Scottish Daily Mail

Vicious threats for the blogger who turned her books round wrong way

- By Alisha Rouse Showbusine­ss Correspond­ent

A PRISTINE offwhite shelf with neat rows of books is not the kind of image that usually sparks hateful comments.

But the latest interior design trend – backwards books – has started a social media frenzy so vicious that a British blogger received aggressive threats from strangers.

Lauren Coleman suggested reversing books on the shelves – leaving the pages facing out – to stop colourful spines dominating the decor.

But the minimalist concept led to Mrs Coleman receiving dozens of abusive messages online. The 35yearold was stunned by the backlash after Ideal Home magazine ran a snap of her bookshelf headlined: ‘Lauren keeps the look neutral by stacking books back to front.’ She has since been threatened and mocked, with one man saying via social network Facebook that he would ‘kick her head in’.

Londoner Mrs Coleman, who was inspired by a similar design on picturesha­ring site Pinterest, said: ‘People started being extremely abusive … people started threatenin­g to come round my house to kick my head in. I can take a joke, but I did not anticipate that level of abuse’.

Despite contacting Facebook, the stylist said no action was taken. She told The Times: ‘I got an autogenera­ted reply saying my complaint did not meet the required criteria.’

Mrs Coleman runs lifestyle blog Rock My Style, which has more than 17,000 Facebook followers. The backwardsb­ooks idea appears to have originated in October on a US design blog. Mrs Coleman explained: ‘Too many books of different colours can make a shelf look cluttered … It was better than storing them in a cupboard.’

‘I can take a joke, but I didn’t anticipate abuse’

 ??  ?? Spine-chilling: This book-storing method led to a backlash for Mrs Coleman, inset
Spine-chilling: This book-storing method led to a backlash for Mrs Coleman, inset
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