading and sharing your thoughts!

  7. This is a wonderful post Julie, when it comes to Sweetie and Darling mixing their books, it is a serious business. From most of the jobs I’ve done, especially homes, each individual have their own home office and their own libraries which makes it easy. But what about those tiny apartments where you can barely move around? unless it’s a very sentimental book like you mentioned, a lot of people are now downloading their books to read on their tablets or even listen to them during their commute.
    Thank you for this detailed and amazing blog like usual.

    • Julie Bestry says:

      You’re so right — I can’t imagine how difficult it must be for people who like to keep their tangible books without confusion in a small apartment. I’m an apartment-dweller, but there’s only one of me, and I’m not giving up my book space! 😉

      You’re right that many people are opting for digital, but there are still so many of us out there who just don’t enjoy reading long-form on a screen. (Then again, I also have a landline phone!)

      Thanks for reading and for your kind words!

  8. Fortunately, my beloved and I will never have this issue. I switched to Kindle books about 5 years ago and have acquired no new physical books since then. Prior to my Kindle-ization, almost all my books were smutty vampire romance novels. It is crystal clear to whom those titillating volumes belong. These days, all my Kindle purchases are British crime novels. Again, no mistaking whose book is whose. Happy reading, everyone!

    • Julie Bestry says:

      You’re so funny, and possibly psychic, as I originally had a paragraph about what you can discuss about entertainment instead of fussing over book space. I’d made a whole like about how you could debate Anne Rice’s vampires vs. Twilight’s — but it’s a trick, because the best vampire is Spike from Buffy! 😉

      That’s great that you have your stuff all squared away and don’t need to tussle over books!

  9. Jana Arevalo says:

    Wow, I’ve never really thought about it… 18 years married and we still keep our books mostly separated! I love all of your suggestions for merging books, though. Great post!

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