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That Amazon Meme ...
You know that amazon.com meme that's going around? The one where you look up what the first two things were that you ever bought from the site? I have only ever bought one book from amazon.com. I bought it this past Christmas. The only reason I used amazon.com was because I'd left all my Christmas shopping until the 24th and I was in a small town in Maine and I was desperate. If I want to order a book on-line, I'll track down the publisher's site, or find a topic-specific distributor, or ... or pretty much anything else that I can think of before I'll decide that I need the book badly enough and soon enough that I have to stoop to Amazon.
Not everything that's cheap and easy is in your long-term self-interest.
Not everything that's cheap and easy is in your long-term self-interest.
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And separately from the specific issues with amazon.com, I believe that the only way to preserve a wide range of consumer options is to preserve a wide range of competing commercial venues. A vendor like amazon.com will offer to sell you everything today in order to establish a virtual monopoly, but once they have that monopoly, you're stuck buying only what they choose to sell you. And what if they don't choose to sell you queer-positive books ... or books from publishers who refuse to give amazon a bigger discount than they give everyone else ... or print-on-demand books from any publisher other than amazon's in-house POD division. (Oops, they already tried that last one, too.)
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Somewhat inconsistantly, I won't set foot in a Barnes & Noble or a Borders because of similar agressive policies that drive small bookstores out of business(and pathetically limited stock)
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I would much rather go to my friendly neighborhood indie bookstore--if I had one, but I don't. The two closest brick-and-mortar bookstores to me are a Borders and a Barnes and Noble, which doesn't seem like much of an improvement, frankly.
I still buy most of my CDs from a used-and-rare classical record store near Union Square, but schlepping home a bag of CDs is a whole lot easier than schlepping a bag of books from the Strand (and, frankly, I'm just not that crazy about the Strand: organization-wise, it's like the Library of Alexandria after it was sacked).
If I still lived near Chicago, I would do all my bookbuying in Hyde Park--if that's any consolation :-)