| I read on Libby and put books on hold. I can turn off the internet access to my kindle if I don't finish the book in time. |
Oops! That’s a typo! I didn’t mean to add that extra zero. Thanks for catching it. $500. I was estimating $10 per book. Most are more but some are less |
I mostly read paper books, which I can place on hold on my online library catalog (non DMV). |
Do you really read an average of 5 books a week? Are you retired? That's almost a box every day. |
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I sometimes buy used books at the friends of the library store, but mostly I use the library for paper copies and for audiobooks via Libby. I subscribe to the library's email newsletters for various genres to learn about new releases, and I also look at Book Pages (available free from library) and Good Reads suggestions. I browse the new release shelves. I like series so I follow those authors to stay informed about their books coming out.
I put books on hold and read/listen when they become available. I can usually finish before they are due and if not I renew the loan if possible. |
| I prefer paper books. I read about 70 books last year. I like to support my independent book store but it gets pricey. I borrow some books from book club members, buy some from thrift books or better books, buy some on Kindle if I travel and it makes it easier, and buy the rest from book stores if I don’t want to wait (say for a new book). Once in awhile, I get one from a little free library. And, finally, I almost always visit bookstores when I travel or buy at museums, etc. I find these last two are good places to find books I might not otherwise come across. |
| Op here—I didn’t realize (or I guess I never thought about it) you could have multiple library cards to create more holds etc. Tgat may explain why my library hold/loan situation is not great! I am not a kindle/e-book person so the act of physically picking out a book that is of interest to me in that moment is part of what I enjoy about reading. |
Oh for goodness sake, not this tired take again. There was a thread about how much people read and there were lots of different details shared by the voracious readers. Some don't watch tv. Some don't use much social media. Some read really fast. Some use multiple formats to read. Some are retired or have an empty nest and reading is their favorite hobby. |
| Sadly, buying. I used to love browsing libraries but now that they smell like pee and look like I could end up with bedbugs if I sit down - and library stacks have been pared down - I don’t enjoy libraries anymore. I don’t like e-readers so I end up buying. The good thing is that there are a lot of used or free books around. |
One of my libraries allows it (not Fairfax, which is totally fair!). I just make a mental note to check on Thursdays around 4-5 PM for anything I know is coming out. I always have a ton of books checked out, so waiting doesn't bother me at all. |
The hold estimate might not be accurate. I'll place 5 holds for a book and when one comes through, I'll cancel the others. It's extremely common (if you follow bookish social media, you'll see this). If it says 50 people are ahead of you, a bunch of them might drop off because they get the book through one of their other cards. |
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Libraries pay more for their books than we do.
You're still supporting authors through your library! |
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I read 113 books in 2025. I only bought two of them, and that was because I wanted paperbacks that I could take on a flight and then just leave at my destination (I put them in little free libraries not the trash). All the rest were library books.
I have a TBR list and use holds to have a pretty much constant stream of books. |
i’m sure that Amazon will find a way for rented media to expire through some kind of software that works even if not connected to the Internet. |
It's the library not Amazon. |