The Next Best Book Club discussion
Book Related Banter
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Internet or Physical Bookstore?
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Having said all that I also use Amazon both for new and used books and Overstock for new books.
I love the smell, and feel of a good bookstore. When we were growing up my mom would give us our allowance when we were getting ready to go into the bookstore once every two weeks when we went into the "city" to grocery shop. Obviously, we never made it out of the store with any allowance left.



can you get e-books for Kindle?

can you get e-books for Kindle?"
Yes, here a link to their info page for using the Kindle with the site:
http://www.booksonboard.com/index.php...


How did you get burned, which online store did you use? I bought an expensive book bundle set from a user on Amazon and never got it (or my money back) so that's the last time I try to buy something from a person rather than from a store. It's sad how many scamming people are out there : (

One was no big deal, cause I got my money back but the bad one was on ebay. The seller had a good rating, but then over Christmas, he just disappeared, nobody got there stuff, he got like 50 negative ratings overnight and then the next day ebay just deleted the seller. I still don't know what happened.
Both - I support the local indie bookstore for gifts and non-fiction, and buy fiction for my Kindle.


I loved a few old bookstores I used to frequent when living near Lancaster, England - old, dusty and the smell of leather.

I still often like to see a book to decide if I want to own it. Sometimes I like to browse and have something catch my eye which is pretty tough on line.
But if I know what I want, buying online is generally cheaper.



Though I have noticed I have become slowly disillusioned with the whole process - fewer and fewer new releases are exciting me, I am sick of the corporate mentality about margin being everything.
And it is weird to note, customers are now starting to treat book stores like internet sights. They want everything instant, especially answers. And the human brain is not always as fast as wireless link.

I completely agree and share the same problem! I honestly don't know what to read at the moment, afraid that the book won't reach my expectations. Do you know of any extremely good books?

Kamee,
It is impossible to recommend a book to someone you don't know, but let's not let the impossible stand in our way :-)
I won't recommend a classic because I assume you've heard about them. I'll suggest one I've read recently.
A friend of mine handed me a book called
The Slap by Christos Tsiolkas. I recommend this to anyone who will listen. Mainly because it is a book that I thought about long after I read it and that I talked to friends about a lot. The premise is simple, a couple is holding a backyard barbecue for friends and family. One obnoxious child grates on everyone's nerves all day and at one point is about to hit another child. The parent of the 2nd child slaps the first.
The book moves from one point of view to the next as it looks at the slap and the subsequent months through the lives of those at the barbecue. The people and their lives are unremarkable but it has you thinking about social norms, friendship, blood ties, parenting, lots of topics that we can all relate to without any major dramatic event (just like all of our lives). I should warn you that the first 2 characters you see are men and the writing style is course (it made me wonder if all men really think that way) but that tone isn't continued. The author does a great job in letting us really see the different personalities.
Anyway, I don't know the author so this isn't a plug for any reason other than I think it is a unique book and one that just might break your dry spell.
Good luck and let me know what you do read and how you like it.




Great, let me know if you like it. It's always scary to recommend a book to people you don't know well (note I didn't recommend my own book - that's even scarier). If you read The Slap and feel like rambling about it for a while, I'm your gal.

I live in Melbourne and work and play where these characters do. So sometimes it was a little too real for me. Espeically considering I have a Greek Friend who married a Fijian Indian :).
Kamee I would also recommend the The Book Thief, set in Nazi Germany it is not your usual war novel, in fact it is one of the most original novels I have read in years. Also The 19th Wife: A Novel which is very very good. Nothing like murder and moroms multipal wives to spice things up.

Sounds like it was even closer to the bone for you. I'm a Sydney-sider with no Greek friends (or no close ones anyway). But I saw lots of people and cultures in the story. As for the screaming at the characters thing, I read it first and then my husband did. He kept screaming, especially at the mother. It was pretty funny to watch. :-)
I found The Book Thief good, but not great. Never read The 19th Wife (yet).

Oh wow, I never thought of that!




Heather in KS


Ideally, I'd go and look at what's in the bookstore, make a list of what I want, then go and get a good deal online. However, sometimes I just can't help myself. :)
Books mentioned in this topic
The 19th Wife (other topics)The Book Thief (other topics)
The Slap (other topics)
The Slap (other topics)
The Slap (other topics)
I did just order a couple books online this year for Christmas gifts but one of them was an accidental find - I was planning on buying it new at Borders for almost $40 but then found it on Amazon for half the price. (This was even after looking at all four local Half Price Books in town, lol.) The other book is for my boyfriend and can only be gotten through the Montreal art museum's website (unless we drive up there to pick it up, which is too tempting to seriously consider...). Had I planned these things I could probably have gotten the French art book for much cheaper, but I want it before Christmas so I have to spend an additional $17 just to get it by 12/22.