Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Is it OK to fold a page in a novel? No. My rules for book lovers

- By John Warner John Warner is the author of “Why They Can’t Write: Killing the Five-Paragraph Essay and Other Necessitie­s.” Twitter @biblioracl­e

I was on a plane recently when I saw what I believed to be a great crime being committed.

A man, reading a hardcover book, upon pausing and wanting to mark the page, folded in from the corner in such a manner that the page was creased in a full diagonal from the top right to the middle of the page. It reminded me of the first fold when you make a paper airplane.

Reader, I gasped. I later determined that this man’s actions were not actually a violation of FAA rules, or any other law for that matter, but if you ask me, they should be.

Seeing this horrible act got me thinking about other things I’ve seen, so I thought I would do a public service and answer questions people may have about the proper care and treatment of books.

Q: What is the proper way to mark progress in a book? A:

It’s fine to use a bookmark, or if you’re reading a hardcover or a paperback with French flaps, to use the dust jacket or book flap to mark the furthest page read. Once you are past halfway, you should switch to the rear jacket flap. Bookmarks themselves can be anything from a bespoke purposebui­lt object to a receipt or an old gum wrapper. The most important criterion is that they not be so bulgy that they distort the pages or binding in the book.

The very top corner of a page can be creased to mark progress in a paperback book, but the pages should never be creased in a hardcover. Ever.

Q: Is it OK to write in a book? A:

Writing in books is encouraged if it is your book. It is great fun to highlight favorite passages or even talk back to the book in the margins. I have some books from graduate school where I’m as interested in reading what I was thinking 25 years ago as the book itself.

If it is not your book, or it is a library book, this is discourage­d because the owner of the book or future readers of the book have not asked for your insights. That said, one of my favorite things is to find well-marked books in used bookstores because they are a fascinatin­g look into the mind of another.

Q: Can I rest my books splayed, face down so the glue at the binding separates the pages from the cover, creating a kind of tunnel effect?

A: Even typing that question was like nails on a chalkboard to me. This is book abuse, and to be avoided if at all possible. I can hear the poor book spines breaking. You can have books fully splayed face up, though.

Q: If I loan a book to someone else, should I expect to get it back, or do I have to say something? A:

My recommenda­tion is for the receiver of the book to always ask if the lender wants it back and act accordingl­y.

Q: I saw an Instagram post where the books were shelved spines in so I was like a wall of neutral-colored pages facing out. Doesn’t that look cool? A:

It does not look cool. It looks sociopathi­c. I am open to any number of home shelving schemes — by author, by genre, even by color — and books definitely have some decorative purpose, but they are not purely decorative, and more importantl­y how would you ever hope to find the book you’re looking for?

Be kind to your books, and they’ll be kind to you in return.

 ?? GETTY ?? The horrors! Splaying a book face down is not to be tolerated. Use a bookmark to save your place.
GETTY The horrors! Splaying a book face down is not to be tolerated. Use a bookmark to save your place.

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