Because Publishers don't want that. The library e-book "market" has become too powerful and it's eating away at their profits. No way they'd help out libraries (and, in turn, us) with that. If libraries were new a new idea today, there's no way that Publishers would ever let that idea get off the ground. |
|
In LCPL, you can use the Suggest a Title feature on the website to ask them to purchase books.
https://catalog.library.loudoun.gov/responsive?section=sap You can use the ILL feature to ask for books from outside the system. https://library.loudoun.gov/Services/Interlibrary-Loan You can also explore the systems around Loudoun that offer reciprocal borrowing. The following jurisdictions participate in the regional reciprocal borrowing program: The cities of Falls Church, Alexandria and Winchester The District of Columbia Arlington, Fairfax, Fauquier, Prince William, Clarke and Frederick counties in Virginia Montgomery, Prince George's and Frederick counties in Maryland. |
Yes, this is really the way to do it. But I do feel guilty about all the extra work it creates for the library staff (pulling the book, transporting it, shelving it with the holds, removing it if someone doesn't pick it up...). Another thing that can be helpful (at least for MCPL) is looking through the books "On Order" and placing holds on those books before they're purchased/processed. https://mcpl.aspendiscovery.org/?browseCategory=mcpl_on_order |
+1 We just need more books in circulation and need to keep purchasing books for publishers and the authors' livelihood (duh). We can't expect to buy one copy and pass it around forever and expect authors and publishers to work on that model. I purchase a fair amount of books either from recommendations from the Week or from people discussing their works on NPR. I want to support all that. Then I put them info free libraries and find good things to read from there. For the other items where I want a specific book but don't want to go broke (like hunting down all the books in an older series recommended here that might get expensive), I use the library and give it plenty of time. |
|
In LCPL you can also sign up for the weekly Wowbrary email, which shows you all the new acquisitions and lets you put holds on them easily.
https://www.wowbrary.org/signup.aspx?l=2227 |
|
The books op mentioned have sold millions. I don’t disagree with paying authors. It’s the middlemen who are getting rich here though. |
Does the library really need suggest a title when there are hundreds waiting for books on hold? Isn’t it obvious? |
There are not unlimited audiobooks. I wait in the hold queue for them as well. |
They do. When ebook holds exceed a certain about, the library will acquire more copies. Then when a book is no longer popular they only keep a handful of ebook and audio copies. |
Dont feel guilty...this is their job. If you didn't place the hold, they wouldn't be needed and they'd lose said job. You are keeping people employed. Also, you PAY FOR LIBRARIES with your taxes! Use the services you pay for! |
Okay. That’s not a thing. |
“Transit” the book? Do you mean “send,” “ship,” or “transfer?” As an avid reader, you should be able to write better than this. |
THIS. Libraries are so important for healthy communities. |
|
I also agree vote for candidates who fund libraries!
As others have said - Get familar with putting holds on books, and actively manage your hold list. If you like to read series in order, put the entire series on hold, freeze everything but the first one, and as the first one becomes available or close to it, unfreezer the next one. I like variety- I read from one series, then a standalone, then another series, then something brandnew, then the next in series 1, etc etc. In order but not one right after the other. That helps. I keep a spreadsheet of my holds! I update it weekly (Monday afternoons, I hope after all the weekend turn ins have bene processed). So I can tell if something is moving fast or slow. And, look at other counties. |