Subject: Books are fun!
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Posted on: 2023-05-28 22:28:10 UTC

I've had to severely downsize my collection over the years, as limited shelf space (and just like... living area space) has forced me to get rid of books. I have a truly outrageous number in storage, awaiting a day when I become a millionaire and can have a library. I am not going through boxes in the cellar for this little game, so some numbers are approximations. This is not a top ten either, since I decided to skip anyone I owned less than five books by. Some honourable mentions include Lisa Kleypas, Julia Quinn and Rainbow Rowell, with four books each!

7. Astrid Lindgren (5)
This is one of those approximations... I am actually not sure how many Astrid Lindgren books I still own. It's at least five: Mio, My Son, The Brothers Lionheart, Ronia the Robber's Daughter, Maddy of June Hill and Simon Small, which was always my favourite because it contained a collection of short stories that I adored that all had a theme of lonely children making friends with supernatural or fairy tale creatures. We have also had many picture books, and different versions of many other stories, and so I am pretty sure I've read most of her stuff at least once. I cannot highlight enough how fundamental Astrid Lindgren was to my childhood. In Sweden, she is still an absolute icon. We put her on our money.

6. Hilary McKay (5)
There is another book in the Casson Family series, apparently? I might need to get that and complete my collection. I have many feelings about this family and these books have made me cry.

5. CS Lewis (7)
I'll be honest with you, I am not sure I have my Narnia books. I think I do? But honestly they are so deep in storage, they might have been given away at some point. (Fun fact: In the Swedish translation Edmund sells his siblings out for toffee.)

4. Annie Dalton (12)
The Agent Angel (previously Angels Unlimited) series have eleven total works on Ao3, of which I have written seven. I regret nothing. These books deserved a bigger following. It had a morally ambiguous hot boy with an awkward redemption arc and everything! There could have been coffeeshop AUs and so many different parirings and my OTP would have been so popular! We could have had it ALL.

3. Neil Gaiman (20)
Most of this is in storage now too, which I regret sometimes because I want to reread Fragile Things real bad and I have no idea where it is! Here's a funny story about Neil Gaiman. A whole bunch of years ago, my much younger cousin was a huge, huge fan of Justin Bieber. During a family gathering the object of her affection was scheduled to appear on TV, whereupon she disappeared to watch him. She returned some moments later sobbing about her love for him. And I nodded in gentle understanding, thinking "ah, yes, young love, I certainly understand the concept. I have not felt that way about anyone in such a long time, though, and I never will again. I'm an adult now! I like things an adult amount!" A few weeks later Neil Gaiman talked at a culture event in Stockholm. I was in the audience. And yeah. I'm sorry, little cousin. I absolutely still get beng overwhelmed by emotions. That man is my Justin Bieber.

2. Terry Pratchett (30)
I don't have a complete collection of PTerry. It's a little bit of a security blanket thing. If I still have things left to read of his, then I don't have to say goodbye to the man himself. I still reread some of my favourites at least once every few years.

1. Margit Sandemo (82)
She was always going to take the top spot, as she was a ridiculously active writer. Her first series Sagan om Isfolket ("The Ice Clan Saga") was published in 1982-89 and was comprised of 47 books. I was obsessed with this series as a teenager and was extremely happy to have a complete collection of all three of her main series. They are firmly in storage these days, as they would leave room for little else if I had them out. All together they spawned dozens of memorable characters over a span of five centuries, with romance, magic, and an epic battle between good and evil. Do I recommend it these days? Eh, it does show its age in some awkward ways, even if I believe the intentions were good. I do still admire the scope of it, and wonder sometimes if that TV show they were going to make will ever actually happen.

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