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Hardbacks or Paperbacks
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Emma
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Oct 16, 2008 12:35PM

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At times I will buy hardcover.




Of course who can wait for a paperback Harry Potter book? Not me. :)






Trade Paper Back books offer a lower price but keep the large print and better paper. I think they will eventually replace most hard cover books. I had to learn all this stuff while self-publishing a book last year.

I always thought tradesize was the small version.
Given this new bit of info (well, new to me), I ultimately prefer the Trade Paper Back version of books.

With a $30.00 hard cover, the publisher has $9.00 to work with. Even though the books cost more to print they still make more money per copy. How well the hard cover sells determines whether or not the book will be printed in paperback.
What I find really sad, is the fact that sometimes when paperbacks don't sell the bookstores are told to just rip off the covers and send them back for a refund. This happens when the shipping cost is more than the printing cost.



However, I will not NOT buy a book because it's only available in hardcover. I just prefer paperbacks.

If it's a series I'm reading or a book I am going to pass on, it's paperback.

In my younger days, I prefered paperbacks for their mobility and their price. These days tho, I've developed this thing for good editing, nicer (and spacier) fonts, and the fact that the hardback is alot hardier than the paperback.
Trade paperbacks are the second choice for me - again, fonts, editing and layout are easier on the eyes.
Getting old, getting old...!


The thing I hate about the small paperbacks is that you have to actively work to keep them open. I like to read while I'm eating alone and I can't do that with paperbacks. You need two hands! Especially if they're big, fat paperbacks.


But I do tend to prefer paperback b/c they are easier to haul around. Although it sometimes really bothers me when the spine gets messed up or the cover gets bent. lol..yeah I can be anal that way sometimes. :)





Just like Eric I don't like mixing when it's a serie. I got the first Jean M. Auel in hardcover but the second one I got in a soft cover and ...welll my boyfriend already knows how my sentence finishes everytime I start about that book I have in hardcover but ..... yesyes I know the second one you got in soft cover and you want to have it too in hard cover and so on .... it really keeps nagging at my mind and it's already for some years. Maybe one day I will buy the whole serie in once in hardcover...but what do i do with the two I have then????

I of course never cared about it because I love to do both together! besides when i am eating pasta with tomato sauce....

I also loathe mixing a series. If I have paperbacks then the whole series is paperback and the same for the hardbacks. My nature just can't handle the mix which is funny because my son's Harry Potter series he has in the living has all paperback except for one that he got as a gift and it of course is hardback. I just turn the other way but it's hard not to want to remove the book.
But I also agree with having a paperback if you are carrying them with you to read.
Working in the library there are definitely a plus to the hardbacks as they don't get shoved behind other books, pages don't come out, they are easier to display, and stay upright much easier but they do have a definite drawback. THe drawback is the spines split in two but even that has an upside, the pages don't come out even then.
Paperbacks get all bended and out of shape, pages come out, don't stay upright, don't fit on shelves well, and well I won't keep going as it can get long.

Well said, JG. I'm with you 100% on this one. My hands get sore when I use the small paperbacks and I feel bad because I ALWAYS break/bend the spine. It's the only way I can keep the darned things open.

I will buy my favs authors hardback.
anita :O)

I will only buy hardcovers when they are on sale though, since I rarely want to pay the hardcover price no matter how much I prefer them.
Except for classics I guess.

i also hate mixing a series, or even if i have multiple single books by the same author. but, i like to have them all in hardback. i bought the first twilight in paperback, because i was skeptical i wouldn't like it. i loved it, so i bought the rest in hardback, and had to go get twilight in hardback to match. although hardbacks are more expensive, if you are a member at some bookstores, you do get a discount on purchases, which helps.
i also have a slight obsession with bookplates, and think that they look much better and are easier to put into hardback books.


a lot of them have some sort of picture and say 'ex libris' or 'from the library of' or whathaveyou and then you write your name on the blank.
i've really gotten into collecting them and matching them to my books.

I like hard and paper, whichever is cheaper - and sometimes the hardback is, indeed, cheaper on Amazon's "new and used." I'm not picky!





I collect old books so they have to be in hardback. My favorite poet must be in hardback. Favorite books mint condition hard back, no one allowed to touch but me. Just for reading and I know my kids will read it too, paperback.

One thing that I don't like is to mix a series up, but that doesn't mean I'm going to go out and buy a hardback if I already have the paperback at home, or wait to buy the paperback if it's a book that I really want to read. I have the first two Harry Potter books in paperback, but the rest is hardcover.
When I buy paperback I highly prefer trade paperback, and only buy the mass edition paperback if that's the only option.

But doesn't hardbacks look better on a shelf??

I used to only like paperbacks as a child, but couldn't tell you why.
