BookMoochers Saturday

After my interview with Lauren Kate, I spent the rest of the Saturday with friends from BookMoochers Pilipinas (the group for Filipino BookMoochers) at the Libreria Bookstore in Cubao X for our year-end get-together.

Traditionally, BookMoochers Pilipinas gatherings were held at Triccie’s house, but since Triccie opened her bookstore, we’ve been hanging out at Libreria. And you know what? It’s just as homey!

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BookMoochers Pilipinas Summer Mixer

Last night was the much awaited summer mixer for BookMoochers Pilipinas, the local group for members of book trading site BookMooch. It was one of the muggiest days in this infernally hot summer, but even the heat couldn’t stop us from heading over to Triccie’s house for our get-together.

Present last night were me, Triccie, Patti, Gege, Czar, Marie, Cecille, Shy, Paolo, Patrick, and JoelG. We haven’t gotten together as a group since last November, and since a lot of members were celebrating their birthdays in April and May (Triccie, Marie, Czar, Cecille, and Fran) we decided a summer party was in order!

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Reading in the 21st century

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Reading never goes out of style, even in the age of technology.

In the August 1894 issue of Scribner’s magazine, an article by Octave Uzanne, predicted “The End of Books,” proposing that in the 20th century, the printed page will be replaced by “storyographs,” patented cylinders containing recordings of books, and writers replaced by “Narrators”  that read stories aloud for the recordings. Uzanne imagines today’s libraries transformed into “phonographotecks” or “phonostereoteks,” repositories for the “storyographs.” He also imagined portable players that he called “pocket phono-opera-graphs.”

While Uzanne’s predictions almost accurately cover audiobooks, ebooks, mp3 players, and personal ebook readers, he was wrong on one count: the introduction of these technologies did not herald the end of books, but rather gives the 21st century person new ways to enjoy the printed page, enhancing the reading experience for the page-turner.

mibfThe Manila International Book Fair lists the top reading technologies, proving just how relevant reading still is in the 21st century.

As the Manila International Book Fair, the paramount event of the Philippine book industry, marks its 30th anniversary this year on Sept 16-20 at the SMX Convention Center, it once again welcomes book lovers to celebrate it celebrates the written word in all its forms.

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In my mailbox

I dropped by the post office today, to pick up some packages before I set off to Sagada.

Here’s what I got:

1) My third copy of I Capture the Castle, from Heather in Oregon. I am still choosing which one I’ll give Mika (my best friend), but I’m keeping two copies for myself… I just love this book!


2) The British kids edition of Harry Potter and Order of the Phoenix, which completes my British set. I mooched it all the way from Switzerland, and the moocher Suprig (a real sweetheart!) also sent me some chocolate ladybugs, gummy hearts, and and Ovaltine bar! Yay.

and 3) an amazing smorgasbord from wired_lain in Japan (I just love mooching from her!): two Tarepanda books, a Japanese version of Howl’s Moving Castle, a penguin bookmark, a Laputa postcard, a sanrio stationery set, willy wonka fun dip, a goody bag filled with almond and cashew roca and some chocolates, a roller stamp, and… sweet potato Kitkat! Thanks so much!!!!


And here’s my version of packing light for my trip to the mountains: no hardcovers! Oh, and I also packed Peter Mayle’s A Dog’s Life, which I’ve already started. Hope I can make a dent in these….


I’ll be away for the long weekend with some Flipper friends, we’re soaking in some food, fun, nature and culture in the Mountain Province, and won’t be back til Monday. I doubt there’s internet there and phone signal’s iffy so I’ll be out of reach for a bit. Don’t worry, I’ve advanced some blog posts (including this one) so you’ll have something to read over the weekend.

Happy long weekend everyone! Squee!

A love affair… with BookMooch


A year and three months ago, I discovered BookMooch, and life, as I knew it, went flying on a crazy tangent.

How has BookMooch changed my life? Let me count the ways:

1) My To Be Read (TBR) pile has over 200 (okay, so it’s nearly 300, but who’s counting?) books in it, and I acquire books faster than I can read them.

2) I have received nearly 500 books from the Philippines and all over the world, including the US, Canada, China, Japan, Singapore, Iran, Australia, UK, the Netherlands, Ireland, Finland, Germany, Italy, France, sweden, Trinidad and Tobago, Portugal, Brazil, and more, and sent over 500 books to these countries as well.

3) I have become acquainted with postal procedures and have ingratiated myself with my postmen (of my office and of my residence), postal workers and customs officer (who had a magical change of heart after I uhmm dangled a prospective subpoena in front of his nose), and have learned that snail mail still works! And that good things come to those who wait.

4) I have waded through more bargain book bins this year than my whole life combined, seeking out cheap books for my BookMooch inventory, because…

5) I have learned that one person’s trash is another person’s treasure, and that giving away the books I don’t want to keep to people who will love them and give them good homes is a most gratifying feeling, especially when a P5 (approx. $0.10 USD) is a book someone halfway across the world has been in search of for so long.

6) Even without my digital kitchen scale (a wonderful investment!) I have learned to approximate weight in 250g increments (because those are the weight classifications for surface mail) by holding objects in my palm, which comes in handy when picking out bargain books for mooching, eking out the last odd kilo in check-in baggage, and estimating the cost of fresh produce at the supermarket.

7) I have an excuse to stock up on heavy brown wrapping paper, catalog envelopes, packaging tape, book-sized plastic bags (for insulation), bubble wrap, scotch tape and markers to wrap mooches in (the same way I have an excuse to hit the bargain bookstore twice a week). I also have a stack of over 500 postcards (mostly from various counters here and in Singapore thanks to my sister dear!) for writing notes for my mooches.

8) I have gone through quite a few recyclable canvas bags that have burst due to the sheer number of books I stuffed into them… Once the handles literally popped off after I claimed 8 parcels at the post office!

9) I have made wonderful friends, such as the BookMoochers Pilipinas family, which holds MoochParties every so often to showcase the brilliance of our members (we have BookMooch Jeopardy, BookMooch auctions, bookswaps) and we’ve organized bargain bookstore warehouse raids too! I’ve also made wonderful friends abroad, like wired_lain in Japan who has been supplying me with the Japanese books (and chocolate and green tea and other odds and ends like a funny talking calculator and a Doraemon notepad) I want, Vee in California who has sent me a lot of wonderful books (and chocolate and coffee and pretzels!), and the countless other members who have gone out of their way to send me a book that I want.

10) I have pimped BookMooch to everyone who will listen (and sometimes even those who won’t), including my friends, the Flippers, my officemates (whose eyes go agog at the packages (and even boxes!) of books shipped to me at work), unsuspecting bookstore browsers and coffeehouse patrons (hehe, I slip in a BM card in strategic locations every so often), national broadsheet readers (yup, I wrote a full-page article for Manila Bulletin), and even marketing officers of bookstores and publishing houses (hehehe)

11) I now have a growing collection of books I can’t read because they’re not in English but I love them all the same, including the film books of the Studio Ghibli films, and yes, my now-famous collection of international editions of Harry Potter (yes, it often induces some amazingly dexterous eye-rolling but I don’t care) which is now close to 80 books, including hmm, let’s see, Japanese, Chinese, contraband Persian, Portuguese, Brazilian Portuguese, Latin, Italian, German, Spanish, Irish, British Kids, British Adult, US, Czech, Polish, Danish, Swedish, Croa
tian, Israeli, Jewish, Ancient Greek, and many more editions (one day I will blog about all of them, I promise)

My Harry Potter shelf
12) I’ve learned the value of time, down to the single second, after repeatedly experiencing the mad scramble for a highly coveted book seconds after it gets listed – I must tell you, I never imagined I’d break out into a sweat just clicking on “save” (on the BMP threads) or “mooch book now”

13) My name is now a trademark in my book circles, because my irrational and obsessive habit of “upgrading” paperbacks into hardcovers, which my book club friends call “doing a Blooey”

If you’re not already on BookMooch, I imagine reading through my list would have confused you, so here’s the lowdown, which I’m borrowing from that article I wrote on Manila Bulletin last year (go take a look at it if you want).

BookMooch (www.bookmooch.com) is a free website where you can give away books you don’t need or want. In return, you get to “mooch” the books you want from other people.

John Buckman, former CEO and primary programmer of Lyris Technologies, and founder of online record label Magnatune, came up with the idea for the site because he needed more space for his books but couldn’t bring himself to throw books away.

“I had stacks of books on my shelves that have been read once, but will never read again. The local used bookstore would only be interested in a few of them, and will pay next to nothing for the books they do want. I figured there’s got to be a better use for perfectly good books” notes Buckman in an interview posted on the site.

“On the practical side, the opportunity to save money and free up shelf space is a motivation to use BookMooch. But not everything has to be about making profit,” Buckman explains. “Sometimes, it’s fun to just give a book to someone. It feels good to recommend a book to someone, to pass it on, so they’ll enjoy it.”

BookMooch also offers a solution for books that are hard to find, out of print, or not locally available, because you never know – somewhere in the world, someone could be willing to part with a copy of that book.

BookMooch is like a giant bookstore, of all the bookshelves in people’s homes,” Buckman states. “By aggregating everyone’s home book collection, we should have the best selection of used books on the planet.”

How it works:

Basically, BookMooch works on a point system. In order for you to get the books you want, you need to earn points, which work as the BookMooch currency.

In your inventory, enter books that you’re willing to give away, and you get 1/10th of a point for each book. So for every 10 books in your inventory, you get 1 point.

Bookmooch has a built-in search engine that reflects if a book is available, the number of copies available, the users who are giving away the book, and even related editions of the book.

So when someone wants a book in your inventory, you respond to the request, and send the book to them. You are awarded one point for each book sent locally (taken from the requestor’s account), and 3 points if the book is sent to another country (2 from the requestor, 1 bonus point awarded by BookMooch for the effort of sending abroad).

While you shoulder the expense of sending a book to someone, you mooch the books you want for free. When you find a book you like and request it from a person who is willing to send it to you, points from your account get transferred to the sender’s account (1 point local, 2 points for international mooches). When you receive the book, you get another 1/10th point (.1) by leaving feedback for the sender.

If the book you want is not available, you can add it to your wishlist, and you automatically get an email notification once someone adds it (or an edition of the book) to their inventory. If you click the “get from Amazon” link in your wishlist instead of waiting for a free copy, BookMooch gets a small (5%) commission from Amazon.

My prize finds? I really can’t single out, there’ve been so many, especially for the hardcover fiend that I am. Let’s just say my present collection will not even be half of what it is now if not for BookMooch; scrolling through my blog entries, you’ll find that almost every other book in there was a mooch.

Sign up for BookMooch now, and mooch from me or thousands of other moochers all over the world. And if you need help getting started, we at BookMoochers Pilipinas will always be glad to show you the ropes and regale you with our best mooching stories.

Hope to see you on BookMooch soon! By the time you rip open that package of that first international mooch, I swear, your life will never be the same again.

Now off to what looks like a great Saturday. Don’t forget to switch off your lights for Earth Hour, everyone! :)