I think you have two different questions there
random thoughts Send a noteboard - 07/02/2011 10:08:40 PM
One is why publishers want hardcover books and then the question why do libraries want hardcover. People are willing to spend more money on hardcover so the publisher can make more money. With libraries I would think that hardcover books are more durable and worth the investment. Also some of the more expensive books were until recently only released in hardcover. Who besides a college student would pay $150 for a paperback?
I need a book. A good book. A book that I will enjoy.
- 06/02/2011 08:25:51 AM
1478 Views
The question is not what you have read, but what you enjoyed reading...
- 06/02/2011 12:57:01 PM
1276 Views
Re: The question is not what you have read, but what you enjoyed reading...
- 12/02/2011 09:24:55 PM
1178 Views
Have you read Foucault's Pendulum? That's been translated into English.
- 06/02/2011 05:09:55 PM
1066 Views
Different things. Decadant things.
- 06/02/2011 10:10:52 PM
1055 Views
Haven't read any Vandermeer, actually. You recommend him?
- 07/02/2011 12:26:35 AM
1134 Views
Jeff is a friend of mine, so of course I would recommend him
- 07/02/2011 08:33:41 AM
1262 Views
I've been looking for a hardcover edition of Là-Bas in French.
- 07/02/2011 06:05:27 AM
1095 Views
I get the sense that would be very expensive if found
- 07/02/2011 08:38:37 AM
1194 Views
Might as well ask American publishers where the obsession with hardcovers comes from.
- 07/02/2011 09:32:50 PM
1078 Views
Don't libraries as a rule have hardcovers?
- 07/02/2011 09:56:07 PM
1084 Views
I think you have two different questions there
- 07/02/2011 10:08:40 PM
1097 Views
Yes, but those are matters of what one is used to, like I said.
- 07/02/2011 10:23:32 PM
1109 Views
so they are buying paperbacks and turning them into hardbacks
- 09/02/2011 03:14:55 PM
1128 Views
Pretty much anything by Neil Gaiman, esp. Good Omens (w/Pratchett). More recommendations inside ...
- 08/02/2011 05:43:22 PM
1296 Views

*NM*