10 Ways to Save Money on Books
Published on - January 15th, 2007 (Modified on - January 16th, 2007) (by J.D. Roth) I used to spend thousands of dollars a year on books, most of which I never read. Recently I’ve begun to trim my book spending. I spent nearly $3000 on books in 2003, but that number dropped to $700 last year. How did I do it? Through self-discipline and some commonsense tricks.
Avoid new releases
New releases sell at a premium. Sometimes you can get them cheap at Costco or Amazon. It’s best to avoid them completely. Put them on hold at the library. If you’re tempted to buy a newly-released book, ask yourself: “Why do I need to own this now? Can I wait?”
Read reviews
Reviews help separate the wheat from the chaff. It’s a terrible feeling to spend $25 on a book only to discover it’s awful. Amazon is an excellent source for reader opinion. I also like Metacritic and The New Yorker. Find a source that you trust, and rely upon it to screen books.
Find the classics online
Most of the literary canon is in the Public Domain. There are thousands of freely-available texts for download at Project Gutenberg. One excellent way to read the classics is through Daily Lit, a service that gives you bite-sized chunks of books in your inbox.
Search for bargains
I look to buy books cheap at garage sales, thrift stores, and library book sales. If you’re patient and have a general idea of what you want, you can build a fantastic library for cheap. Don’t forget: if you find a nice stash at a garage sale, you can negotiate for a better price.
Make Amazon your all-purpose book tool
Though I buy some books from Amazon, I mainly use the site as a reference. I’m able to check reviews, prices, and related works. For many books, I can preview the first few pages. I can check release dates. My top use for Amazon is to compile a “reading list”. Whenever I spot a book that might be interesting, I add it to my Amazon list. About once a month, I go through this list and put the books on hold at the library…
Frequent your public library
This is the cornerstone to my system. The true revolution came when I discovered my library’s web site. Referencing my Amazon wish list, I place books on hold. When they’re ready, I stop after work to pick up a batch. I keep those books out for what seems like forever. My library system lets me renew for nearly six months! I believe that every smart, frugal person should make active use of her public libary.
Explore used book stores
Not all used booksellers are created equal. Scour your neighborhood to find the good ones. Some are stocked with romance novels and children’s books. That’s fine for some people, but I like a used bookstore with a diverse inventory. My wife has introduced me to the joys of the Edward R. Hamilton catalog. We just placed an order yesterday. Had we purchased these same books on Amazon, we would have spent over more than twice as much. (If you’re willing to buy used through Amazon, you can find many common books for only a buck or two.)
Harness the power of the internet
There are many book-related resources online. Over the past few weeks, readers have e-mailed to share resources such as:
- TitleTrader lets you swap books, DVDs, and CDs. The site offers a points-based system for requests.
- PaperBackSwap allows members to swap books my mail. For each book you send (paying postage), you earn credit to receive a book.
- Bookins is similar to the first two services, except that it reverses the payment structure. You only pay to receive books. Shipping books is free. Why is this a big deal? If you have too many books and want to purge your library, you can post your list and then gradually get rid of your overstock at no cost.
- BookSwim promises to be like Netflix for books. It’s nearing launch.
Audible is an expensive but useful option, especially if you enjoy listening to books on your iPod (as I do).
Buy only what you intend to read
This may seem obvious, but it’s taken me a long time to learn. I tend to want to own any book of interest. This is a huge money sink if the books remain unread. One approach is to only buy new books after you’ve read those last purchased. I’m not to this point yet, but I’m much better than I used to be.
Share
Pass books around to family and friends. Ask to borrow theirs. Create an informal book exchange among your social network. This is an excellent way to stretch the value of a dollar.

Eighteen months ago, I purged a large portion of my personal library. At that time I wrote:
We have many bookcases with many shelves. To be precise, we have eighty-five bookshelves of about thirty inches each. That’s approximately 2550 inches of books, or about 213 feet. That’s a hell of a lot of books.
A recent change in my mental outlook has allowed me to realize that I don’t need to possess as many books as I once did. It used to be that I felt the urge to own any book that looked remotely interesting. No longer. Nowadays I’m more interested in purchasing high-quality copies of books that I already love or want to treasure.
Spurred by Live Simple, I’ve scoured our bookshelves in an attempt to free space. To do this, I deliberately shut off my sentimental faculties. If it’s not a book that I want to re-read or to keep as reference then I set it aside to purge. I’ve purged hundreds of books. (This sounds impressive, but really it only freed about twelve shelves of space. I still have seventy-three shelves filled with books.)
Since then, I’ve purged even more books. More impressively, I’ve reduced the flow of books into the house. I still have a large library, but at least now my book spending is under control.
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Read e-books. Most titles you read in HS and College are public domain, although they are still published for profit. The e-Reader software for the Palm is free. There is an e-Reader Pro that you can pay to upgrade to. I’ve never done this since the e-reader is all I’ve needed. Find free e-books at:
http://www.manybooks.net
http://www.e-book.com
http://www.stockton.lib.ca.us
http://www.free-ebooks.net
http://www.ereader.com
http://www.user.pa.net
In 1998 the Modern Library, a division of Random House, New York, released a list of “the 100 best novels written in the English language and published since 1900.” The list sparked an instant comeback for some of the titles. Available at http://www.user.pa.net in PDA readable format are these free downloadable titles from the Modern Library 100.
#1. Joyce, James. Ulysses
#3. Joyce, James. A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
#9. Lawrence, D. H. Sons and Lovers
#12. Butler, Samuel. The Way of All Flesh
#19. Ellison, Ralph. The Invisible Man
#24. Anderson, Sherwood. Winesburg, Ohio
#27. James, Henry. The Ambassadors
#30. Ford, Ford Madox. The Good Soldier
#32. James, Henry. The Golden Bowl
#33. Dreiser, Theodore. Sister Carrie
#38. Forster, E. M. Howard’s End
#46. Conrad, Joseph. The Secret Agent
#47. Conrad, Joseph. Nostromo
#49. Lawrence, D. H. Women in Love
#58. Wharton, Edith. The Age of Innocence
#59. Beerbohm, Max. Zuleika Dobson
#66. Maugham, W. Somerset. Of Human Bondage
#67. Conrad, Joseph. Heart of Darkness
#68. Lewis, Sinclair Main Street
#69. Wharton, Edith. The House of Mirth
#78. Kipling, Rudyard. Kim
#79. Forster, E.M. A Room With A View
#85. Conrad, Joseph. Lord Jim
#87. Bennett, Arnold. The Old Wives’ Tale
#88. London, Jack. The Call of the Wild
You will also find these High School English novels Available in PDA format at http://www.user.pa.net
Little Women by Louisa May Alcott
The Wonderful Wizard of Oz by Frank Baum
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain
Anne of Green Gables by Lucy Maud Montgomery
The Red Badge of Courage by Stephen Crane
When you get on manybooks.net, the number and scope of the free e-Books will astound you. In fact, you will probably go nuts and start downloading hundreds of books (like I did), only to find that you could never hope to have enough time to read them all. I burned them all to CD, creating an instant library.
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For library books,
Library Lookup
Long term solution, buy books from Indie bookstores and stop making the big stores profit and driving out the diverse voices.
Good luck!
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Library Lookup
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[...] 10 Ways to Save Money on Books Great tips for all the book-lovers out there. [...]
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[...] Ik ben zelf nogal een boeken koop fan, maar nu het tijdelijk wat minder gaat bruto netto gezien moet er bespaard worden. Hier een aantal tips om dit voor elkaar te krijgen. (via) [...]
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Here’s a brokerage of web sites that I have found invaluable. http://used.addall.com/
You may sort by price, title, dealer or web site and refine results. I can often beat my local bookstore even including shipping and it comes right to my door. Addall searches Amazon,ABE, Half, foreign sites, goodwill and tons of others. Even out of print books come up for cheap. Have to watch out for some bookstores’ generic descriptions if you want a real idea of the book’s quality. I hadn’t seen it mentioned so I thought I’d put it in the list. One book I did not find at my library I am getting cheap then donating it to them after I’m done!
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There’s also Daedalus Books. Overseas shipping may add to the price, but the catalogue is steeply discounted. It’s really just a question of whether their list includes what you want at the time or if you’re just browsing and end up with some good stuff. When I still lived in New York, Daedalus and the Strand were my primary sources, even for new releases.
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If you are in the UK (and only the UK, it’s not set up for anywhere outside yet)you could do worse than http://www.readitswapit.com. List your unwanteds, then browse other people’s lists, if you find something you like, request a swap. If they like something on your list you just exchange books.
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or even:
http://www.readitswapit.com
without the trailing full stop.
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You should have left the email you used for the Trading sites on here. I know I would have been more than happy to list you as a reference and I doubt i’d have been the only one.
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http://www.goodreads.com/ just launched today and incorporates a book swapping feature. When you write up a book review, you can check a box to indicate that you’re willing to swap it with someone.
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You can read more than just the classics on-line. Here are two sci-fi publishers with on-line content
http://www.baen.com/library/
http://www.afterburnsf.com/index.php
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[...] The financial advice site Get Rich Slowly suggests using the library as a frugal way to save money on books. I agree, and am going to endure more bad OPAC design in the interest of financial progress. Stay tuned. [...]
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[...] 10 Ways to Save Money on Books Great tips for all the book-lovers out there. [...]
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I collect books. The above suggestions are good but…Amazon is not the best or cheapest source for books. That distinction goes to what ever book seller has the book that you want, with the lowest price and,the condition of the book that you will except.
As I said, I collect books. With a 3000+ library, I’m very picky about what I buy. So, I’m looking for 3 things, current market value, commonality, and rock bottom price.
I’ve always had sources for research, but the best I’ve ever seen in life is addall.com.
They are the biggest aggregator I’ve ever seen.
They search the biggest 24 book sellers on the net.
That may not mean anything to you, but when you understand that each one of these major sellers hosts/sells books for thousands of book stores and sellers around the world, and those stores are selling in turn for millions of small book sellers, your talking about billions of books.
So…there you are with your copy of “fill in the blank” and you want to know how common it is or how much its worth or, your looking for a paper back copy of “The Hobbit”. When addall.com’s used/out of print search brings up 6500 copies, you start to get the picture.
The one thing you will learn from using addall.com’s site is how “common” most books are. You can also sort by the common criteria,Title,Author,Price,Site,Dealer.
Also, you’ll learn how crazy the book market is.
The price swings are unreal.
Give addall.com a try. I know you’ll like it.
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Does anyone know if there are any Canadian equivalents to the internet resources listed under “Harness the power of the internet”?
Most of them don’t seem to allow shipping to Canada. At least that is what I understand.
Any help much appreciated. Thanks!
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After reading all the comments so far, I have yet to see anything on my favorite site – Zooba.com It’s a monthly shipping of the top book in your list/you can buy immediately. I like it to know once a month, I’m getting a book I wanted for only $9.99 and free shipping. Books can be rearranged, deleted, put back in, ect at any time of the month. Nice big selection to choose from. This site is wonderful if you just have to BUY it. I have much reading to do now checking out everyone else’s suggestions. Thanks everybody.
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[...] this gets crazy, I found J.D. posting an article on how to save money on books. Most of them are common sense, but so long as our minds are occupied with the urge of satisfying [...]
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[...] an interesting post on Get Rich Slowly about 10 Ways to Save Money on Books. It’s a very specialized article, but it has some good tips: books are expensive these days, [...]
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[...] 10 Ways to Save Money on Books Great tips for all the book-lovers out there. [...]
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You can rent books online at:
http://www.booksfree.com
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You know, I buy lots of books too. I try to read most of them
But because I live in Singapore, shipping rates for books from the US can be very expensive.
I needed a way to find the cheapest cost for any set of books I want, shipping rates included.
So I created Best Book Combo.
http://www.bestbookcombo.com
It factors in the various shipping rates for sellers from each store. This is especially handy for store aggregators like abebooks, where each seller has its own shipping rate.
And for international users, I built them a currency converter too.
All in all, I managed to save about 2 hours of frustration each time I try to buy books, and cut costs by about 25%
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Write reviews for magazines
If you, like me, are a bookworm, have a good background in literature(s) and are able with the written word, you could become a regular contributor to magazines and get new books free.
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Why not just look for discounts on Amazon? A lot of the times they come up cheaper than a normal shop.
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Another option for your used books is to sell them on ebay. If they are about niche topics you may be able earn a decent amount of money.
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If you are a college student like me you can check out StudentBookSearch. They have a free textbook exchange and you can also compare book prices from the top bookstores.
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