aamcnamara: (Default)
This morning we had a lovely thunderstorm--possibly the first that we've had since I've been here? (I am not counting the Day Of Weird Weather in which it snowed, hailed, sleeted, rained, thunderstormed. That was just strange.) Rain pouring down and the thunder and lightning... it's kind of nice how I'll get another round of spring, thunderstorms, nice weather once I get back to Minnesota.

Counting strictly and including today, I have four days left on campus. (Not counting the brief bit of Wednesday I'll spend mostly eating breakfast before I leave.) I exist in a halfway land between Packing To Leave and pretending it won't happen. My room is full of boxes half-full of things, but I don't want to work on them. I don't want to repack them, fit everything nicely together. I have plenty of time, right? Anyway, I might need that stuff.

You know. Before Monday morning, when I should tape shut the boxes I'm shipping back home. Or before Tuesday, when I should have all the stuff that I'm storing in safely closed bins. At the latest, before Wednesday morning--when I will pick up my suitcases, drop my key in the box in the entrance hall, and walk out that door.
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Today, my morning class got out early, so I walked over to the bookstore just across the street from campus. I was looking for [livejournal.com profile] matociquala's Chill, though not really expecting to find it. I did not find it. I approached the friendly woman at the desk, who looked it up for me in their database and said, Oh yes, we just put in our last order for the week, but we can have it for you by the middle of next week. It's this much. What's your name? Telephone number?

Just like that, next week, after I have finished my papers and exams, I will have a copy of Chill waiting for me.

So here is my question. It might be a silly question, but I am wholly serious in asking it.

Why don't more people order books through their bookstores?

Okay, yes, Amazon is helpful for small presses, for obscure books, for things which are out of print. And I get that a lot of people in rural areas, in places where there aren't any independent bookstores, etc., don't exactly have this option. That is understandable.

But I am under the impression that, a lot of the time, that is not what Amazon is used for.

Get this, O children of the 21st century: I am putting money into a local independent bookstore. It is just as handy, maybe even more so under my particular circumstances, than ordering it from Amazon or Borders or Barnes & Noble.

And? I did not even have to pay shipping.

Dear people of previous generations: what exactly is it which is so handy about ordering online? Is it just novelty? Do warehouses run out of books a lot? Did I just hit upon a book which happened to be available? What are the factors which made everyone converge suddenly on this option?

The confusion of my generation thanks you.

May 2017

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