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HERE,
KITTY, KITTY
Deodorizing
a book
by Ellen G.K. Rubin
(reprinted from Movable Stationery
May 1999 vol.7, no.2 )

| From
the pop-up book, Alice in Wonderland,
illustrated and paper engineered by Vojtech
Kubasta |
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Your feline friend is sitting on a miracle cleanser…
of books! Kitty litter! Yes, cat litter! I’ve
proved it. I happened upon a suggestion in an antique
weekly newsletter to use cat litter to deodorize old
books. Being an avid antiquarian book collector, I
usually associate the smell of old books with pleasure.
Until recently, I did not have the occasion, let alone
the thought, to ‘deodorize’ a book. But
then the necessity arose.
Through a catalog, I purchased a Blue Ribbon (1934)
Little Red Ridinghood "pop-up" Book. It
was in very fine condition, as described. But what
was surely lacking from the description was the book’s
smell. There was no doubt the book had been rescued
(Phew!) from a fire; it had that strong acrid smell
of smoke (Phooey!). Here was another opportunity for
an experiment. (See Movable Stationery Vol. 5 No.4
Step Right Up!) I had been successful (read ‘lucky’)
with the TidyPen and hoped my ‘luck’ would
hold out attempting to use kitty litter to rid this
book of its most unpleasant odor. Not owning a cat,
I borrowed the kitty litter from a neighbor. (Can‘t
you just see me, container in hand, "May I borrow
a cup of cat litter, please?")
Using a large zip-lock bag, I put the kitty litter
in with the book, shaking carefully to bring it into
as much contact with the paper as possible. The bag
was sealed and put in my garage. The next day, I removed
the book for a test whiff. Most of the smell of was
gone. Best of all, the litter’s contact with
the book had done no damage to the paper, something
I was most anxious about. Ignoring the maxim, "The
enemy of good is better," I put the book back
into the bag, this time carefully shaking the litter
into the crevices of the spine where the odor was
strongest. I hoped one more day would get rid of the
rest of the smell. I still was anxious about a longer
proximity of litter on paper. Well, I experienced
an extended ‘senior moment’ and forgot
about the project. A week later (!), I rediscovered
the bag. No damage to the book (Whew!) and the smell
was totally gone. In fact, it now had a slightly aromatic
scent. There was no problem shaking the litter from
the spine and movables, another anxiety of mine.
Conclusion? One can buy smelly books with impunity.
But if you don’t have a cat, make friends with
a neighbor who has one.
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