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The Cost of Reading while Travelling...

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Old Jul 28, 2005 | 5:23 pm
  #31  
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Originally Posted by SanDiego1K
I'm cheaper than any of you. Our local libraries sell paperbacks for $.25 or $.50. I've got about 4 local and county libraries within a 10 mile drive. I stock up there periodically. Then when I finish a book on the road, I abandon it.

I travel a lot to places where there is little activity in the evening, and no English TV other than CNN type shows. I read omnivorously, and like buying books on the cheap.
My tactic, too, except that our library lets you check them out just like the hardcovers. Lightweight, and the price is right.
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Old Jul 28, 2005 | 5:52 pm
  #32  
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My library has paperbacks to check out - but then I need to return them. I'll often start a trip with a dozen or more books and come home with none or 1. That allows me room for shopping, or amenity kits or airline pjs - or simply a lighter suitcase.
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Old Jul 28, 2005 | 6:54 pm
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Originally Posted by SanDiego1K
I'm cheaper than any of you. Our local libraries sell paperbacks for $.25 or $.50. I've got about 4 local and county libraries within a 10 mile drive. I stock up there periodically. Then when I finish a book on the road, I abandon it.
I can top that. In the final hours of our library book sales you take a brown paper bag and get everything you can fit in it for a grand total of $1. Who said the early bird gets the worm?
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Old Jul 28, 2005 | 7:34 pm
  #34  
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The Economist is definitely my travelling periodical of choice. In fact, even when I'm not flying I often stick it in my backpocket for when I have some downtime while out shopping with the girlfriend or something. Light and plenty of good reading.
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Old Jul 28, 2005 | 7:53 pm
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Consider the cost of monthly "entertainment"... dinners out, cable, renting DVDs. I would much rather spend my money on books, even if the total is three or four figures.
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Old Jul 28, 2005 | 8:21 pm
  #36  
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Originally Posted by bigbrownboy
The Economist is definitely my travelling periodical of choice. In fact, even when I'm not flying I often stick it in my backpocket for when I have some downtime while out shopping with the girlfriend or something. Light and plenty of good reading.

Have you read "McCarthy's Bar" - featurning the author's Singapore Noodle Index tour of Ireland?
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Old Jul 28, 2005 | 8:32 pm
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I buy used paperbacks (nice and lightweight) from the library sale tables. I can leave them, give them away, trade with fellow travelers--and if I happen to arrive back home with them--or with new acquisitions--I cheerfully donate them back to the library (getting a donation slip for my taxes). Garage sales are another source. And a month or so ago, I bought several new hardback books at Target for $.25 each. I'm currently reading a very interesting book titled Poison. (which, now that I think of it, might be a good book to be reading on a SW flight when I want to discourage anyone from taking the empty seat next to me)
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Old Jul 28, 2005 | 11:51 pm
  #38  
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I only buy books on half.com or amazon's used marketplace.

usually the books are read once and that's it.
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Old Jul 29, 2005 | 12:38 am
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Originally Posted by Martinis at 8

So, I've switched over to visiting the local library and checking out books. Some of my international trips can be as long as two months, so library fines were a question that came up. Fortunately, the local library lets one extend books by internet.

M8
Library books are great - but if you are away for a month or two try not to take out popular books - if someone puts a hold on it you won't be able to renew it online or otherwise.
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Old Jul 29, 2005 | 1:26 am
  #40  
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Originally Posted by letiole
I can top that. In the final hours of our library book sales you take a brown paper bag and get everything you can fit in it for a grand total of $1. Who said the early bird gets the worm?
My local library also has that (though it's $5/bag). Usually at that point, the selection is fairly pitiful, eg mostly bestselling beach novels that I wouldn't read because the quality of the writing would bug me too much. However, I'm usually able to find enough books to fill one bag. As kids, we had a library full of the $1 bag books, and that provided ample summer reading. Of course, I was much less picky then about what I read--cliched writing/plots isn't cliched if you've never encountered it before!

For discounted recently published books, I like using bookcloseouts.com. 90% of the (current) books that I want end up there. The books are good quality and shipping is cheap for large orders. Otherwise I tend to use half.com which usually has the lowest price available (though shipping can add up and quality isn't 100% guaranteed).
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Old Jul 29, 2005 | 2:05 am
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Originally Posted by sarah615
Consider the cost of monthly "entertainment"... dinners out, cable, renting DVDs. I would much rather spend my money on books, even if the total is three or four figures.
Renting DVD's is relavitely cheap. I bring my Netflix DVD with me when I fly. I usually watch one on the plane. If I'm traveling in the US, I can then just mail it in any mailbox and a new movie will usually be in my mailbox by the time I come back. If I have time on the trip, I watch the rest, except I always save a DVD for the flight home.

As for reading, I think movies and the internet has reduced my reading time. I used to read a lot of novels when I was in high school, but all the mandatory reading in college turned me off reading. If I have a long flight, I'll usually bring a few magazines and a new novel though. I'll watch a DVD and then read. It's really the only time I read books that aren't related to my work.
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Old Jul 29, 2005 | 10:48 pm
  #42  
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I didn't realize I'm not the only one who leaves books behind instead of bringing them home. I travel with novels or other books I know I won't want to reread or keep for research and leave them wherever I finish them. I'm fortunate in that one of my editing jobs is for a magazine that reviews several hundred books a year, and I get about 3-4x that many review products. Occasionally I buy used paperbacks at the library or really cheap ones at the bargain bookstores.
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Old Jul 29, 2005 | 11:18 pm
  #43  
 
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Originally Posted by bigbrownboy
The Economist is definitely my travelling periodical of choice. In fact, even when I'm not flying I often stick it in my backpocket for when I have some downtime while out shopping with the girlfriend or something. Light and plenty of good reading.
If The Economist would only lose the 20+ pages per issue of want ads for agrarian development advisers in Zambia or for extension MBA programs in Dubuque, the world's airlines would save $millions annually on jet fuel....
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Old Jul 30, 2005 | 12:48 am
  #44  
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I use the library a lot for books to take on the road. Since my trips last 4-5 weeks, I helps some, but not enough. 2 or 3 hard covers is all I want to pack due to weight and space. I don't like to take the paperbacks from the library due to their fragility and the fact that they are not usually current.

I will order a newish book from the library - in SFO they will transport any book you want to a neighborhood branch, and then pick them up before I go. Internet renewal is wonderful. Usually, it is only the books that my wife cons me for that end up with fines. Still at $.10 a day, it is not so bad.

When I go to the Chicago area and stay a month, the Evanston library will issue a temporary card when presented with a letter from my hotel giving my length of stay.

In Switzerland, paperbacks cost Sfr 15.00 to 17.00. Reading for entertainment gets quite expensive when a book last only 2 days. I rationalize it as being cheaper than going to a movie!

Like others, I will also frequent the used book outlets for paperbacks and will take as many as ten if I have the room. At $1.50 t0 $3.00 these are a bargain for two evenings of entertainment.
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Old Jul 30, 2005 | 2:52 am
  #45  
 
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I'd say that I break even on my travel reading - lots of offsetting factors:

On the plus side:
- I take a lot of magazine supplements with me that I throw away as I go - these are easy reading and cost nothing extra
- I don't buy newspapers as I get them at the hotel or read them on-line - I'd normally pay for them at home
- I probably surf more when I travel - especially with faster connections at hotels - so don't read as much

On the negative side:
- tend to buy a lot of books and magazines if I am in NYC - Borders Union square and the magazine shop across from the W Union Square do very well out of me - though I'd probably buy these if I wasn't travelling
- I always end up buying books at the airport - just in case I run out of reading

I never seem to get through as much reading a I'd hope when travelling - very envious of those that can get through several books in a two week trip.. but as others may have said - I'd probably end up buying a lot of this stuff (DVDs, magazines, books) even if I wasn't travelling as Ijust like to accumulate this stuff!
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