Anonymous wrote:OP, check Costco. They have many of the new releases in stock in their stores.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I get weird about library books, because I’m a germaphobe. I can’t help but wonder if people read the book on the toilet, or while they were sick. I also worry about bed bugs being brought into my house. So I buy books, then donate them to charity.
Same here. I used to live at the library as a kid, but now I prefer to buy my books new because who knows where the books have been.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is almost *never* about the writer becoming rich.
It's about paper, printing, binding, and shipping. Inflexible costs. Recently f--ed even further by Trump's dumb tariffs.
Also: do you really think content should be free? Do you have any idea of how long it takes to compose and edit a decent book that isn't a piece of self-published trash?
Actually its about the publisher becoming rich. They take 85% of the profits to pay for their New York offices and six-figure salaries for everyone. When Fifty Shades of Grey went big, everyone at the publishing house got a $5,000 bonus.
50 Shades is a rare bigtime success story. For the most part no one is getting rich off books. Would that it were. Most books sell a few thousand copies. Mine is one example - $18.99 hardcover, coming out soon in paperback for a little more than half that. Trust me, neither I nor my publisher is getting rich - but your purchase actually makes a huge difference in terms of whether I'll earn out my piddling advance or not.
Books stay in B&N for a hot second unless they are huge sellers - the rest get sent back to the publisher, where they then count as a return against the writer's advance (again, mind was piddling)
Buy books. Take them out from the library. Borrow them from your friends. Do what works for you.
I like the thought that it helps the author when I splurge on a book.
Anonymous wrote:I get weird about library books, because I’m a germaphobe. I can’t help but wonder if people read the book on the toilet, or while they were sick. I also worry about bed bugs being brought into my house. So I buy books, then donate them to charity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is almost *never* about the writer becoming rich.
It's about paper, printing, binding, and shipping. Inflexible costs. Recently f--ed even further by Trump's dumb tariffs.
Also: do you really think content should be free? Do you have any idea of how long it takes to compose and edit a decent book that isn't a piece of self-published trash?
Actually its about the publisher becoming rich. They take 85% of the profits to pay for their New York offices and six-figure salaries for everyone. When Fifty Shades of Grey went big, everyone at the publishing house got a $5,000 bonus.
50 Shades is a rare bigtime success story. For the most part no one is getting rich off books. Would that it were. Most books sell a few thousand copies. Mine is one example - $18.99 hardcover, coming out soon in paperback for a little more than half that. Trust me, neither I nor my publisher is getting rich - but your purchase actually makes a huge difference in terms of whether I'll earn out my piddling advance or not.
Books stay in B&N for a hot second unless they are huge sellers - the rest get sent back to the publisher, where they then count as a return against the writer's advance (again, mind was piddling)
Buy books. Take them out from the library. Borrow them from your friends. Do what works for you.
I like the thought that it helps the author when I splurge on a book.
Anonymous wrote:I get weird about library books, because I’m a germaphobe. I can’t help but wonder if people read the book on the toilet, or while they were sick. I also worry about bed bugs being brought into my house. So I buy books, then donate them to charity.

Anonymous wrote:If you amortized it to cost per hour of enjoyment, it's far cheaper than a night at the movies or a dinner out. I'd rather spend $27 on a book than on a bottle of wine, or four ice creams at Coldstone..
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is almost *never* about the writer becoming rich.
It's about paper, printing, binding, and shipping. Inflexible costs. Recently f--ed even further by Trump's dumb tariffs.
Also: do you really think content should be free? Do you have any idea of how long it takes to compose and edit a decent book that isn't a piece of self-published trash?
Actually its about the publisher becoming rich. They take 85% of the profits to pay for their New York offices and six-figure salaries for everyone. When Fifty Shades of Grey went big, everyone at the publishing house got a $5,000 bonus.
We are a family of four (one in college) and our HHI is about 1/3 of yours. I typically go to the library but if it's a book that I really want to own and/or an author that I'm a big fan of, I have no problem paying that much to purchase it as soon as it comes out. If you don't want to, then don't.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You sound so cheap. What is your HHI?
DP $350,000 a year and I only buy Kindle copies. Paying $27 for a hardback is ridiculous, especially if it's going to shop up under a third-hand reseller for $3.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You sound so cheap. What is your HHI?
DP $350,000 a year and I only buy Kindle copies. Paying $27 for a hardback is ridiculous, especially if its going to shop up under a third-hand reseller for $3.