What's the Name of That Book??? discussion
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For use in schools and libraries only
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I mean I guess that makes sense. Certain editions manufactured, maybe by textbook companies or subsidiaries thereof, for sale only to institutions. It just seems weird stuck there in some journal review. Why even bother to mention it?

An example off the top of my head is often some marketed through Scholastic are specific to schools/school libraries only, such as one edition through the book club, of Tangerine by Edward Bloor, saw that mentioned online.
Yes, turtleback editions occurred to me. In my public library's online catalog these are almost always referred to as paperbacks, but they are in fact turtlebacks.

The old-fashioned way was they would insert a thick piece of cardboard inside the front and back covers of a paperback to make it sturdier, then they laminate it. So e.g. a paperback you can easily rip off the cover, a turtleback you'd have to try a lot harder. The newer way of doing it is just to manufacture the entire binding in one piece, so you're not beginning with a paperback and adapting it for library use, you're buying the ready-made turtleback from the manufacturer. It's still thick laminated cardboard.
Whereas a hardcover is usually cardboard covered in cloth, with a dustjacket.
Whereas a hardcover is usually cardboard covered in cloth, with a dustjacket.
In other words, it's the same size as a paperback, but with a hard and shiny cover. I personally can not stand them.
Sometimes "library binding" refers to a hardback with reinforced binding, as well.
Sometimes "library binding" refers to a hardback with reinforced binding, as well.

its the damndest thing but the brine of the pickle juice invades the taste buds on your tongue which are on fire and immediately cools them down so that just one second later you cant even remember having had the whiskey shot. Thus, you are ready for your next one! Its a fabulous drink invention.
Andria wrote: "In other words, it's the same size as a paperback, but with a hard and shiny cover. I personally can not stand them. "
I can't stand the new ones, like the Stephen King pictured. The old ones aren't bad at all. I recently got this from the library, a 1961 paperback edition that had been reinforced...
I can't stand the new ones, like the Stephen King pictured. The old ones aren't bad at all. I recently got this from the library, a 1961 paperback edition that had been reinforced...

"For use in schools and libraries only. Fourteen-year-old Deanne decides to spend her summer vacation helping in the oncology ward of the hospital and risks having her heart broken when she befriends a young man dying of cancer."
The book is If I Should Die Before I Wake.