Boring munchkin technique #1: What if I told you there was a place you could go where they would give you books? paper or ebook, whichever you prefer. And if they didn’t have the book you wanted, they would order it for you? And when you were done with the book. and didn’t want it cluttering up your apartment any more, you could give it back to them; and they would store it for you until needed it again? So not only does this service get you books. It effectively increases the amount of living space you have, and the general neatness of your apartment or house. How much would you pay for such a service? $50 a month? $100 a month? $5000 a year? How much do you spend on books now that you have to store and manage?
Of course, you already know there is such a service, and it doesn’t cost you even $10 a month. It’s the public library. If you haven’t stopped into your public library lately, it’s time to check it out again. Public libraries have become a lot more effective in the last decade. You can now order books online, and have them delivered to your local branch, so if you remember a time when the library rarely had what you wanted, check again. It’s no longer just a place to browse to find something to read. It’s a place where you can find exactly the book you want. If library fines bother you, libraries will now send you email reminders to renew, and let you renew online. If you use ebooks, you don’t even have to go to the library to pick up or return the books. Most libraries are much more convenient than they were even a few years ago.
It’s not perfect. Most libraries don’t have a lot of the more technical books, ebooks aren’t as available as they should be (blame the publishers for that since they don’t license a lot of ebooks to libraries) and occasionally you may have to bring a paper book back to the library before you’re done with it because someone else wants to read it. However if your reading tastes aren’t too esoteric, and you have access to a good library system in a major metropolitan area, then you can get 90% or more of your books from the public library. You will still buy a few books that they don’t have available, or that you really want to consult every day for a year; but you can save a lot of money, time, and space by visiting your local library before you visit amazon.
Or you could get it even more conveniently, even faster, and even cheaper from the internet. Even if you for some reason hesitate to pirate, it’s easy to find a legally free alternative to anything.
You will still buy a few books that they don’t have available, or that you really want to consult every day for a year; but you can save a lot of money, time, and space by visiting your local library before you visit amazon.
Time? I get the idea with most of them but it takes me a couple of hours to get down to the library and back whereas it’s like a couple of minutes to order from Amazon or somewhere.
Amazon takes a minimum of 1 calendar day to get a paper book to me, and that’s at some extra cost. I can get a paper book from my local library in under an hour if it’s on the shelves. (It helps that I live a block away from the Brooklyn Central Library.) If the book I want is not on the shelves, them amazon may be quicker; and I may order from them if I really need the book ASAP. For ebooks it’s a wash on time, though amazon does have a much better selection of ebooks.
As with all advice, adjust to fit your personal circumstances. If you live 2 hours away from the nearest library, you may be willing to trade money for time, especially if it[’s a book you’re pretty sure you’re going to want to refer to repeatedly, rather than just read once and put on a shelf, never to be looked at again. I suspect most folks live closer than that. Many people who live in an urban or suburban area walk or drive by a public library on an almost daily basis.
There are certainly reasons to buy some books rather than merely borrowing them. But my main point is that before reflexively going to amazon and clicking “buy It now”, you should take a few seconds to consider whether you might be better off searching for it at the library first. I am astonished at how many book hoarders I know who have apartments stacked with paper tomes, sometimes almost dangerously so, who somehow never consider setting foot in a public library.
Many library catalogues are searchable online. So you just have to search a different site to wether they have it or not. If they have it, it’s probably quicker to take a trip to the library than to wait for shipping.
But it requires active, exclusive use of time to go to a library, loan out a book, and bring it back (and additional time to return it), whereas I can do whatever while the book is en route.
That is true. However according to my experience you don’t need to spend much time in the library itself if you know what you’re looking for (you can always stay for the atmosphere). What takes time is going to and from the library. The value of this time obviously depends on a lot of parameters: is the library close to your route to/from some other place, are you currently very busy, do you enjoy city walks/bike-rides, etc.
Boring munchkin technique #1: What if I told you there was a place you could go where they would give you books? paper or ebook, whichever you prefer. And if they didn’t have the book you wanted, they would order it for you? And when you were done with the book. and didn’t want it cluttering up your apartment any more, you could give it back to them; and they would store it for you until needed it again? So not only does this service get you books. It effectively increases the amount of living space you have, and the general neatness of your apartment or house. How much would you pay for such a service? $50 a month? $100 a month? $5000 a year? How much do you spend on books now that you have to store and manage?
Of course, you already know there is such a service, and it doesn’t cost you even $10 a month. It’s the public library. If you haven’t stopped into your public library lately, it’s time to check it out again. Public libraries have become a lot more effective in the last decade. You can now order books online, and have them delivered to your local branch, so if you remember a time when the library rarely had what you wanted, check again. It’s no longer just a place to browse to find something to read. It’s a place where you can find exactly the book you want. If library fines bother you, libraries will now send you email reminders to renew, and let you renew online. If you use ebooks, you don’t even have to go to the library to pick up or return the books. Most libraries are much more convenient than they were even a few years ago.
It’s not perfect. Most libraries don’t have a lot of the more technical books, ebooks aren’t as available as they should be (blame the publishers for that since they don’t license a lot of ebooks to libraries) and occasionally you may have to bring a paper book back to the library before you’re done with it because someone else wants to read it. However if your reading tastes aren’t too esoteric, and you have access to a good library system in a major metropolitan area, then you can get 90% or more of your books from the public library. You will still buy a few books that they don’t have available, or that you really want to consult every day for a year; but you can save a lot of money, time, and space by visiting your local library before you visit amazon.
Or you could get it even more conveniently, even faster, and even cheaper from the internet. Even if you for some reason hesitate to pirate, it’s easy to find a legally free alternative to anything.
On that note.. could anyone recommend a good tracker for literature?
Mendeley.
Time? I get the idea with most of them but it takes me a couple of hours to get down to the library and back whereas it’s like a couple of minutes to order from Amazon or somewhere.
Amazon takes a minimum of 1 calendar day to get a paper book to me, and that’s at some extra cost. I can get a paper book from my local library in under an hour if it’s on the shelves. (It helps that I live a block away from the Brooklyn Central Library.) If the book I want is not on the shelves, them amazon may be quicker; and I may order from them if I really need the book ASAP. For ebooks it’s a wash on time, though amazon does have a much better selection of ebooks.
As with all advice, adjust to fit your personal circumstances. If you live 2 hours away from the nearest library, you may be willing to trade money for time, especially if it[’s a book you’re pretty sure you’re going to want to refer to repeatedly, rather than just read once and put on a shelf, never to be looked at again. I suspect most folks live closer than that. Many people who live in an urban or suburban area walk or drive by a public library on an almost daily basis.
There are certainly reasons to buy some books rather than merely borrowing them. But my main point is that before reflexively going to amazon and clicking “buy It now”, you should take a few seconds to consider whether you might be better off searching for it at the library first. I am astonished at how many book hoarders I know who have apartments stacked with paper tomes, sometimes almost dangerously so, who somehow never consider setting foot in a public library.
Many library catalogues are searchable online. So you just have to search a different site to wether they have it or not. If they have it, it’s probably quicker to take a trip to the library than to wait for shipping.
But it requires active, exclusive use of time to go to a library, loan out a book, and bring it back (and additional time to return it), whereas I can do whatever while the book is en route.
That is true. However according to my experience you don’t need to spend much time in the library itself if you know what you’re looking for (you can always stay for the atmosphere). What takes time is going to and from the library. The value of this time obviously depends on a lot of parameters: is the library close to your route to/from some other place, are you currently very busy, do you enjoy city walks/bike-rides, etc.