The bread and butter of an Oxfam bookshop is re-stocking, refreshing, making look good, making the shop look cared for – and that involves culling/rejecting/sending books to a central warehouse where they might get another life- chance.
( I am sorry if you are wincing at this point, but we have to be ruthless in our standards if we want to be a quality second-hand bookshop that happens to be raising money for very good causes.)
This is the result of the alarmingly many donations on Saturday – yes just one day – again I am sorry but we do have to do it.

Anyway, the word of last week was titivating.
I was surprised that some of our volunteers didn’t know that word, but one fellow (young) volunteer looked it up and said, ‘Ah now I understand.’
Oxford English Dictionary says: ’titivate something – to improve the appearance of something by making small changes.’
So, once you have done the ruthless bit of culling books, you have to look around the shop and titivate it.
For example, do you know what a front-facer is? Of course you don’t, why would you? but once I have explained it, it will be obvious.
It is a book (on a stand) which had its cover facing you. You might be surprised to know how many of them sell compared to books which only show you their spine.
Have a look when you are next in a bookshop – they will all have them.
So, front-facers need to look good, and then they sell and then you need to find another one which looks as good – and repeat.
Shelves need to look full. Half empty shelves never sell – they look too sad and tired.
So, you have to fill up shelves and that means having stock to fill them with.
Given that we can’t order our stock, that can mean juggling.
We were short of history – which we never usually are – but we were.
So, we moved a shelf of Folio Society books and used them to fill a shelf and used the history books on that shelf to ‘fatten’ up the shelves above.
When we get more history, we will move the Folios again.
But you can’t just fill up any shelf with what you have lots of. You can’t put ‘humour’ or ‘self help’ under history – not really….
And whilst I am on the subject of history, let me tell you about some treats of books which are now for sale on the internet.
One small book and three weighty tomes.
The small book is a ‘finger book’ and was given to young men going off to WW1 by, I am told, by godparents and was designed to be slipped into a uniform pocket.

I have no idea what story this little book has to tell, but it is a lovely, and possibly, sad thing.
And, if that book could tell a story, these books actually do.
They are a glimpse of the social history of Portsmouth.
They are the record of the council’s deliberations and decisions in 1913,1914 and 1918 – not least the Education and Distress Committees.
It is the index which gives you an insight into the attitudes and decisions of the policy/rules makers of the time.
I will leave you with some images of that.
But just before I go, I will tell you that the result of all of us titivating, we took £1411.10 last week – we are very ‘chuffed’ which according to the Collins dictionary is ‘pleased, delighted, gratified, etc.’ And we are.


and some more

