In Defense of Buying Books
Published on - December 30th, 2008 (Modified on - January 5th, 2010) (by J.D. Roth) J.D. is on vacation. This is a guest post from Ann Zerkle, a Get Rich Slowly lurker, and the founder of Heroes of Capitalism.
I know J.D. has posted many times about how going to the library saves money, but I personally love to buy books. Even after reading the arguments about saving money over the year, going to the library and everything else, I still think buying some books is good for me. This is my defense of buying books.
Cheap entertainment
First and foremost, the average cost of an hour of entertainment is pretty low for books. For instance, here’s a chart of entertainment options, and their financial cost per hour.
| Activity | Cost per Hour |
| Movie ($7.00 Ticket, 2 Hour Movie) | $3.50 |
| Cable TV ($40.00 per month, 2 Hours a day) | $0.67 |
| Book ($15.00, 6 Hours) | $2.5 |
| Baseball Game ($40.00, 3 Hours) | $13.34 |
| Concert ($50.00, 2 Hours) | $25.00 |
| Night Out ($50.00, 4 Hours) | $12.50 |
| Internet | Pennies? |
These numbers are based on an informal survey of my co-workers. I suggest you try it with your own values. Also, I assumed that I only read the book once and paid a pretty high price for it (usually, I buy paperbacks). If I really love a book, I keep it forever. I have books that I’ve read over and over and over and over again. I imagine the average per hour on some of my books is reaching mere cents per hour.
Often when I buy books, I pass them to my mother or sister and expect them continue handing the books around. I rarely balk at letting someone borrow a book (or three or four). I like that I can read something and then “release it into the wild”. This method of circulation has taken hold among my family, and I would guess one out of every three books is something that was given to me. This year I’ve given away over 20 books.
This pay-it-forward book network relieves the pressure of having tons of books around the house and makes me feel connected to my loved ones through shared reading experiences.
Books as an experience
Even with all this cost benefit analysis, ultimately, I am not buying books — I am buying an experience. One of my favorite date nights with my husband is going to Books-A-Million, drinking coffee, reading a big pile of trashy magazines (which I rarely buy), and browsing the books. Sometimes we walk away buying nothing. Other times we’ll spend $30. Nonetheless, it’s a pretty cheap date considering that we are there for sometimes up to five hours (yes, we are true book-store junkies!). We could do this at the library, but in South Carolina, the libraries don’t allow food and don’t stay open past 6pm on Fridays.
Along with the book-store experience, I flat out enjoy the hunt. Once I searched for an out-of-print book for over a year. When I finally found it at a used book store, it was absolutely exhilarating.
I enjoy searching the piles of books at the bargain tables. Sometimes this means getting books I would not have read otherwise, like the teenybopper fiction, which was really hot earlier this year. Other times, I go to a used book store to find things I know have been out for a while. Also, there are some books that I willingly pay full price for because I don’t want to be left behind.
For instance, when the last Twilight book was released, I bought it immediately. I did this because I did not want someone ruining it for me. It was worth the money to make sure I got a fresh experience. There is no way I could have gotten that book from the library the first day it was released.
Books as indulgence
Even if the previous logic isn’t convincing, consider that books are my reward. Instead of a big fancy meal or a special treat, I often get a book to celebrate things. A book is usually much cheaper than a meal at a fancy restaurant or a concert, is fewer calories than ice cream and lasts a lot longer than both!
Plus, like any indulgence, books can be bought with out-of-budget money. My husband and I have coin jar where we collect our loose change. We take it to the Coinstar machines, and get our return as an Amazon gift card, for which there is no conversion fee. This is a once a year reward that we blow on all the books we wanted to buy. Don’t underestimate the power of the coin jar. Last time we went we had over $70 in coins!
The benefits of buying
Beyond of all of this, sometimes there are specific benefits from buying. For instance, I do a decent amount of traveling, which can be quite overwhelming. I’ve spent two summers in Europe, surrounded by a language other than English. I cannot tell you how comforting it is dive into a good English book.
Even during domestic travel I find that a book can be a great distraction. I could take a library book with me on these trips, but the risk of losing a book is pretty high for me when I travel.
But the main reason I don’t like to check out library books is that I am not nice to my books. I like to read in the bathtub (more than one book has met its demise there). I like to bend my paperbacks in half. I like to write my thoughts in the margins. I like to highlight quotes I enjoy. I generally keep books in my bag, and often find a unique set of stains and dings from this. Just for the record: librarians do not like when you do this to their books!
All purchase decisions come down to one question: “What is the alternative?” For me, the alternative to purchasing a book is pretty lame. This may change if I end up near a quality library, but for living in the middle of Nowhere, South Carolina, buying is the way to go for me.
Have you ever thought of your purchases in terms of “average cost per hour”? What sorts of indulgences are worth the cost to you? And if you’re looking for something to buy, you might want to consider the GRS list of 25 of the Best Books on Money.
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I’m certainly willing to step up and say my books are my indulgence, but the city library system which does not meet my needs in my area of specialization is the Philadelphia library system – not the smallest in the country, and probably “decent” by most standards.
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I used to love bookstores, and would go often and spend as much as $50 or more at a pop. Over the years I’ve donated hundreds–actually probably thousands–of books to the library just because I ran out of room for them in my house.
These days, I use the library a lot, buy cheap used books online, and only rarely buy a brand-new book. I realized that I bought a lot of books that I ended up not especially liking and thus not even finishing, and books that I enjoyed once but realistically would never read again. My city library doesn’t have everything, but it has an awesome interlibrary loan system and can get books from public and university libraries all over my state (CA), at no charge, within a few days. It is very rare that I can’t get a book that I want this way.
Hundreds of dollars I used to spend buying books basically because I was bored (just going out in search of something to read, and it was also someplace to go) now goes into my savings account. Occasionally, if there’s some new book that I simply must read RIGHT NOW, I will splurge on a new one, but for the most part I’ve weaned myself from the addiction of instant gratification and the need to “own” a bajillion books.
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I knit for the same reasons – for ~$50 worth of yarn or so, I can have entertainment for months, something to do in a line, something to do while catching public transport, and something to keep my hands busy while joining others for a meal when I’ve already eaten, and in the end I have a jumper that I will wear to pieces as it fits me and is my colours and suits my wardrobe. The ultimate in frugal pursuits!
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I have an additional reason to add: for your babies.
Growing up, we had a room upstairs referred to as “the study,” where I spent some time writing in Word 5.0 and logging into Prodigy, but most of my time was spent in wonder, looking through the collection of books stored in the many bookshelves that lined one wall. These were books collected by my mother over the years: college textbooks, fiction, nonfiction. The subjects ranged from science fiction to the paranormal to comparative religion to medieval armor. This was a happy, quiet place, where I would spend hours devouring books not targeted to my age range.
Today, between my husband and I, we have even more books than were in the study, and I hope that my kids will have the same wonder when flipping through them someday.
If my mother had not purchased all of these books, and kept them, I would not have had the opportunity to have the same experience.
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As a 16-year-old male, I find that nearly all of my peers have no interest in books or reading in general. However, I enjoy reading a great deal, and often spend hours wandering libraries and book stores. I guess I’m an anomaly in today’s youth, but I just can’t see why this should be. Books are an essential part of my life, and I couldn’t imagine ever giving them up for a digital counterpart. There’s something in their substance and feel that makes them the perfect medium for any sort of reading.
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I’m so addicted to visiting bookstores and buying books that I started a blog about independent bookstores. I completely agree that shopping for books is an experience. I get to know the people who work at the stores and talk to people about books as I meet them in the aisles. I have been saying for years that hour for hour a book is the best deal in the world. I buy lots of books, BUT it’s just about all I buy. Very few clothes, no jewelry, no unnecessary house stuff. Thank goodness my addiction is cheap. I stopped checking books out of the library when I realized I paid as much in late fees as I did for a new book, which I didn’t have to panic over everytime it came close to liquid or a child.
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Just 2 quick notes, I was on BookMooch and had listed 20 books to swap and asked for 2-3 books I wanted. I received tons of send me books please and absolute silence on books I requested (Mrs. Read??)
I only buy used books thru Amazon, which has ‘used’ books and sellers have storefronts. I rarely pay more than .99 and have purchased technical books costing $130 for son in college, for .99. Shpg is a flat $3.99 HOWEVER, sellers always combine fees when you buy a few books. And its recycling!
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Better yet, you can get free books and free shipping at http://www.bookaway.blogspot.com.
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