Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think for most people this is a combo of budget/discretionary income + capacity to wait. For me, my interests don't always align with the books the library tends to purchase (international lit fic) so I do buy a lot. I generally order from Blackwell's in the UK.
Also depends on your library. I still have a card for the Philly library (shhhhh this is key to my happiness) and it has a vastly superior ebook collection compared to DCPL (which I love as an organization, we're just not in sync).
I love Blackwells. I would love to see the list of books from your most recent order!
Isn't it great?? They're the best. My last order was an all-in-one version of Pat Barker's Regeneration trilogy, Cuddy by Benjamin Myers, Amma by Saraid De Silva, Monstrum by Lottie Mills, and couple of Oxford World's Classics paperbacks (North and South by Elizabeth Gaskell and Germinal by Emile Zola) - I like Oxford's versions when available. You???
I've actually never ordered from them, how is shipping and delivery to the US? I shop in person every 2-3 years and love finding things I've never heard of (eg, had never heard of Simon Hopkinson and bought his cookbook on a whim. Love it!). And browsing any OUP titles.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think for most people this is a combo of budget/discretionary income + capacity to wait. For me, my interests don't always align with the books the library tends to purchase (international lit fic) so I do buy a lot. I generally order from Blackwell's in the UK.
Also depends on your library. I still have a card for the Philly library (shhhhh this is key to my happiness) and it has a vastly superior ebook collection compared to DCPL (which I love as an organization, we're just not in sync).
I love Blackwells. I would love to see the list of books from your most recent order!
Isn't it great?? They're the best. My last order was an all-in-one version of Pat Barker's Regeneration trilogy, Cuddy by Benjamin Myers, Amma by Saraid De Silva, Monstrum by Lottie Mills, and couple of Oxford World's Classics paperbacks (North and South by Elizabeth Gaskell and Germinal by Emile Zola) - I like Oxford's versions when available. You???
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think for most people this is a combo of budget/discretionary income + capacity to wait. For me, my interests don't always align with the books the library tends to purchase (international lit fic) so I do buy a lot. I generally order from Blackwell's in the UK.
Also depends on your library. I still have a card for the Philly library (shhhhh this is key to my happiness) and it has a vastly superior ebook collection compared to DCPL (which I love as an organization, we're just not in sync).
I love Blackwells. I would love to see the list of books from your most recent order!
Anonymous wrote:I think for most people this is a combo of budget/discretionary income + capacity to wait. For me, my interests don't always align with the books the library tends to purchase (international lit fic) so I do buy a lot. I generally order from Blackwell's in the UK.
Also depends on your library. I still have a card for the Philly library (shhhhh this is key to my happiness) and it has a vastly superior ebook collection compared to DCPL (which I love as an organization, we're just not in sync).
Anonymous wrote:To the people who can't find something available to read, do you have a TBR?
If you use GoodReads, there's a chrome extension called Available Reads that lets you load your libraries and you can quickly see what books/audiobooks on your list are available (and how long the holds are for those that aren't). I have around 100 books on my TBR at any given time and can easily plan by reading with that extension.
Here's an example from the My Books page:
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From the book's actual page:
Anonymous wrote:Im a long time book hoarder, so not like you![]()
I only buy books i love now because its hard for me to get rid of them after I read them



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.
Yes, pretty much. I’m not usually in a rush to read any particular book.