The pages have come loose from the binding, and Im afraid if I use it anymore it will just literally fall apart. It was second hand when I got it but if I sellotape it anymore it will collapse. I dont think many Bibles were made to last they get so worn and the spines get torn. Plus the pages are tissue thin its really hard to turn them. You'd be reading a page and then go to turn it and find youve turned two or three pages more than you needed to. My copy was published by Oxford ..I am thinking those in their Oxford University ivory towers have no idea how much use a Bible gets as readers we dont all just display them on a shelf for the gold lettered binding. I cant even glue or sew it back up will just make it even worse.
I have a newer Bible that is much better bound so am pondering shall I do with this old one...
what do you do with them? I am loathe to bin a Bible but, would it be disrespectful to donate it becaause the next recipient will find it as hard to read as I do. Keep it in a drawer or cupboard? Press flowers inside it? Make it into a doorstop? Its not really heavy enough, and rebinding it wont help the pages inside as its not just the cover thats falling apart.
What is your perfectly ideal Bible book made of?
I have a newer Bible that is much better bound so am pondering shall I do with this old one...
what do you do with them? I am loathe to bin a Bible but, would it be disrespectful to donate it becaause the next recipient will find it as hard to read as I do. Keep it in a drawer or cupboard? Press flowers inside it? Make it into a doorstop? Its not really heavy enough, and rebinding it wont help the pages inside as its not just the cover thats falling apart.
What is your perfectly ideal Bible book made of?
- 1
- Show all