The bond between a reader and their bookshelf is intimate and almost sacred. As I’ve written about literature, my collection has constantly evolved—growing, shrinking, and shifting with my life. Each spring, crowded home shelves remind me: our libraries do more than store books. They quietly tell our stories through spines and dust jackets.
Spring cleaning your bookshelf isn’t just about making space; it’s a chance for honest self-reflection as a reader. It prompts you to remember who you were with each book, who you are now, and who you’re becoming. I’ve found it’s also one of the most emotionally challenging decluttering tasks.
The Emotional Weight of Books
Before sharing practical steps, it’s important to acknowledge something non-readers might not understand. Letting go of books can feel like a betrayal. They hold memories of the moments you read them. These memories include a college apartment with Toni Morrison. They capture a beach vacation with Elena Ferrante. They also bring to mind a tough winter soothed by poetry.
When I donated my old copy of The Norton Anthology of English Literature from college, it was falling apart. It was filled with notes I wrote at nineteen that now make me cringe. But holding it felt like holding onto my younger self’s dreams. She truly believed she could understand every line of The Waste Land. Letting it go meant accepting I had grown past that version of myself, and that was okay.
This emotional layer is why bookshelf spring cleaning matters. It’s not only about minimalism. It’s about making space, both physically and mentally, for new experiences. It also involves honoring books that have shaped you.
The Three-Category System: Keep, Donate, Reread
I’ve developed a three-category approach that balances sentimentality with practicality. As you handle each book, ask yourself which category it belongs to:
Books to Keep
These are your keepers—the volumes that have earned permanent residence on your shelves. To decide if a book belongs here, ask yourself a few questions. Do you actively use this book? Do you reread it? Does it hold lasting significance or irreplaceable personal meaning to you? Books usually fit because they offer frequent reference, repeated enjoyment, personal transformation, beauty, or deep sentimental value.
Reference and Research Books: I write about literature professionally. I keep comprehensive poetry anthologies. I also have collections of literary criticism and biographies of writers. If you’re a student, professional, or serious hobbyist in any field, keep the books you genuinely consult. My battered copy of The Princeton Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics” has earned its place through actual use, not nostalgia.
Books You Reread Regularly: I return to Joan Didion’s essays annually, the way some people rewatch favorite films. Her Slouching Towards Bethlehem has revealed something new to me each time I’ve opened it over the past fifteen years. If you’ve reread a book three or more times, it’s probably a keeper.
Books That Changed You: Some books create clear before-and-after moments in your reading life. For me, Maxine Hong Kingston’s The Warrior Woman changed how I understood memoir and cultural identity. These important books deserve a place on your shelf. Even if you never reread them, they’re part of your intellectual history.
Beautiful Objects: I love books for their beauty, too. My first edition of Sylvia Plath’s Ariel, with its striking cover, stays on my shelf. I don’t use it often. It’s a beautiful object that brings me joy every time I see it. If a book is like art in your home, keep it. Loving how it looks is reason enough.
Signed or Gifted Books with Meaning: The copy of Beloved that my graduate school mentor inscribed to me stays. I keep it even though I own another reading copy. Meaningful inscriptions create a different kind of value.
Books to Donate
Donating a book isn’t the same as rejecting it. A book belongs here if you realize it no longer serves you. This may be because you’ve outgrown it or have duplicates. Perhaps you never realistically plan to read it, or it doesn’t match your current values. Let it move on to someone who needs it, just as you once did.
Books You’ve Outgrown: I donated most of my young adult fiction collection. Someone will love my copy of The Perks of Being a Wallflower.
Duplicates: Somehow, I accumulated three copies of To Kill a Mockingbird over the years. Two found new homes. Unless you’re a serious collector, one reading copy suffices.
Books You Bought But Never Read (And Really Won’t): This is the hardest group to admit to. Maybe you have a perfect copy of Infinite Jest you bought five years ago. If you haven’t opened it yet and feel dread instead of excitement, you should donate it. It’s time to give it away. Someone else might actually read it.
Reading interests change: The self-help books that spoke to me in my twenties feel simplistic now. My thriller phase in 2015 has passed. It’s natural to move on.
Damaged Books Beyond Repair: If a paperback is falling apart, you probably don’t need it anymore. You haven’t replaced it. The only exception is for books with real sentimental value—those can be rebound or saved. most exciting—it’s your spring reading list, hiding in plain sight on your shelves:
Books to reread: These books are memorable. You want to revisit them for new insight. They may confirm their lasting value. These include titles you loved but haven’t revisited. Or those you suspect might offer more meaning now than when you first read them. Consider if a book deserves another chance based on changed perspective or nostalgia.
I first attempted Virginia Woolf’s The Waves in college and struggled with it. Ten years later, it became a favorite. If you think you weren’t ready for a book before, spring is the perfect second chance.
Comfort Reads: I reread Anne Lamott’s Bird by Bird whenever I’m having trouble with a writing project. These books are like old friends. You know exactly what they’ll give you, and that’s just what you need.
Books You Remember Loving But Can’t Remember Why: Do you recall a book being significant? If the details have faded, it’s worth revisiting. See if it still resonates or if you’ve romanticized it in memory.
A Genre-by-Genre Approach
Different genres require different evaluation criteria:
Fiction
Fiction is often the hardest category because novels hold strong memories. Keep the ones you know you’ll reread or that mark important moments in your reading life. Donate the ones you finished but didn’t love. Give away the ones you left unfinished and haven’t picked up in a year. Also, donate any you kept just because you thought you “should” read them.
Literary fiction tends to reward rereading more than genre fiction, though there are exceptions. I’ve reread Ursula K. Le Guin’s The Left Hand of Darkness multiple times, finding new political and philosophical dimensions each time. Meanwhile, many mystery novels, while enjoyable, don’t demand a second read once you know whodunit.
Poetry
Poetry collections are my weakness. They’re slim, beautiful, and I always think I need them all. But I’ve learned to keep only the ones I actually read. If you haven’t read a poem from a collection in two years, donate it. Poetry is meant to be read, not just displayed.
Keep the poets who speak to you viscerally. For me, that’s Mary Oliver, Lucille Clifton, and Ocean Vuong. Their collections are dog-eared and annotated. The pristine poetry books I bought because I thought I “should” read more poetry? Those went to the library donation box.
Nonfiction
Nonfiction ages differently from fiction. Some nonfiction becomes dated quickly. Examples include technology books, trend-focused business books, and diet fads. Other nonfiction becomes more valuable over time. This includes history, biography, essay collections, and cultural criticism.
Ask yourself: Is this information still current? Do I need to own this? Could I borrow it from the library if I ever need to reference it again? Would I recommend this book to someone today?
I keep nonfiction that gives lasting insights or that I use often. Susan Sontag’s essays stay, but the 2010 social media marketing guide goes.
Graphic Novels and Comics
These are often oversized and take up a lot of space. Keep the ones that are important artistically or that you truly reread. I kept Persepolis and Fun Home, but I donated collections I only read once and never picked up again.
Reference Books
Many reference books are obsolete. That 2005 travel guide to Paris? Donate it. The encyclopedia set? Unless it has sentimental value, it’s taking up space that digital resources have made unnecessary.
Some reference books still have value. These include comprehensive dictionaries and specialized encyclopedias in your field. There are also beautifully illustrated reference works that function as both information sources and art books.
The Practical Process: How to Actually Do This
Now that you understand the categories, here’s how to tackle the physical task:
Step 1: Schedule Dedicated Time
Don’t try to finish this in just an hour. Set aside a weekend afternoon or a few evenings. I’ve found that after 2-3 hours, I start to get tired of making decisions.
Step 2: Gather Supplies
You’ll need:
- Boxes or bags for donations
- A separate box for books to reread
- Cleaning supplies (microfiber cloths, gentle cleaner)
- A notebook for tracking books you’re donating (useful for tax deductions)
- Post-it notes for marking spots as you work
Step 3: Empty One Shelf at a Time
Take all the books off one shelf at a time. This way, you handle each book and can clean the shelf, too. Dust builds up quickly on bookshelves, so spring cleaning is a great time to address it.
Step 4: The Touch Test
Pick up each book. It might sound like something from Marie Kondo, but it really helps. Notice how you feel—excited, guilty, indifferent, or burdened. These feelings tell you a lot. For each book, ask:
- Have I read this?
- If yes, would I reread it?
- If no, will I realistically read it in the next six months?
- Does this book reflect who I am now or who I want to become?
- Would I buy this book today if I saw it in a store?
- Am I keeping this out of obligation or genuine desire?
Step 6: Make Quick Decisions
Don’t agonize. If you’re unsure, don’t overthink it. If you’re not sure about a book, make a “maybe” pile. Keep this pile to no more than 10% of your collection. Go back to these books at the end and decide what to do.
When you put books back on the shelves, think about how you want to organize them. I sort fiction and poetry by author, and nonfiction by subject. Some people organize by color, which looks nice but can make books hard to find. Others sort by size, which saves space but can be messy. Pick a system that works for how you use your books.
The Minimalism Question
Minimalism has changed how we think about owning books. But I don’t agree that having a lot of books is always too much. A carefully chosen collection of 30 books isn’t automatically better than a library of 300.
Books are tools for thinking. They’re also cultural artifacts, conversation starters, and sources of serendipity. Some of my best reading experiences have come from pulling a forgotten book off my shelf on a whim.
Still, collecting books without thought doesn’t help anyone. The goal isn’t to have as few books as possible. It’s more important to have the right books for you at this moment. For a literature professor, that could mean 2,000 books. For someone who likes borrowing from the library, it might be 50 favorites.
The real question isn’t: How many books should I own? It’s more about: Does my collection match how I actually read? Or is it just a reminder of books I wish I’d read but never will?
Making Room for New Literature
This is perhaps the most important reason to spring clean your bookshelf: making room for discovery.
Every book you keep is one you’re choosing, which means you’re making less room for others. If your shelves are packed with books you’ll never read, you have no physical or mental space for new reads. There’s no space for that new novel everyone’s talking about. You can’t make room for the poetry your friend suggested. There’s no space for the essay collection that could change your perspective. After a good bookshelf purge, I’m more excited about reading. The books that remain feel chosen rather than accumulated. And when I bring home a new book, I have a place for it.
Where to Donate
Once you’ve made your decisions, donate thoughtfully:
Local Libraries: Many libraries accept donations for their book sales, which fund library programs.
Little Free Libraries: These neighborhood book exchanges are perfect for popular fiction and children’s books.
Schools and Literacy Programs: Teachers and literacy organizations often need books, especially children’s and young adult titles.
Prisons and Jails: Many prison book programs accept donations, though they have specific guidelines about acceptable content and formats.
Nursing Homes and Senior Centers: Large-print books and classic fiction are often welcome.
Thrift Stores: Goodwill, Salvation Army, and local thrift stores will take most books.
Online Services: PaperBackSwap, BookMooch, and similar sites let you trade books with other readers.
Specialized Organizations: Organizations like Books for Africa or Books Through Bars serve specific communities.
Books Worth Keeping: Examples
While everyone’s “keep” list will differ, here are categories and examples of books that often earn their shelf space:
Classics That Reward Rereading: Middlemarch by George Eliot is great for rereading. Even One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel García Márquez is excellent for a second read. Beloved by Toni Morrison is also one of those books that reveal new dimensions with each reading.
Essay Collections: Essays age well. Keep Joan Didion, James Baldwin, Zadie Smith, Rebecca Solnit, and other essayists who combine beautiful prose with enduring insights.
Poetry That Speaks to You: Your personal canon might include poets such as Mary Oliver, Rumi, and Emily Dickinson. It might also feature contemporary poets like Ada Limón or Danez Smith.
Books About Books: If you love reading about reading, keep a copy of The Possessed by Elif Batuman. Or consider How to Read Literature Like a Professor by Thomas C. Foster, or Ex Libris by Anne Fadiman.
Cultural Touchstones: Books that define their era or that everyone references—1984, The Handmaid’s Tale, Invisible Man—are worth keeping. Even if you don’t reread them, they’re part of our cultural conversation.
Books Worth Donating: Examples
Trendy Books You Never Connected With: That buzzy novel everyone loved but you found tedious? Let it go find its people.
Self-Help Books That Didn’t Help: If The Secret or Eat, Pray, Love didn’t alter your life, pass them on. Someone else might need them more.
Outdated Nonfiction: Technology books more than five years old are outdated. Travel guides from the pre-smartphone era are no longer useful. Diet books promoting debunked fads are misleading.
Books You Kept for Prestige: If you’re holding onto Proust or Joyce solely to look intellectual, donate them. Life’s too short for performative reading.
Books Worth Rereading: Examples
Books You Read in School: Revisit The Great Gatsby as an adult. Try reading To Kill a Mockingbird again. Experience The Catcher in the Rye with a new perspective. You’ll be amazed at what you missed when you were forced to read them.
Books You Read During Major Life Transitions: That novel you read during your divorce might seem different now. You might perceive it differently because you have distance. It may also have a different impact if you read it during your mother’s illness.
Books by Authors You’ve Since Discovered: Have you fallen in love with an author’s recent work? Take the time to explore their earlier novels. You’ll gain a new appreciation.
The Ongoing Practice
Spring cleaning your bookshelf shouldn’t be something you do only once every ten years. I use a “one in, one out” rule for most of my books. When I bring home a new one, I see if something else can go. This keeps my collection changing and fresh.
I also do a small review every season, taking out 5-10 books that I no longer need. This stops my shelves from getting so full that spring cleaning feels overwhelming.
Final Thoughts: Your Library as a Living Thing
Your bookshelf isn’t a museum. It’s a living reflection of who you are as a reader, thinker, and person. It should change as you do.
Some books are meant to stay with you for life. Others are meant to pass through your hands and into someone else’s. Both kinds of books are valuable. After this year’s spring cleaning, I look at my shelves and see fewer books, but more purpose. I see novels that shaped how I understand stories. I see poetry that helped me through hard times. I also see essays that taught me to think. There’s also space for new discoveries and old favorites I want to revisit.
Spring cleaning your bookshelf is about choosing what matters, but it’s also about understanding yourself. It means asking: What stories do I need right now? Which voices do I want nearby? Which books will I take with me into the next part of my reading life?
The answers to those questions—those are the books worth keeping.
Esther A. Lombardi is a freelance writer, journalist, and multimedia storyteller. She has more than two decades of experience. She writes about literature, education, and culture for publications both online and in print.
Discover more from A Book Geek
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.














