Image by Kraybon |
Every semester, as sure as anything, come out a flurry of articles and posts about the costs of books for school these days and every year they somewhat baffle me. The average cost is now listed as 1,1367$ per year, but in three and a half years in college and 1 1/2 in grad school I have never spent more than 200$ a semester and usually less than 100$. Now I have studied in cheap fields, textbook wise (although I was a psych minor and psych books are expensive), but that figure is the national average, not the average for Science majors only. Anyway, here is what I know.
Rule #1: Never ever, ever,ever,ever, ever shop at the campus book store. Even the used books are way more expensive than you can get elsewhere. There are no other rules, the rest is strategy.
Textbooks vs. monographs vs workbooks: a definition of terms
Textbooks, for this discussion anyway, are large usually multi-authored works meant to be an encyclopedic overview of the established facts of a certain subject. They have bland titles like "Introduction to Calculus" and "Data Security in a New Millennium". These are the most expensive new, but there exist a few strategies for dealing with them. Monographs on the other hand are single or (not technically, but for this discussion) team authored works which present a specific, possibly contested, point of view on a very focused subject and have titles like "Subjects of the Sultan: Culture and Daily Life in the Ottoman Empire" or "Double Fold: Libraries and the Assault on Paper", so dramatic/artistic vague title: explanatory, usually long sub-title. The good news is that they can usually be gotten cheaply. The bad news is that classes that assign them usually assign like six of them. Workbooks generally are median expensive and have to be bought new, so really you pretty much have to eat that cost. Sorry.
Getting Books for Free
The Interwebs: Your ability to get your book for free (legally) on the internet is substantially dependent on your discipline and almost exclusively limited to monographs and novels. If you are in an English class for pre-20th century lit, you can get your books for free (except any textbooks). Certain disciplines, like library/information and computer sciences are offering more and more monographs free online, and some academic publishers like Yale, University of Michigan, and MIT are posting a substantial number of new monographs. To find these, for books published before 1928, go to archive.org or Google Books. Otherwise, google the full book title and look for the book's website or page hosted on the publisher's website. If it's available there will be a link somewhere in there, usually obvious on the front page.
Image by: Jonathan Moreau |
Getting Books for Cheap
Aggregated Search Engines: The best deals on books are usually found on used sites, so I used to search through five different sites comparing prices. Lo, then did the aggregated searches appear, and the peasants rejoiced. This is the great secret to cheap books. My favorite is Deal Oz, but if anyone else has a favorite drop it in the comments. Just keep combined shipping possibilities in mind. Also, if your assigned textbook is brand new, be sure to ask your professor if an older edition is okay, because usually it is and superseded editions are dirt cheap.
Textbook Rental: Sometimes these are a great deal, but I find they are rarely much cheaper, and sometimes more expensive, than a used copy. My personal opinion is that they are really only ideal for something like a required class outside your major or field of interest. If it is the introductory class in your major then chances are the textbook will be useful to keep around for future reference. I might just be a book hoarder though.
*Sorry, I went to High School in Austin. It's a thing
2 comments:
I stopped buying my books from the bookstore after my first semester :) I have been procrastinating on buying my books I need right now...
Love your blog! ^_^
Thanks so much! It means a lot to hear people appreciate it.
Good luck on your book buying!
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