| You can buy a stamp that says something like, “Little Free Library use only. Not for resale.” Apparently, used book stores honor it. You stamp it on the side of the book with across the pages. |
| There are at least 10 LFL near me. There are 3 on my square block. Some are more full than others and some clearly turn over faster. Not sure why. But, I have never seen or heard of them being cleaned out. I think it’s too bad that happens. It’s definitely not in the spirit. |
Well... if I get a book from a LFL I should be allowed to resell it when I'm done with it. I just object to the idea that LFLs are just pick-up points for sleazy used book sellers who are going to throw out 90 percent of the books that someone intended to have go to their neighbors. |
| Maybe the guy grabs all the books and brings them to a charity like the Boys & Girls Club or needs them for a classroom in an undeserved school. |
Why? They're good books. I'm just trying to downsize. Either a neighbor enjoys reading them or the guy with the car gets some money when someone else wants to read them. Sounds like a win win situation for the planet. |
| Some people don't register their book box on the LFL website, so non-neighbors are less likely to discover ones on quiet streets. |
The previous poster said their goal was to just get them out of their house. If they know that someone is going to come along, take the valuable ones and throw out the rest, why not skip the middle man and just throw them out? |
Yeah. Maybe.
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Dana K White makes sense to me on the reselling issue.
If this guy wants to put in the work to sell the books, that's more work than I'm prepared to do. I used to take used kids clothes to a church that gave them out for free. A worker told me that people were turning around and selling them at a consignment store. Well, I wasn't prepared to go to the effort if consigning, and I'm pretty sure the clients doing this needed money more than me. https://www.aslobcomesclean.com/2013/01/why-i-dont-care-who-sells-my-stuff/ |
How do we know what he's doing with them? |
| A neighbor with small kids seemed to always grab items from our curb give away. Made me happy until I saw we were just a chunk of his yard sale at the end of the summer. I no longer must leave things out. I ask if anyone bid interested to email me. They never ask for anything. I know it shouldn't matter since I did not want them or try to sell them but it still annoyed me. |
NP. Why would you throw them all out instead of letting someone else figure out which ones should be thrown out and which shouldn't? I take most of my old books to the Friends of the Library Store partially so they can figure out which ones to trash. |
I’m with you but PP just said they want them out of their house. Indiscriminate dumping into LFL real |
I'm not putting in 35 year old accounting text books. I recycle stuff I don't think people will want. The books I put in disappear pretty quickly. We must have good taste. I put in recent books as soon as my husband and I have both read them. |
Speak for yourself. I snap up the kids’ Bible stories, read them once, and pass them on. I usually return them to a FLL at a local church so they’ll get to the people who will appreciate them. |