i have tested this theory in the last few weeks and have seen it in EVERY SINGLE CHARITY SHOP I HAVE BEEN IN WITHOUT EXCEPTION.
― jed_ (jed), Wednesday, 4 May 2005 20:30 (twenty years ago)
― Jordan (Jordan), Wednesday, 4 May 2005 21:24 (twenty years ago)
― Ken L (Ken L), Wednesday, 4 May 2005 21:26 (twenty years ago)
― jed_ (jed), Wednesday, 4 May 2005 21:53 (twenty years ago)
― Gear! (can Jung shill it, Mu?) (Gear!), Thursday, 5 May 2005 01:30 (twenty years ago)
― Hurting (Hurting), Thursday, 5 May 2005 02:46 (twenty years ago)
― tom west (thomp), Thursday, 5 May 2005 03:10 (twenty years ago)
Papillion by Henri Charriere (sp?)The Godfather by Mario PuzoThe Dirty Dozen by Nathan someone-or-otherAnything by Robert Ludlum
Nowadays, the books I always see are:Anything by Tom ClancyAnything by Michael ConnellyBag of Bones by Stephen King
― Adrian, Thursday, 5 May 2005 08:46 (twenty years ago)
― estela (estela), Thursday, 5 May 2005 10:41 (twenty years ago)
― jed_ (jed), Thursday, 5 May 2005 12:16 (twenty years ago)
Er, I mean, send to live on happy book farms with all the other books no-one wants to buy.
― accentmonkey (accentmonkey), Thursday, 5 May 2005 13:46 (twenty years ago)
― Ray (Ray), Thursday, 5 May 2005 19:43 (twenty years ago)
― Ethan, Thursday, 5 May 2005 20:43 (twenty years ago)
assorted titles by Erma Bombeck, Dave Barry, Leo Buscaglia
― jaymc (jaymc), Thursday, 5 May 2005 23:16 (twenty years ago)
I'm already doing that with the CD singles that radio stations and record companies dump on us.
Sigh.
In Irish charity shops you get a lot of religious books as well. Priests be dyin', no new priests be comin' along.
― accentmonkey (accentmonkey), Friday, 6 May 2005 05:52 (twenty years ago)
― Gear! (can Jung shill it, Mu?) (Gear!), Friday, 6 May 2005 06:03 (twenty years ago)
― Ken L (Ken L), Friday, 6 May 2005 11:18 (twenty years ago)
― Madchen (Madchen), Friday, 6 May 2005 11:45 (twenty years ago)
― Madchen (Madchen), Friday, 6 May 2005 11:46 (twenty years ago)
Make Your Baby Fall Asleep
Etc.
― PJ Miller (PJ Miller), Friday, 6 May 2005 12:07 (twenty years ago)
It did remind me of another definite addition to this thread though: Coelho's Alchemist.I'm tempted to add Gibran's The Prophet as well, though I didn't see that there. For some reason I've seen a "gift edition" of it everywhere as of late.
― Øystein (Øystein), Friday, 6 May 2005 12:43 (twenty years ago)
The books I saw most copies of:Amalie Skram - Hellemyrsfolket (three copies)Frederick Forsyth - Day of the jackal (five copies, mostly Norwegian translations)
― Øystein (Øystein), Friday, 6 May 2005 15:14 (twenty years ago)
I fear that The Da Vinci Code may finally have reached saturation point. I've had a copy in the window for two days and no-one's bought it. If no-one buys it this weekend, I'll know I can stop asking people I see reading it to donate it when they've finished.
― accentmonkey (accentmonkey), Friday, 6 May 2005 16:31 (twenty years ago)
Philip Roth's Goodbye Columbus, Our Gang, and Portnoy's Complaint are always big thrift store staples. Same with Shogun.
― kyle (akmonday), Friday, 6 May 2005 18:42 (twenty years ago)
― Ken L (Ken L), Friday, 6 May 2005 19:12 (twenty years ago)
― Casuistry (Chris P), Friday, 6 May 2005 19:44 (twenty years ago)
― Ken L (Ken L), Friday, 6 May 2005 19:56 (twenty years ago)
― Ken L (Ken L), Friday, 6 May 2005 20:01 (twenty years ago)
― Ken L (Ken L), Friday, 6 May 2005 20:27 (twenty years ago)
― Ken L (Ken L), Friday, 6 May 2005 20:29 (twenty years ago)
― Ken L (Ken L), Friday, 6 May 2005 20:38 (twenty years ago)
― kyle (akmonday), Friday, 6 May 2005 20:49 (twenty years ago)
Has anyone here ever (a) noticed that a book was constantly in the charity shops and (b) then decided to buy it just to see what it was all about (knowing full well how difficult it would be to see off afterwards)?
― Casuistry (Chris P), Saturday, 7 May 2005 18:06 (twenty years ago)
― Sinead, Sunday, 8 May 2005 15:06 (twenty years ago)
It's weird about 'Good Behaviour'. I really like this book but never would have known what to expect from it in advance - has it been really badly marketed over the years or something?
― Archel (Archel), Monday, 9 May 2005 15:46 (twenty years ago)
― holojames (holojames), Monday, 9 May 2005 17:04 (twenty years ago)
― Casuistry (Chris P), Monday, 9 May 2005 18:17 (twenty years ago)
Umm, The God of Small Things. Or anything else with stickers about winning prestigious literary prizes that people buy to put on their coffee table and make them look smart.
― Liz :x (Liz :x), Tuesday, 10 May 2005 08:15 (twenty years ago)
― Markelby (Mark C), Saturday, 14 May 2005 11:32 (twenty years ago)
books clogging up shelfspace in the near future :lord of the ringsatkins dietda vinci code
― zappi (joni), Saturday, 14 May 2005 13:56 (twenty years ago)
― dja, Saturday, 14 May 2005 15:04 (twenty years ago)
I guess most of the books in s/h shops have orig. been given as gifts, a la "Hey, this character reminds a bit me of X, I'll give it to them for their birthday", hence all the Br. Jones, Nick Hornby & their imitators. 20 or so years ago, these type of shops were full of Kingsley Amis etc for much the same reason I imagine.
― bham, Monday, 23 May 2005 08:58 (twenty years ago)
― kyle (akmonday), Monday, 23 May 2005 21:56 (twenty years ago)
― PJ Miller (PJ Miller), Tuesday, 24 May 2005 07:58 (twenty years ago)
http://www.tomwolfe.com/images/covers/ManinFull.jpg
― Suzy Creemcheese (SuzyCreemcheese), Tuesday, 21 June 2005 19:47 (twenty years ago)
― Beth Parker, Monday, 15 August 2005 19:42 (twenty years ago)
― accentmonkey (accentmonkey), Monday, 15 August 2005 20:37 (twenty years ago)
― jed_ (jed), Monday, 15 August 2005 21:39 (twenty years ago)
His other ones even more so, I think because they're worse so people just want to get rid of them out of their houses. Plus we had three copies in one week of a book that's being described in its blurb as the thinking person's DVC. One man brought it into the shop, put it on the counter and said "you can have this, it's RUBBISH!"
And good god, you could drown in Robert Jordans.
― accentmonkey (accentmonkey), Tuesday, 16 August 2005 06:46 (twenty years ago)
― Øystein (Øystein), Tuesday, 16 August 2005 07:29 (twenty years ago)
Agatha Christie's entire collection, always.
Also old Penguin versions of A Passage to India and Pride and Prejudice.
― franny glass, Thursday, 14 May 2009 02:29 (sixteen years ago)
http://bonsaisgigantes.net/parodiasanimadas/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/paul-reiser-couplehood.jpg
― corey, Monday, 7 March 2011 01:18 (fourteen years ago)
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/515JT4XBCFL.jpg
― textbook blows on the head (dowd), Monday, 7 March 2011 01:26 (fourteen years ago)
the shipping news
― plax (ico), Monday, 7 March 2011 01:30 (fourteen years ago)
saw that displayed prominently in a gallery bookshop yesterday for some reason
― joe smooth's 'promised blend' instant coffee (haitch), Monday, 7 March 2011 01:39 (fourteen years ago)
Karel Čapek - War With the Newts (There's a Norwegian bookclub edition from the 70s that's /everywhere/. Ditto their edition of One Day in the Life Of Ivan Mumblevich)
― Øystein, Monday, 7 March 2011 13:16 (fourteen years ago)
http://i2.squidoocdn.com/resize/squidoo_images/250/draft_lens9008791module79321771photo_1263909562and-ladies-of-club2.jpg
― The all-jazz interpreter (Eazy), Monday, 7 March 2011 15:27 (fourteen years ago)
alexander mccall smith is eeeeverywhere, in great volume.
― Antoine Bugleboy (Merdeyeux), Tuesday, 8 March 2011 23:30 (fourteen years ago)
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51THS318YHL._SL500_AA300_.jpg
― portrait of velleity (woof), Wednesday, 9 March 2011 09:45 (fourteen years ago)
i had at least two copies of that by accident
― thomp, Wednesday, 9 March 2011 11:12 (fourteen years ago)
why are there so many copies of it floating around? was it massively popular amongst penguin-reading autodidacts?
― thomp, Wednesday, 9 March 2011 11:13 (fourteen years ago)
I guess? I suppose it was a bestseller in the day - mass culture dissolving working class tradition was a popular angst theme I imagine; plus it was probably on a lot of humanities and social science introductory reading lists. But i dunno, its multi-copy presence in every second hand shop in Britain is impressive. Maybe I should read it (it looks dull tho)
― portrait of velleity (woof), Wednesday, 9 March 2011 11:21 (fourteen years ago)
i remember it being p smart and honest; a lot of it is more in the way of a disguised memoir. but i never finished the second half, the mass culture half, or even got more than a few pages into it.
― thomp, Wednesday, 9 March 2011 11:55 (fourteen years ago)
its one of the foundational texts of 20th century brit cultural studies along w/ culture and society by raymond williams, and i think it was also read widely outside academia, back in the day
its a pretty common bk - esp that edition - but i don't see it in that many charity shops in glasgow (when compared to hornby, potter etc etc)
― Ward Fowler, Wednesday, 9 March 2011 12:16 (fourteen years ago)
http://books.google.com/books?id=SmXHxPavANkC&printsec=frontcover&img=1&zoom=1&l=220
― Buff Orpington (Abbbottt), Wednesday, 9 March 2011 13:20 (fourteen years ago)
Kate Morton, The House At Riverton - has the same spine as another book I'd been looking for, every charity shop has piles of the things and none of whatever it was I was after
― Ismael Klata, Wednesday, 9 March 2011 13:55 (fourteen years ago)
http://www.swordfishingcentral.com/images/store/400182188292.jpg
― A Very Small Bag of Phrases (Eazy), Wednesday, 9 March 2011 17:30 (fourteen years ago)
That Hoggart's still in print, it seems:
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/P/0141191589.01._SCLZZZZZZZ_.jpg
― the most cuddlesome bug that ever was borned (James Morrison), Wednesday, 9 March 2011 23:06 (fourteen years ago)
was at a p large tent book sale today where i saw a volunteer file in an entire box full of 'me talk pretty one day', prob 20 copies plus there were already a bunch around that section & im sure elsewhere
― johnny crunch, Saturday, 16 July 2011 22:22 (fourteen years ago)
When I used to volunteer in a charity shop we once received a massive hardback copy of the Karma Sutra, we used to sit it facing with the cover forward (as opposed to just the spine, like a normal bookshelf) and laugh at people trying not to pick it up/skim it/acknowledge it.
We also used to get Mills & Boon constantly and they would sell so fast, which I just don't understand - there seems to be about three different plots between the entire series.
― ha ha ha ha jack my swag (boxedjoy), Saturday, 16 July 2011 23:24 (fourteen years ago)
Ah, I've bored people with how I was in an apartment in Berlin with just 25 Mills and Boon books and War and Peace. I got through about 12 of the M&B before finally succumbing. They were all pretty much bored suburban housewife with either unpleasant/dead/no husband meets in what all things considered must be really quite unlikely circumstances an uncontrollably rich arab stud farmer/american pilot entrepreneur/russian oligarch/unbuttoned English toff/sensitive Italian playboy. This man will be generally unusually liberal, loving, wealthy, sexually accomplished, and see things in the woman others haven't and in certain cases won't mind that the woman has children in fact be surprisingly good with them. In return the woman will educate them a little in aspects of life that their rude, uncontrollably masculine/wealthy upbringing hasn't educated them in, idk like buying a can of beans from the supermarket or getting the right settings on the washing machine. They will feel enlightened by this. There will be a couple of hiccups of some sort, one where the woman can't believe that this man is interested in them, and another where it looks like it's not going to work out, but incredibly and against the odds he is and it does.
I believe that chick lit has posed quite a few problems for the traditional Mills & Boon template, which is known to be exacting. Some female readers, it turns out, like to be seen to be more emancipated that the traditional Mills & Boon story had allowed them to be, and maybe even show glimpses of feisty humour and cynical indifference towards males. This was quite difficult to embrace for M&B, and I think what happened was that they started producing a different series, for the more emancipated urban style of woman. I haven't read any of these, so I don't how they work, but I imagine that although the flavour and expressions might be slightly different, the plot probably isn't. Maybe the male is a bit more flawed, maybe the woman has more agency in it all, but i can't believe it doesn't end with an unusually desirable man being netted. Or maybe it does, idk. There's probably no more literary merit, although to be fair to M&B, there's clearly not a word out of place, which while it means the reader knows what they are getting, also means there are no flights of fancy. Reading 10 in a row is rather gruelling is all I'm saying.
To change tack slightly, just going past Oxfam this morning, wtf is London Dialogues by 'Tiresias'. I keep getting Cyril Connolly in my head, but that could just be 'London' + 'myth ref'.
― Fizzles the Chimp (GamalielRatsey), Sunday, 17 July 2011 07:10 (fourteen years ago)
The Light in the Piazza- I see it at flea markets, church thrift stores, library book sales, garage sales, on shelves at estate sales, Savers, Goodwill, Salvation Army and it has been at every library I have ever worked in, of course. Book has been haunting me for 22 years.
― *tera, Sunday, 17 July 2011 07:35 (fourteen years ago)
Checked that London Dialogues book. self, published, Some boring-ass '80s Hampstead types talking about the state of the country. Nothing to see here.
― Fizzles the Chimp (GamalielRatsey), Sunday, 17 July 2011 12:15 (fourteen years ago)
Things I didn't know until I started working in a library: Mills & Boon used to put out introductory science books for schools in the 60s and 70s.http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51AlUTXu39L._SL500_AA300_.jpg http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51kf5N0mFtL._SL500_AA300_.jpg http://www.amazon.co.uk/Religion-science-Science-society-Habgood/dp/B0000CM8JZ/ref=sr_1_149?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1310912344&sr=1-149
Never seen one in a charity shop, though.
― the ascent of nyan (a passing spacecadet), Sunday, 17 July 2011 14:33 (fourteen years ago)
Reccently every bookshop I've been in has a copy (often more than one) of this.http://applecrossantiques.co.uk/images/JamesHerriotsYorkshire%20(260x300).jpgIt's actually a rather nice book.
― Ned Trifle X, Tuesday, 30 August 2011 07:38 (fourteen years ago)
the satanic verses
― lag∞n, Tuesday, 24 December 2013 21:06 (eleven years ago)
Couplehood
― zanarkand bozo (abanana), Wednesday, 25 December 2013 03:34 (eleven years ago)
seeing tons of updike esp the rabbit series @ book sales this season, prob means ppl who owned them have recently died :(
― johnny crunch, Monday, 24 July 2017 02:40 (eight years ago)
Just walked by neighborhood streetseller and they had a more interesting selection than usual, such as The Sound and The Fury, then I, the Jury then a copy of Sanctuary and Requiem for a Nun with a SEXY PHOTOE of Lee Remick on the cover.
― Recnac and my 📛 is Yrral (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 17 November 2018 21:04 (six years ago)
Sanctuary with Requiem for a Nun
― Recnac and my 📛 is Yrral (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 17 November 2018 21:20 (six years ago)
Also The Portable Oscar Wilde, Three by Flannery O’Connor, The Threepenny Opera
― Recnac and my 📛 is Yrral (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 17 November 2018 21:21 (six years ago)
Little Fauss and Big Halsy, Bonjour Tristesse, Elmer Gantry, The Hound of the Baskervilles, DO U SEE?
― Recnac and my 📛 is Yrral (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 17 November 2018 21:23 (six years ago)
Cloud Atlas has been fairly common in the charity shops recently.
― Leaghaidh am brón an t-anam bochd (dowd), Saturday, 17 November 2018 22:33 (six years ago)
Cloud Atlas mittelbraus its way thru every charity shop in the world
― Danton Lok (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 17 November 2018 22:48 (six years ago)
Still no sign of Morrissey's Autobiography. I was sure it would be a straight-to-charity release.
― fetter, Tuesday, 27 November 2018 13:18 (six years ago)
I see it quite a lot, up here (Glasgow). Never see his novel, though (probably because it never sold any copies to begin with).
― Ward Fowler, Tuesday, 27 November 2018 13:53 (six years ago)
the 50 shades of grey and twilight series are ubiquitous ime
― sign up for my waterless urinals webinar (bizarro gazzara), Tuesday, 27 November 2018 13:53 (six years ago)
https://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2016/03/23/09/32732A7A00000578-3505687-image-a-30_1458726175497.jpg
― Ward Fowler, Tuesday, 27 November 2018 13:55 (six years ago)
The version of Running Dog with the awesome/trashy thriller cover
https://www.jhbooks.com/pictures/medium/152271.jpg
― Chuck_Tatum, Thursday, 29 November 2018 16:35 (six years ago)
And "Offshore" (although obvs it is vv good)
― Chuck_Tatum, Thursday, 29 November 2018 16:36 (six years ago)
That Delillo cover is like the canine answer version to Alan Coren's Golfing For Cats
https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/51P%2BJhTELDL._SX322_BO1,204,203,200_.jpg
― Ward Fowler, Thursday, 29 November 2018 16:45 (six years ago)
Yikes! My thoughts went "Awww, a cat playing golf... cool sweater... er, swastika"
― Chuck_Tatum, Thursday, 29 November 2018 17:02 (six years ago)
it's a collection of coren's never very funny columns in punch magazine, so named bcz he -- amusingly! -- noted that the topselling books of the time were abt either cats or golf or hitler, so proposed a title that somehow combined them all
― mark s, Thursday, 29 November 2018 17:08 (six years ago)
This being Oregon, I never fail to see multiple copies of Krakauer's Into the Wild. Sometimes there will be a round dozen of them shelved side-by-side. They are more prevalent even than Wild, Cheryl Strayed, which rarely shows up in herds greater than five at once.
I still see some of the Bridget Jones series of novels, but they are fading away to obscurity after a period of ubiquity. Tom Clancy is finally sinking into the sunset, too.
― A is for (Aimless), Tuesday, 26 February 2019 02:54 (six years ago)
Just dropped off a bunch of books (and some CDs) at Housing Works. Wondering whether I am going to that freeing feeling or an emotional hangover/backlash or both and in what order or in what intensity.
― The Fearless Thread Killers (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 2 September 2019 16:29 (six years ago)
The past four or five years I've noticed that Nicholas Sparks' novels occupy at least two feet of shelf space in all the charity bookshops I frequent.
― A is for (Aimless), Monday, 2 September 2019 17:06 (six years ago)
Entire shelves for James Patterson
― brimstead, Monday, 2 September 2019 17:19 (six years ago)
entire warehouses filled with gently used Elegance of the Hedgehog trade paperbacks
― hoostanbank de reason lyrics mp4 hd video download (unregistered), Monday, 2 September 2019 17:35 (six years ago)
This must be the #1 easiest to find book in my town.
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/1/1f/State_of_Terror.jpg
― jmm, Thursday, 20 February 2025 01:07 (eight months ago)
Around here the charity shops overflow with Alexander McCall Smith titles.
― more difficult than I look (Aimless), Thursday, 20 February 2025 01:19 (eight months ago)