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Books

Fake Books Are a Real Home Decor Trend (nytimes.com) 98

If it looks like a book, feels like a book and stacks like a book, then there's still a good chance it may not be a book. From a report: Fake books come in several different forms: once-real books that are hollowed out, fabric backdrops with images of books printed onto them, empty boxlike objects with faux titles and authors or sometimes just a facade of spines along a bookshelf. Already the norm for film sets and commercial spaces, fake books are becoming popular fixtures in homes. While some people are going all in and covering entire walls in fake books, others are aghast at the thought that someone would think to decorate with a book that isn't real. "I will never use fake books," said Jeanie Engelbach, an interior designer and organizer in New York City. "It just registers as pretentious, and it creates the illusion that you are either better read or smarter than you really are."

Ms. Engelbach said she has frequently used books as decor, at times styling clients' bookcases with aesthetics taking priority over function, which is a typical interior-design practice. At Books by the Foot -- a company that sells, as its name suggests, books by the foot -- one can purchase books by color (options include "luscious creams," "vintage cabernet" and "rainbow ombre"), by subject ("well-read art" or "gardening"), wrapped books (covered in linen or rose gold) and more. The tomes are all "rescue books," ones that would otherwise be discarded or recycled for paper pulp, said Charles Roberts, the president of Books by the Foot's parent company, Wonder Book. During the pandemic lockdown in 2020, remote work created increased demand for the company's services. While it mostly specializes in the sale of real books, the company has also dabbled in the world of faux ones.

The book seller has cut books -- so only the spines remain -- and glued them to shelves for cruise ships,"where they don't want to have a lot of weight or worry that the books will fall off the shelves if the weather gets bad," Mr. Roberts said. There are other, sometimes counterintuitive, uses for fake tomes as well. Although it has the capacity to hold more than 1.35 million of them, many of the books in China's 360,000-square-foot Tianjin Binhai Library aren't real. Instead, perforated aluminum plates emblazoned with images of books can be found, primarily on the upper shelves of the atrium. While the presence of artificial books in a place devoted to reading has been widely criticized -- "more fiction than books," one headline mocked -- it remains a buzzy tourist attraction. After all, the books don't need to be real if it's just for the 'gram.

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Fake Books Are a Real Home Decor Trend

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  • First book: (Score:1, Funny)

    by Tablizer ( 95088 )

    "Everything Everywhere is Fake and Rigged, by Tondald Drump"

    • Re: (Score:1, Offtopic)

      by cayenne8 ( 626475 )

      "Everything Everywhere is Fake and Rigged, by Tondald Drump"

      Wow...that guy really (still) lives in your head, doesn't he?

      • by Anonymous Coward
        If you time-traveled back to Nicaragua in 2002, would you advise people to forget about Daniel Ortega? Having unworthy and dangerous leaders living rent-free in our heads is an immune reaction that will protect us in the future.
      • by Pascoea ( 968200 )
        1) Boo hoo. The comment was funny. 2) He's still, unfortunately, an active presidential candidate. Kind of front-and-center in people's minds for a good reason.
    • "Everything Everywhere is Fake and Rigged, by Tondald Drump"

      How about this set of fake books - Twitter Accounting Practices and Financial Records - The Jack Dorsey Years

  • TFA nails it (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Brett Buck ( 811747 ) on Tuesday May 02, 2023 @12:48PM (#63491612)

    "Pretentious" is the perfect description. Shallow people who think a good TikTok video is high art, trying to show how "old school" they are. "Affectation" would be another good description.

            I used to wonder why some people seemed dedicated to being something they aren't. Then, I met them and talked to them, and it made sense.

    • Re:TFA nails it (Score:4, Insightful)

      by war4peace ( 1628283 ) on Tuesday May 02, 2023 @01:22PM (#63491738)

      You know what's worse? People who buy books but never read them.
      My ex-wife's brother did that. He had full collections of books, not cheap, but never opened one.

      • Re:TFA nails it (Score:4, Insightful)

        by ranton ( 36917 ) on Tuesday May 02, 2023 @01:24PM (#63491744)

        Well it's definitely not worse. At least your ex-wife's brother was helping to fund authors. Still a bad habit, but not worse than buying fake books.

        • You may have a point here :)

        • by bn-7bc ( 909819 )
          we he could be a book collector, it's about as stupid (to us non collectors() as the "vinyl"collators considering and album (with the same music mind you) as somthing worthwhile because the vinyl is did another color (yes i mean the same tracks in the same order, the same bldy master record etc. Actually my friend collect vinyl and when i saw what to me was a duplicate (described above) my comment was, oh nice you have a duplicate, that must be handy for swapping purposes on meets etc, well he told me why i
      • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

        You know what's worse? People who buy books but never read them.
        My ex-wife's brother did that. He had full collections of books, not cheap, but never opened one.

        I have a pile of books I haven't read yet - I acquire books faster than I can read them.

        Why? They're interesting to me, and I want to read them, just I don't have the time to. Chances are if I waited to buy the books, they'd go out of print and I'd have to shell out more money to find a used copy somewhere (half my Amazon wishlist now consists of bo

    • I take offense at that. I met my second wife with Discipline and Punish [existentialcomics.com] by Foucault.
    • TBH this is a also prefect metaphor for a country in which everything else has also been hollowed out and turned into a decoration...
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      It could just be pragmatic. When interviewing over video link, having a bookshelf in the background might influence the interviewer. Same for politicians being interviewed from home, it might influence some voters. Politicians can also select the books to send a particular message, even if they interviewer won't necessarily broadcast every word they say, or ask them certain leading questions.

  • by taustin ( 171655 ) on Tuesday May 02, 2023 @12:49PM (#63491616) Homepage Journal

    "It just registers as pretentious, and it creates the illusion that you are either better read or smarter than you really are."

    But then, so does a wall covered in real books. Especially real books you've never read.

    • by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Tuesday May 02, 2023 @01:02PM (#63491654) Homepage Journal

      so does a wall covered in real books. Especially real books you've never read.

      A wall covered in real books you haven't read is pretentious. But if you think a wall covered in real books you have read is, then that's actually saying something about you.

      • by ranton ( 36917 )

        But if you think a wall covered in real books you have read is, then that's actually saying something about you.

        Eventually you have to either admit to being a hoarder or being pretentious though if you haven't just donated your books after reading them. I qualify as a bit of a hoarder, but I've still donated the vast majority of books I've ever bought. Once a year I just fill up a few boxes and take them to goodwill. I still have four Ikea bookshelves filled with books I can't seem to part with, but every year I eventually come to grips with being able to let go of a few more.

        Then again, if it wasn't for my wife I wo

        • by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Tuesday May 02, 2023 @01:27PM (#63491756) Journal
          If the books spark joy, and you have room for them, then you're not a hoarder. There's nothing wrong with keeping books around that you've read, even if you won't read them again. Sometimes just looking at the title is enough to bring back a good memory.
        • That's like saying you're a hoarder for having physical media instead of streaming everything. It doesn't have to be on display, of course. But books are hard to sort through when they're not. That's different from DVDs that are ripped to a media server and the originals are in compact binders. But it's still keeping the media because physical possession has value.

          • by taustin ( 171655 )

            It doesn't have to be on display, of course. But books are hard to sort through when they're not.

            Only if you're better at organizing them on the shelf than in other storage. There's no reason they can't be organized just as well in a climate controlled storage locker.

      • by taustin ( 171655 )

        Having read a lot of books is one thing. I've read, perhaps, thousands of books.

        Feeling the need to show off how many books I've read by covering a wall with them is something different. That's bragging about how well read, and presumably, therefore, smart, one is. Which is to say, pretentious.

        • I do have a bookcase full of books I've read. However, they're there because I want to keep and store them somewhere, not because I want to show them off.
          • by taustin ( 171655 )

            There are other, more efficient, cheaper, and better for the books ways to keep and store books than on display in your living room.

            Which leads me to believe that the "on display" part has significant value for you.

            • by laxguy ( 1179231 )

              yes, i like the look, color, smell and memories my books bring to me. whatever you think of me for having them is, well... thats on you.

            • I never said they were on display in my living room. As it happens, they're in a bookcase oriented to face my desk at arm's length for accessibility in my home office which means you can't actually see the books unless you're actually sitting at my desk. If you're anywhere else in my office, you can't see them. What you believe is irrelevant.
      • by Striek ( 1811980 )

        We have a full copy of the Encyclopedia Britannica, 1969. We certainly haven't read it all.

        It's just too beautiful to throw out, (and still smells fantastic) so it sits on one of our bookshelves.

      • by EvilSS ( 557649 )
        I have one of those, but it wouldn't fit in well with most decor. Most real books that aren't antiques or special leather bound editions look either gaudy with the dust jacket on, or bland with it off. And of course, paperbacks just don't display well, especially after a few readings.
    • What if it's not even trying to look real [amazon.com]?

      I lived in England for a while and saw a lot of fake electric fireplaces [flames.co.uk]. At first I thought they were incredibly cheesy because they didn't even look real. But then I realized they were so unreal, they weren't actually trying to trick anybody - they're just a reminiscent way to decorate a wall heater. Somehow that made me feel better about them.

    • by ranton ( 36917 )

      "It just registers as pretentious, and it creates the illusion that you are either better read or smarter than you really are."

      But then, so does a wall covered in real books. Especially real books you've never read.

      My walls are covered in real books, and I've probably only read about half of them. I simply have a bad habit of buying more books that interest me than I can reasonably read, mostly because I've struggled to change my book buying habit after having kids 8 years ago (when my available time to read nose dived).

      So while I meet the definition of pretentious you listed, I've still donated the majority of books I have ever read. I'd still call myself more of an undisciplined spender, hoarder, and optimist than p

      • You could always do what Forrest J Ackerman did: he could honestly claim that he'd read every last word in every book in his extensive collection because before putting a new book on the shelf he'd open it up to the last page and read the last word in the book. You'd be amazed how many people took that claim seriously.
  • .... but where am I going to put all my books if I use fake books for decoration?

    I've moved over 30 times in my life and have lost untold numbers of books, some I wish I had not gotten rid of, due to moving capacity issues. The three large bookshelves in the living room are now full, again, and the shelves on all the end tables are also stacked high with books in one state of being read or another... and I've got boxes of mostly-read books needing a bookshelf.

    Illiteracy has become a bit of an epidemic, hasn

    • Re:But where... (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Brett Buck ( 811747 ) on Tuesday May 02, 2023 @01:01PM (#63491652)

      Illiteracy is not quite descriptive - aliteracy, maybe. They *can* read, they just don't. Add in "what do I care about what old white people said 260 years ago?" and "I read on the internet, why kill trees?" with their kindle full of John Grisham, I can see how they wouldn't consider it a priority.

              You can see the effects, idiots fall for absolutely *ancient* scams that Shakespeare thought were old had, they know absolutely nothing of history, so they have no idea how well off they are, enabling them to complain and claim persecution for the most trivial perceived slight.

    • but all those Unleashed and Manning series books are not so esthetic.

      • I should qualify this. The Manning series often has esthetic covers in terms of say being on a coffee table, but not when mass filed in a bookshelf.

      • by CAIMLAS ( 41445 )

        No idea what those are. Most of the books I read have a "first published" date 20-70+ years ago.

    • by jwhyche ( 6192 )

      Same boat. I've moved all over the place and lost or gotten rid of more books than I can count. I had plastic tubs full of books, mostly cheap paperbacks that I bought from second had book stores. When I got married, my new wife needed space and guess what she insisted we get rid of?

      That should have been my first clue she was bats ass crazy. Who doesn't want a old tub of classic star trek and star wars paperback? Apparently, the local library and used bookstore didn't. They took the other books

      • I know people like the tactile nature of physical books. But e-ink beats paperbacks in every way. Hardcovers are actually nice to look at and easy to keep open while reading. Paperbacks are just the worst option other than being cheap secondhand.

        • But e-ink beats paperbacks in every way.

          One does not have to worry someone else will remove their physical book from their possession, unlike digital books.

          One does not have to worry someone else will change the wording of their physical book, unlike digital books.

          One doesn't have to repeatedly charge their physical book to read it, unlike digital books.

          One is free to loan out their physical book to someone else without any restrictions other than it being returned, unlike digital book
          • Most of those are not the format, but the provider. You can strip the DRM and get rid of most of that.

            I do have to charge my e-ink Kindle...once a month. And that's using it daily.

            • by jwhyche ( 6192 )

              I have found there are two classes of books that I read. Those that I want to keep and those that I will read and probably never read again.

              Books that I want to keep, like Harry Potter, The Dresden Files, Clarks and Nortons works, I will buy and strip the DRM off. I have complete control over those books. I will read them on anything I want too.

              For the second class I found subscribing to Kindle Unlimited to be a good choice. There is a large selection of books that I will read, probably not finishi

      • by CAIMLAS ( 41445 )

        I only read fiction on kindle, for some reason.

        Anything I might want to reference or share gets purchased in paper.

  • by JustNiz ( 692889 ) on Tuesday May 02, 2023 @12:57PM (#63491636)

    >> once-real books that are hollowed out

    I mean it doens't even make them smaller. Lets take some books and make sure I cant accidentally learn something?

    • Because it's leftover waste from destroying the pages to create other dumb art.

    • You use those to stash things you'd rather people didn't find, such as weed in backward places that still put you in prison for having it in your possession.
  • by cpt kangarooski ( 3773 ) on Tuesday May 02, 2023 @12:57PM (#63491640) Homepage

    If you're going to use books strictly for decoration you can at least show off a bit by using real yet uncut books. There is literary precedent.

  • by timeOday ( 582209 ) on Tuesday May 02, 2023 @01:00PM (#63491646)
    Still got some shelf space to fill next to my collection of vinyl records I can't play [loudwire.com].
    • Still got some shelf space to fill next to my collection of vinyl records I can't play [loudwire.com].

      It's interesting that you have the whole downsizing and tiny house groups while at the same time you have another group that is buying useless stuff with no practical value to them.

  • by drwho ( 4190 ) on Tuesday May 02, 2023 @01:08PM (#63491676) Homepage Journal

    In the late '80s, a Burger King was built in my town. Upon my first entry, I was delighted to see a shelf full of books, and after getting my meal, sat down near it and tried to grab a book (I think it was "The Brothers Karamazov") only to find that I couldn't, and the whole thing was a dummy - a prop. I was upset, and then worried what else there was false. I then doubted the royalty of the supposed king, and if what I was eating was really beef. On the whole, it was a step down from the mini-golf which had previously been on the site..

  • Ebooks are far more convenient.

    Especially for those of us with eyesight problems.

    • by JP205 ( 263673 )
      Fair enough, but the dead tree editions work so much better for those of us with electricity problems.
      • My Kindle Paperwhite lasts a solid month of an hour or two a day usage. I do read at night with the backlight on the lowest setting, though. If I had electricity problems, I could charge it with the smallest of solar panels once every couple of weeks.

    • For ephemeral fiction, I agree heartily. For fiction I'll reread (Gene Wolfe, Tolkien) or reference books on, say, woodworking, having physical copies is quite nice.
    • by avandesande ( 143899 ) on Tuesday May 02, 2023 @01:57PM (#63491884) Journal
      I have fake ebooks on my tablet
    • by Striek ( 1811980 )

      I have eyesight problems, but just nearsightedness.

      It's quite relaxing to take my glasses off / contacts out and read a book. In a twist of irony, as my eyes age, those "eyesight problems" for me keep me able to read small print comfortably.

    • Ebooks are far more convenient.Especially for those of us with eyesight problems.

      My situation exactly (and because e-books are so easy to get I do more reading than I ever did on paper), which is why when I want to look pretentious I use a wall of books as my Zoom background.

  • by Strider- ( 39683 ) on Tuesday May 02, 2023 @01:15PM (#63491714)

    I just want books liek "Fromage to Eternity" "Grated Expectations" "Waiting for Gouda" and so forth.

    Wallace absolutely had his priorities right.

    • I wouldn't be surprised to see these turn up in my local Barnes and Noble. They already have "Caught Bread Handed", "Fudge and Jury", and "Another One Bites the Crust" (with many others). Link: Bakeshop Mysteries [bookseriesinorder.com]
  • by q_e_t ( 5104099 ) on Tuesday May 02, 2023 @01:28PM (#63491760)
    My concern is more funding the purchase of more books and working out where additional shelves for them might fit. In that sense, e-books are useful due to lesser storage requirements, but I have quite a few physical books that are out of print and definitely not available electronically.
  • .. the complete set of O'Reilly Xlib, XToolkit and Motif programming and reference manuals. I may have cracked one or two of them open back in the old days. But much of that content is also available in man pages. So no need to drag 5 feet of bookshelf content to the coffee shop with my laptop when I've got an application to write. But they sure look cool in the bookcase.

    I also have a copy of the CRC Standard Math Tables. I have to confess only making it about halfway through reading the log tables before

  • HEY, ARE YOU TIRED OF REAL BOOKS? Just cluttering up your house, where you open ’em, and they actually have something to read? And see words? Not our books!
  • I suppose that in one way it's just art imitating the past, the fact that they are fake likely doesn't even reigster in the heads of the people they are trying to impress. They are probably too young to appreciate having a book collection themselves. To them it's a bit of throwback decor. Amongst my older friends, we can all appreciate a good library. For the younger people I know, it's mostly a curiosity unless they are one of the rare ones enthralled by physical books, or educated in a profession that

  • It's not enough to own books you don't read, you have to make some kind of psychopathic statement by guaranteeing they can never be read by anybody.

    This kind of person is probably baffled why it would be in bad taste to stuff and mount their dead relatives in the living room.
  • ...and discarded at least 95% of our books. I kept a few hundref in my little man-cubby, because I have always loved having a wall of books to look at. But new books are now ebooks, which is just practical.

    If I found a bunch of fake books in someone's house, my opinion of them would plummet. I would understand fake books in someplace like Ikea, where they have fake stuff sitting on furniture to show what it could look when in use. In someone's house? Pathetic...

  • If you go to Versailles there's rooms that are filled with fake books. And we all know what happened to the residents of that palace.
  • Tactile and nostalgic for sure. But you need a lot of wall space to store them, especially if you're an avid reader and have "a touch of grey."
  • These people are disgusting. The only justifiable good use of fake books is to hide drugs, guns, adrenochrome blood from dead babies, and freeze-dried pieces of my missing ex-wife.
  • by dosun88888 ( 265953 ) on Tuesday May 02, 2023 @07:26PM (#63492852)

    Are fake books purchased by people who never had any books in the first place and want some for decoration, or are they for people who have a library of embarrassing books that they don't want to show off?

    Gonna go out on a limb and "not having enough books" is probably not a problem many slashdot readers have.

  • I'm very important. I have many leather-bound books and my apartment smells of rich mahogany.

  • Start by reading about The Great Gatsby who was a shallow representation of a person and owned a library of fake books.
    • by whitroth ( 9367 )

      I recently read that for the first time.

      Bleah. This is the ultimate novel of the Jazz Age? A bunch of well-off to rich people (working people, the 90% of us, don't actually appear), not one of whom I like, nor would I want to spend time with.

  • For complete and total frauds, who actual don't read (like TFG, who couldn't read the daily security briefings).

    Fake books, for fake people.

  • I read at least one novel a week... all eBooks borrowed from the library ... no one that actually likes to read would be fooled by all the fakes lined up on shelves, especially when the owner of those fakes starts to talk.
  • ..just to make fake ones? We're fully in simulation land now aren't we? https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wik... [wikipedia.org]
  • Personally, I think this is a very stylish idea. I have such a shelf, but they are all real. I love satire, found where there are only satire [phdessay.com] and nothing else. It is important to me that all the books on my shelf are real. I love to turn the pages and smell the paper.

God doesn't play dice. -- Albert Einstein

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