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The Next Best Book Club discussion

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Non-Book Related Banter > Unpleasant question: bed bugs in library books?

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message 1: by Susan (new)

Susan | 15 comments I just read that bed bugs can live in library books (or any books for that matter). Has anyone ever heard of this? I'm such an avid reader that I rely completely on the library and swaptree.com to get my books - otherwise I couldn't afford my "habit." I'm a bit stunned at this revelation and I fear that I now must give up both means to get my books. What do you guys think? Am I being ridiculous? I live in NYC and the situation is bad here so why take the risk???


message 2: by Bhumi (new)

Bhumi | 524 comments Hmmm. I haven't heard of so-called "book" bugs, but bed bugs do exist, so maybe they're in books too. I don't know...


message 3: by Carol (new)

Carol eeewwww I hope not.


message 4: by Peregrine (last edited Nov 16, 2009 01:44PM) (new)

Peregrine Maybe ask your local health authority?


message 5: by Suzanne (new)

Suzanne (bellamy22) | 610 comments NOT SOMETHING ELSE TO FREAK OUT ABOUT???

I passed my limit long ago...
Carol, LOL!


message 6: by Tracey (new)

Tracey (tracey1970) I think it is a load of old ****ocks.


message 7: by Carol (new)

Carol According to Entomology Dept. , bed bugs can and do live in any small protected space. They can even live in your toilets, furniture(wood) ect.


message 8: by Tracey (new)

Tracey (tracey1970) Then why are they called bed bugs?


message 9: by Susan (new)

Susan | 15 comments they live in these other spaces but visit your bed at night to feed. lovely isn't it?


message 10: by Tracey (new)

Tracey (tracey1970) Too much information!


message 11: by [ JT ] (last edited Nov 16, 2009 01:58PM) (new)

[ JT ] | 22 comments Perhaps storing books in your freezer for a bit of time after receiving them would help? I've heard of this for killing other bugs... would it work for bed bugs is the question!

EDIT: In the freezer in a zip lock bag, I mean!


message 12: by Susan (new)

Susan | 15 comments yeah - i actually saw that suggestion on a website. But (squimish people close your eyes) the thought of bed bugs in my freezer is just too gross to entertain.


message 13: by Suzanne (new)

Suzanne (bellamy22) | 610 comments Carol, NO More research!!! Please...


message 14: by Carol (new)

Carol yuckety yuk yuk


message 15: by Melissa (new)

Melissa Harris I may never sleep, read, eat, or poop again...


message 16: by Carol (new)

Carol Nah just the cold weather making skin dry, bugs don't survive the cold. except lice in the arctic realm.


message 17: by Jackie (new)

Jackie (thenightowl) Oh that's just gross, but I think possible. On the plus side, I've been checking out library books for years and years and have never had a problem...so I doubt anyone else would. *goes off to knock on some wood* lol.


message 18: by Carol (new)

Carol Oil your skin down and drink lots of water. That is what I order.


message 19: by Carol (new)

Carol You could always wear a hazmat suit. Those little suckers wouldn't last long in there. Of course you wouldn't either.


message 20: by Bhumi (new)

Bhumi | 524 comments Because hazmat suits are oh-so-common, right? :)


message 21: by Carol (new)

Carol wrap yourself in saran wrap same thing hahahahaha


message 22: by Liz (new)

Liz I've never heard that, but it's an unpleasant thought! Oh well, at least they're not arctic lice. Maybe we all need separate freezers to ensure that there are no bugs in our books?


message 23: by El (new)

El I will say that silverfish really screw books up if they get into them. But that's a different story...


message 24: by Carol (new)

Carol Termites love books as much as we do. They just eat up the pages. Pun intended.


message 25: by Cindy (new)

Cindy (newtomato) Then there's the criminals who cut gun-shaped holes in big books to hide their heat.


message 26: by Carol (new)

Carol Or people who make safes out of books to hide valuables. hehe


message 27: by [ JT ] (new)

[ JT ] | 22 comments El wrote: "I will say that silverfish really screw books up if they get into them. But that's a different story..."

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.


message 28: by Carol (new)

Carol There are silverfish baits. I think Home Depot has them. It gets rid of them pronto.


message 29: by Suzanne (new)

Suzanne (bellamy22) | 610 comments Kaliki, Just when I think I might end it all ... there you are and I AM rolling on the floor LOL!

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!!!!!


message 30: by Melissa (new)

Melissa Harris Suzanne, you should meet my family. There are 6 of us, all with the exact same sense of humor.


message 31: by Suzanne (new)

Suzanne (bellamy22) | 610 comments I know where I'm going for the Holidays!!!


message 32: by Carol (new)

Carol Kaliki wrote: "Suzanne, you should meet my family. There are 6 of us, all with the exact same sense of humor. "

Make room for 5 more hahahahaha


message 33: by Suzanne (new)

Suzanne (bellamy22) | 610 comments YAY!

and a Pug!!!


message 34: by Carol (new)

Carol Did I tell you the story about my aunt's two pets?

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.


message 35: by Melissa (new)

Melissa Harris OMG!! Is that true??! I just got the best visual .. and now I'm the one rolling on the floor!!

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!


message 36: by Carol (new)

Carol OMG!! Is that true??! I just got the best visual .. and now I'm the one rolling on the floor!!


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


message 37: by Melissa (new)

Melissa Harris I love it! Do tell, what were their names - the pug and the pig?


message 38: by Carol (new)

Carol Pugsly and pigsly. I did not say she was original in her thinking. hahahahahaahaha


message 39: by Suzanne (new)

Suzanne (bellamy22) | 610 comments OMG! I believe it!!! Stella, an appropriately named Pug, stands in the front yard and, if you even dare to drive down her street...never mind her driveway... well, you're in for it, that's all I have to say!!!

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!


message 40: by Carol (new)

Carol Yea pugs are a creed unto themselves. They are pretty funny.


message 41: by Jeremiah (last edited Nov 17, 2009 04:23PM) (new)

Jeremiah Cain (jeremiah_cain) | 16 comments Well, we seem to have changed subjects but according to Wikipedia's Bedbug article:

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:]


message 42: by Jeremiah (new)

Jeremiah Cain (jeremiah_cain) | 16 comments Of course, I'm not sure how well the book would do after all that.


message 43: by Carol (new)

Carol Gives a new meaning to fast freeze


message 44: by Cindy (new)

Cindy (newtomato) I'll have to test out the freezing plan with The Iceman Cometh.

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.


message 45: by Carol (new)

Carol Ice Station Zebra is another good book to try out in the name of science


message 46: by Melissa (new)

Melissa Harris Cindy wrote: "I'll have to test out the freezing plan with The Iceman Cometh.

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


LOL!


message 47: by Cindy (new)

Cindy (newtomato) Good one, carol! The idea of saving a book by using extreme cold is kind of an anti-Fahrenheit-451.


message 48: by Carol (new)

Carol Cindy wrote: "Good one, carol! The idea of saving a book by using extreme cold is kind of an anti-Fahrenheit-451."

LOL


message 49: by Erin (new)

Erin I also rely almost completely on my local public library to support my reading habit... I do have a sister, however, who refuses to check out any books from the library on the premise that "you know people read those in the bathroom, don't you?...... ;0 Sometimes ignorance truly is bliss.


message 50: by Paul (new)

Paul Hollis | 194 comments From what I understand bedbuds are attracted to warmth i.e. human warmth and like tics feed off our blood and they stay in wood or the edges of mattresses (NEVER buy USED mattresses!!!)

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.


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