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I have tons of books on my "to-read" stack anyway.

I'm in a pretty good library system, so most books I want to read are available somewhere, but a harder question for me is whether or not to buy a book if the library system doesn't have a copy.

Good point Petra, they probably will have multiple copies of the book if it is that wanted.

If it was an unknown author, I might wait longer.


a)I find it at our awesome remaindered-book store
b)It turns out one of my relatives already has it for me to borrow
c)I find myself in an indie book store that I feel I need to support with cash
I would wait forever. The worst that can happen is I die before I get the book. Then it won't matter anyway.
My library system tends to buy huge numbers of the books they know will be in high demand, so even if you are #64 you will probably get it within a couple months, I would think. They have 58 copies of Mark Twain's Autobiography, all of which are either checked out, on hold, or in transit to another library. They had many more copies of Freedom.
My library system tends to buy huge numbers of the books they know will be in high demand, so even if you are #64 you will probably get it within a couple months, I would think. They have 58 copies of Mark Twain's Autobiography, all of which are either checked out, on hold, or in transit to another library. They had many more copies of Freedom.


..."
if your library system doesn't have a copy of the book you want you should ask the librarian because sometimes the book can be borrowed outside your system. i'm on the east coast. the librarian (superwoman) once got a book for me that came from Washington state !

"Online ordering makes library a victim of its success"
Interesting stats from the Chicago Public Library system. "These days, as many as 120,000 items are placed on hold each month, 95 percent of which are done via computer."
"...a "holds report" produced by the library staff each month ... indicates what items cardholders have been requesting.
"We try to maintain a 5 to 1 ratio," he said. "If 100 people are waiting for a title, we want at least 20 copies."
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/lo...
Interesting stats from the Chicago Public Library system. "These days, as many as 120,000 items are placed on hold each month, 95 percent of which are done via computer."
"...a "holds report" produced by the library staff each month ... indicates what items cardholders have been requesting.
"We try to maintain a 5 to 1 ratio," he said. "If 100 people are waiting for a title, we want at least 20 copies."
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/lo...

We are lucky with our little library that they even get one copy!
If I really want the book I will buy it. And Amazon is pretty darn fast out here in rural America-


As the youth materials selector with a replacement budget to use at my own disgression, I use my own judgement. Which means, I get way more than that. Kids shouldn't have to wait forever for the next Diary of a Wimpy Kid title.
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If everybody on the list kept the book a week, this would mean a year and a quarter before you would get to read the book.
If nothing else I would probably put tis on my wish list for birthday or christmas to get it earlier. How long would you wait?