Are You Guilty Of Buying New Books & Leaving Them Unread? There Is Actually A Word For It

Akanksha Bhatia

Do your hands itch to grab a copy every time you cross a bookstore? Do you find yourself adding books to your wish-list even before you finish the last four ones you purchased?  Well, there is finally a word for this, Tsundoku

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The Japanese word doku essentially means reading and tsun which originates in tsumu is a word that means to pile up. So when put together, tsundoku means the buying of reading material and piling it up. 

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According to Professor Gerstle who teaches pre-modern Japanese at the University of London, “The phrase ‘tsundoku sensei’ appears in text from 1879 according to the writer Mori Senzo. Which is likely to be satirical, about a teacher who has lots of books but doesn’t read them.” 

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However, it isn’t an insult as the term implies that there is an intention to go around to reading it eventually. It hangs somewhere between bibliomania and hoarding, a perfect combination of loving books too much and not actually getting around to reading them. 

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