ITT: We discuss strategies of re-appropriating literature, particularly from university and public libraries and discuss our recent exploits.
>be me >be a highly intelligent individual who is always looking to maintain thriftiness (it’s a virtue) while broadening my horizons >while wearing headphones past my university libraries door scanners I noticed the regular high pitched ringing was absent >this could only mean one thing
My friends, I tell you it has been an excellent week in the world of literary reappropriation! Fortune truly smilies on the ambitious, and my hunch about the door scanners proved to be correct, so being the crafty individual that I am, I did not hesitate to seize the opportunity! So far I have practically waltzed out of the front door with The Pale King, Consider The Lobster, Blood Meridian, Solaris, Invanhoe, and the complete Adventures of Tintin. What a haul!
Waiting in a dentist's office might take a magazine am I u yet I think so 2bh btw I only read the first three lines of your post
Charles Cooper
Please be constructive, this is a serious thread.
Bentley Harris
I stole Thus Spoke Zarathustra and Beyond Good and Evil when I was 18, I think that's about it.
Josiah Moore
Quality choices friend!
Anthony Gray
i'm a total hacker i libgen
Ryder Rogers
Fine. The first and only book I stole from a retail store (when I was 13) was a copy of The Book Thief. Not even kidding. The second one I took was a copy of Snow Crash from my local library. Then I grew up and now I occasionally donate my old books to the library.
Jason Jackson
No joke, I'm reading Snow Crash right now
Bretty fun
Brayden Scott
I'm glad you are taking the dfw out of the library so young students won't be exposed to his shitty writing, in fact I would forgive all the other thefts just for you having done this service
Ayden Hill
stole a copy of V. from Barnes and Noble awhile back. Only theft I've done