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Lucrative Market in Selling Used Books
by K Snow

Published on this site: September 13th, 2006 - See
more articles from this month

Buying used books was not always in fashion. On the contrary it was not
considered acceptable and was looked down upon. College students and book-lovers
made clandestine trips to stores that sold second hand books. Not only
did their purchase of the large number of books that they wanted come
cheap, the bookstores also gave them the time and space that they required
to browse through various books. These trips promised an unstrained period
of time with coffee, background music, a soothing flavor of the age gone
by and years of paper.
But then the poplar bookstores realized that there was a lucrative market
in selling used books as well and soon enough the independent operator
who were also booklovers themselveswere shoved aside in the race to make
money. The consumers also realized the practicality of the buy and are
no longer embarrassed to be seen with a used book.
The result - large bookstores added a section on second hand books and
more and more people flocked to it. Today buying an old book has become
as frustrating as buying a brand new best seller. The pleasure of experiencing
the sweet fragrance of the Victorian age at the crummy but loveable stores
has become a thing of the past.
To give you a first hand experience of what happens at these stores, let
me take you to a trip to one such store. After you travel through pellets
of rain in maddening traffic and arrive at the magazine section in a buffed
up store looking for an old edition, you realize that there are some eight
people standing in front of you. There is no solace in the fact that these people are
genuine buyers and shall get on with their purchases because all that
they do is scratch their bottoms, talk on cell phones, rummage through
the pages of magazines leaving them debased with smudges and smears or
just plain simple hang around.
Since a trip to a brick and mortar bookstore has become such a thwarting
experience, buying old books on the Internet seems much more convenient
and comfortable. You miss the crummy but loveable ambience but can sift
through many books to find the one you want in seconds. Some of the great
sites that I have discovered for second hand books are listed below.
Powells.com is the site of one of the largest bookstores that spans a
city block is a few stories high. Situated in Oregon you require a map
to navigate. Navigating through these on the Internet seems like a better
prospect than physically sailing through the sea of people.
Ebay.com helps in searching a book or periodical using the search engine
GreenAppleBooks.com is one of the latest favorites in the Bay Area. Their
physical store is an antithesis of the crowded chain bookstores.
Word Power http://www.word-power.co.uk/about_us
is one of the few independent online bookstores and does not receive any
state or other funding to promote, or maintain. So do visit the site and
check it out!

K Snow: Discover how to buy old books on the Internet by visiting
http://advice-books.com


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