ABE is an example of where the web has not just altered the scope of an activity, it has changed its nature. What’s more it helps a deserving and generally under-funded stratum of the retail world.
ABE is an umbrella under which shelter 13,000 second-hand-book shops (Gosh, that’s hard to hyphenate.) round the world, providing them with exposure and a reference service way beyond individual resources. And using ABE has unexpected charms.
There’s a British author called John Lodwick, killed in a car crash in the sixties, whom I read with enthusiasm. His books are long out of print but I decided to push out the ABE boat. My trawl brought in seven or eight titles. But the charm came from where the Jiffy-bags were filled. One was in Tennessee, another in Pennsylvania. Hard to see how those shops would otherwise have got my custom.
There is a tiny catch. Some of the books cost a mere 50 cents but, not surprisingly, packing and postage is several multiples of that. I for one don’t object.
2 comments:
I remember when Abe books started out in a garage in Victoria, BC, run by two couples. It's grown so huge now that Amazon has bought it, did you know. I hope it doesn't change. My beef is that everything is now in US$, even if you are buying from a Canadian seller, and yes, the shipping is usually way more than the book itself. I've had some wonderful finds of out-of -print books.
That's sad news. I always feel guilty using Amazon (for books) since they obviously undercut bricks-and-mortar bookshops. Now, with ABE as a subsidiary, they get "the ha-penny and the toffee" as my granny used to say.
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