You of course can do whatever you like with this—put all of the 724 books of the Wheel of Time series into their own Collection, say, or separate out fiction from nonfiction. It’s your party, and you can organize how you want to.
So to access and edit your Collections, first open the iBooks app. On the iPhone, touch the text at the top-center of your screen (which probably reads “Books”); on the iPad, you’ll tap “Collections.”
Within that view, you can check out what Collections you already have. The default ones (which you can’t remove) are “Books,” “Purchased Books,” and “PDFs.” The “PDFs” Collection is filled with, well, PDFs that you’ve saved to iBooks from somewhere else—Safari or Mail, for example. Anyway, choose to add a new Collection, give it a name, and away you go.
When you’re finished, touch “Done.” Now we’re gonna add some books to it! Go to the Collection you want to move from by tapping on it from the Collections dialog (as shown in my third screenshot above) and touch “Edit.”
Select the books you’d like to add to your new Collection, and then tap “Move.”
Afterward, pick any of your Collections to move your selection to.
Finally, to delete a Collection you’ve added, go back to your Collections screen, touch “Edit,” and you’ll see the familiar red Delete icon.
If you had items in the Collection you’re trying to remove, iBooks will then ask you what you’d like to do with them. Choose “Don’t Remove,” and those books will pop back to where they came from.
Do you guys use Collections in any original ways? How do you organize all of your iBooks? Am I the only crazy person who reads way more on my iPhone than on my iPad? Tell me all about it in the comments!