The Next Best Book Club discussion
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Unpleasant question: bed bugs in library books?
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Susan
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Nov 16, 2009 01:35PM

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![[ JT ] | 22 comments](https://images.gr-assets.com/users/1253302100p1/2641450.jpg)
EDIT: In the freezer in a zip lock bag, I mean!






![[ JT ] | 22 comments](https://images.gr-assets.com/users/1253302100p1/2641450.jpg)
Unrelated to the original discussion, but I have heard that cloves are a natural silverfish repellant. Anyone have experience with this? :)
I was considering buying some clove to put in the corners of bookshelves, but I thought perhaps this was a bit of overkill. haha.

Carol, you're getting away with much too much!!! ha!
But thank God for Cindy, whose shot of reality brings us ALL down to Earth...
C-Scream out loud funny!!!!!

Make room for 5 more hahahahaha

She had a pug and a pig, and they both chased cars and the mail man. The mailman would not deliver the mail to her house.

Come one, come all, including the pets! My husband will be grateful. He grew up in a very small (1 brother) quiet family .. and while he loves my siblings, when we're all together we drive him completely nuts!

That is an absolutely true story. My Aunt was a fun lady, she kept our family in stitches.

She hurls herself up on the throats of the big dogs and tries to sever their aortas ... she only has goblin teeth, so no such luck, but it is a good visual while she manages to hold on!

Extreme temperatures
The use of a fabric steamer on the infestations will kill the eggs and the bugs instantly.[citation needed:] The bed bugs cannot handle the intense heat and are killed in a couple of seconds. Since steam will penetrate the pores of a mattress, it can reach deep into the corners of beds.[citation needed:]
The thermal death point for the common bedbug (C. lectularius) is 45°C (113°F), and all stages of life are killed by 7 minutes of exposure to 46°C (115°F).[41:] However, to ensure that bedbugs do not survive by hiding in locations that do not quite reach the thermal death point, the US Department of Defense recommends using a temperature of at least 49°C (120°F), at 20-30% relative humidity, for at least 20 minutes.[42:] Enclosing a mattress in a black plastic bag and placing it in the sun on a hot day is not considered an effective method of killing bedbugs, due to the difficulty of maintaining a high temperature across the entire surface area of the mattress.[43:]
There is uncertainty as to how long bedbugs can survive cold temperatures. Below 16.1°C (61°F), adults enter semi-hibernation and can survive longer.[44:] Bedbugs can survive for at least five days at -10°C (14°F) but will die after 15 minutes of exposure to -32°C (-25.6°F)[45:] It is believed that storing infested items below -19°C (0°F) for at least four days will be successful. Carbon dioxide deployed in the form of "snow" may kill bedbugs by rapid freezing.[42:]

Or if you want me to first infest your copy of Going Rogue An American Life with whatever bugs you choose, I'd be happy to oblige and document. All in the name of science, of course.

Or if you want me to first infest your copy of Going Rogue An American Life with whatever bugs you ch..."
LOL!

LOL


Silverfish can get into books though
and yes there is really are "bookworms" not really worms but some kind of lice I'm not sure if they like the paper or the glue but they usually are found in really old, antique books.
Books mentioned in this topic
Going Rogue: An American Life (other topics)The Iceman Cometh (other topics)
Going Rogue: An American Life (other topics)
The Iceman Cometh (other topics)