Pay £5 for four books - and never receive a single one of them. Book Aid International's 'reverse book club' sends books to readers of all ages in Africa and beyond. Book Aid International, from £5Photograph: PRWear Shakespeare on your sleeve with a New York Review watch featuring David Levine's caricature of the Bard. "Classic and casual", says the NYR, and who are we to disagree. New York Review, $24.95 Photograph: PRAdopt-a-book from the British Library and get a personalised certificate, a bookplate added to the book or an invitation to a behind-the-scenes tour. British Library, from £25Photograph: PR
The complete text of a Shakespeare play on one poster-sized, readable page. Ideal for the back of a book-lover's loo door. One Page Book, £19.95Photograph: PRDrink to Elizabeth Barrett Browning's Sonnets from the Portuguese with this teapot dedicated to the Victorian poet. The British Library, £35Photograph: PRAs seen at the Guardian Hay festival. Lounge in style on a Penguin deckchair. Iwantoneofthose.com, £59.99 Photograph: PRGoats are so last year. Now you can give two books to a community school (like Mashimoni Squatters primary school, Kenya, pictured) and a warm feeling inside to the person on whose behalf you've donated them. Oxfam Unwrapped, £8Photograph: Geoff Sayer/PRHaving said all that, these little pieces of paper of joy are all that a book-lover really, really wants. National Book Tokens, on sale in bookshops and online from £1 Photograph: PR
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