Now you've got me in the mood for a full search and inventory of those shelves.
I'll post back on here perhaps tonight or tomorrow, and tell you what I find.
Inventory finished!

*dusts himself off*
Right, this is where I use JUB as an online notebook to keep a record of my findings.
Noteworthy books, from newest to oldest:
The New Pictorial Atlas of the World ( no date ) - This was fascinating, because looking at the maps, it's clear it was published before WWII. Germany is also called 'Prussia' and its borders are much further east into Poland; and the map of Africa is crazy, lol - it's all still colonial posessions, with names like 'French West Africa' and 'Belgian Congo' and 'Anglo-Egyptian Sudan' plus the old 'Abyssinia' and 'Rhodesia' are still there.
Encyclopedia of Needlework ( no date ) - It's clearly a very old book, but I couldn't find a date. It's full of text about sewing, stitching, crotcheting, embroidery, etc.
Notre-Dame de Paris by Victor Hugo ( 1928 ) - This one has a wonderful cover of black and gold with swirling patterns and decorative fancy writing all in gold. It's the famous Hunchback of Notre-Dame story with Quasimodo and all that.
Flints: An Illustrated Manual of the Stone Age for Beginners ( 1926 ) - This is just a small paperback handbook like a pamphlet, with various diagrams and sketchings, etc.
Remarkable Women of France ( 1914 ) - A big book, this one, full of tales of the French aristocracy through history and mini-biographies of many a
madame,
mademoiselle,
duchesse,
marquise, etc.
The Shorter Poems of William Wordsworth ( 1909 ) - Not much else to say here.
Chats on English Earthenware ( 1909 ) - This is all about pottery, with drawings of kilns, jugs, vases, etc.
Whisperings from the Great ( 1906 ) - This is like a big diary, and alongside each date of the year is a collection of little poems and sayings for the day - mostly religious ones.
From Fox's Earth to Mountain Tarn ( 1906 ) - A book on Scottish wildlife and scenery, with descriptions of forests and rivers and glens, with red deer, eagles, ospreys, salmon, trout, otters, etc.
Handbook of the Coins of Great Britain and Ireland ( 1899 ) - This is a reference work for coin collectors, mostly just text right through. Wierd to think that when this book was published, they'd have had no concept of any coin from the entire 20th century.
Swiss Family Robinson ( 1891 ) - ( mentioned in my previous post )
I seriously doubt that it's the oldest book in that room, to be honest.
And it wasn't.
There are two older than it, and they couldn't be more different....
A Manual of Inorganic Chemistry ( 1874 ) - You'd easily miss this book, because it's small and inconspicuous. It's a little tatty and worn and faded. Really an academic book for professional study, full of chemical formulas and diagrams of apparatus that you'd see in a Victorian laboratory - glass cyclinders and tubes and rods, and using a flame to heat up mixtures and solutions, etc.
And finally, there was this truly GIANT Bible - the biggest book in the whole room, but it was concealed in a small cupboard under the shelves. It looks more like a wizard's spellbook to be honest. The date is given as 'MDCCCLXVI' - ( 1866 ) And I remember it now, because it came from my late grandmother's house when she had to move into care. I'd forgotten about it. At the back, there's a few pages of writing recording dates of births and marriages in my grandmother's family. My great-grandparents names are there and great-granduncles and aunts as well. And tucked inside, I found a small receipt from my great-grandfather's coal merchant business. On the back, there's his signature. My dad was very interested when I showed him - we'd both kind of forgotten about the old family Bible.
There we have it. But there's still two other neglected old bookshelves in this house, you know.
Maybe I should become a librarian.
