How do you keep track of your list of books?
this is "collection development", but from a personal point of view...
How do you keep track of a list of books, in some way that it's usable and useful at the library, usable and useful at Amazon, handy with you when you are walking through some interesting independent bookstore or doing research online?
This ends up being complicated enough that it's hard to say that there's one "best" answer, since different people are doing different things with that list. Let's go through a few of them.
At the Ann Arbor District Library, they have a feature that lets my checkouts get saved so that when I check out a book it gets added to a list which I can subsequently browse or download. Handy for retrospectively remembering what I was reading, or for browsing through again for ideas on things to reread, or refinding a book to recommend.
There is of course the Amazon wish list, which in addition to saving books for you to buy later, also helps their recommendation system trigger suggested new purchases for you. For me most of the time these days the recommended book gets pulled over to the library web site to check out or put on hold or suggest if it's a title they don't have.
For keeping lists of books in some social way, I'm using Librarything; the big advantage to that is that you can surf your way through your collection and others collections and find kindred spirits, people who have found that same book printed only 5000 times and interesting enough to make a comment on it. There are other book list sharing systems which I haven't used as much.
Paul Bausch wrote a book list managment application once upon a time that I used to keep my book list in, largely a list of kids books; that was a simple annotated list and a publishing tool very similar to blogger for generating a page full of cover images and links. I liked it, but there wasn't a business in it, but I still liked the model where the hosting site generated a page that you published yourself.
Melissa Kiser alerted me to the book list management service on worldcat.org - which gets you a huge collection to search through and then pick items that you want to save for later. It's handy in that it works across libraries, so that you can search in worldcat and create a list which would be useful to reference to find the closest library that holds a work.
Did I mention paper? Yes, paper. Write down things you want to read on a piece of paper, maybe a lovely little durable book, and work your way through them as you find them.
Similarly, there should be lots and lots of not very high tech ways to use spreadsheets to keep track of reading lists, either an offline list which you dump out from time to time, or an online list in Google Spreadsheets that keeps track. The Google version could even do lookups for you through a function call and tell you something about book status in your library or the cost of a used book (writing said functions an exercise to the reader).
You'd like a mobile phone to be useful in this. It's not absurd to repurpose your mobile's address book to put in author names, and then jog your memory at the book-place of authors you're looking for by browsing that category in your address book. For modern living authors that can actually be a really good idea, since in this day of the net more of them will have their own web pages and more will be accessible in some way.
How do you keep track of books?
(this post missing some links)
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