Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m the same. If I want to read a book, I dislike having to wait for it to be in, or to be rushed to read it by a certain date to take it back to the library. I want to be able to toss it in my tote bag and dogear the pages and not worry about keeping it in a certain condition. When I tie reading to the constraints of the library I enjoy it less, so I often buy the books. Some I keep, some I pass on to friends, some I sell back to thriftbooks.
You must be a really slow reader. I know it can take up to a week to get a book at the library, so I am planning my next two books before I finish my current one. You have three weeks to keep a book through MCPL, and it auto renews unless there’s a wait or it’s a lucky day shelf book.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m the same. If I want to read a book, I dislike having to wait for it to be in, or to be rushed to read it by a certain date to take it back to the library. I want to be able to toss it in my tote bag and dogear the pages and not worry about keeping it in a certain condition. When I tie reading to the constraints of the library I enjoy it less, so I often buy the books. Some I keep, some I pass on to friends, some I sell back to thriftbooks.
You must be a really slow reader. I know it can take up to a week to get a book at the library, so I am planning my next two books before I finish my current one. You have three weeks to keep a book through MCPL, and it auto renews unless there’s a wait or it’s a lucky day shelf book.
Anonymous wrote:I’m the same. If I want to read a book, I dislike having to wait for it to be in, or to be rushed to read it by a certain date to take it back to the library. I want to be able to toss it in my tote bag and dogear the pages and not worry about keeping it in a certain condition. When I tie reading to the constraints of the library I enjoy it less, so I often buy the books. Some I keep, some I pass on to friends, some I sell back to thriftbooks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I read about 3-4 books a week and I get them all from various Little Free Libraries. There are more than 10 of those within a half mile of my home in all directions (NE DC) and while many of them are full of "what to expect when expecting" type and policy wonlk/government analysis books, there are also plenty of good books. I grab whatever appeals to me and put it back in another LFL when I'm done.
I have found bestsellers - a couple years later. That's fine with me. I'm not in a book group and have no deadlines for finishing a book.
So to answer your question - neither. I don;'t buy books and I don't check them out from libraries.
You must be taking ALL the good books because every LFL I've tried to find a good book in has had nothing but garage in them. All of them. I don't even know why there are still LFL anymore. Pointless!
I have such a hard time finding good books in these too! Although I'm starting to recognize maybe I'm part of the problem - I forget about them and don't stock them when I have good used books. This is a nice reminder to make more of an effort.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I read about 3-4 books a week and I get them all from various Little Free Libraries. There are more than 10 of those within a half mile of my home in all directions (NE DC) and while many of them are full of "what to expect when expecting" type and policy wonlk/government analysis books, there are also plenty of good books. I grab whatever appeals to me and put it back in another LFL when I'm done.
I have found bestsellers - a couple years later. That's fine with me. I'm not in a book group and have no deadlines for finishing a book.
So to answer your question - neither. I don;'t buy books and I don't check them out from libraries.
You must be taking ALL the good books because every LFL I've tried to find a good book in has had nothing but garage in them. All of them. I don't even know why there are still LFL anymore. Pointless!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have no interest in buying $$$ coffee, but I’ve always been a book buyer and don’t have any issue spending money on books. The library never seems to have the book I’m interested in or I can’t finish it in time because there’s a waitlist behind me so I buy most of my books, immediately donate the ones I don’t absolutely love and keep the ones I might read again or loan to a friend. I also feel like buying books helps support authors and publishers—and imo that’s worth it alone. If you are a library mostly person, do you just read whatever the library has available whenever it comes ready? I’m curious to know if people tend to buy books more than take out from the library.
Buying is waaaay better. It's very difficult letting those leave the home after they have been loved tho to make room for new buys.
Anonymous wrote:I read about 3-4 books a week and I get them all from various Little Free Libraries. There are more than 10 of those within a half mile of my home in all directions (NE DC) and while many of them are full of "what to expect when expecting" type and policy wonlk/government analysis books, there are also plenty of good books. I grab whatever appeals to me and put it back in another LFL when I'm done.
I have found bestsellers - a couple years later. That's fine with me. I'm not in a book group and have no deadlines for finishing a book.
So to answer your question - neither. I don;'t buy books and I don't check them out from libraries.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A secret if you like Libby and have an e reader. I've noticed that as long as I stay in the book, even after it's been returned, I can finish the book. If you go to the home screen it yanks it. This is true on both my Paperwhite and early model kindle.
Ma’am, just put your kindle in airplane mode like the rest of us.
I've found airplane mode doesn't always work. Sometimes if you go to the homescreen it will pull the book, even in airplane mode.
That doesn’t make a bit of sense. It would have to connect to WiFi to do that, and airplane mode is not connected.
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.
A Kindle is Amazon
You can read the ebooks you borrow from the library through libby on a kindle.
I have a kindle and i have never bought a book from Amazon.
Anonymous wrote:I have no interest in buying $$$ coffee, but I’ve always been a book buyer and don’t have any issue spending money on books. The library never seems to have the book I’m interested in or I can’t finish it in time because there’s a waitlist behind me so I buy most of my books, immediately donate the ones I don’t absolutely love and keep the ones I might read again or loan to a friend. I also feel like buying books helps support authors and publishers—and imo that’s worth it alone. If you are a library mostly person, do you just read whatever the library has available whenever it comes ready? I’m curious to know if people tend to buy books more than take out from the library.