I always assumed it was cheaper to send back the covers than entire books.

It's been ages since I've been to a 7-11. Weis Markets, a grocery store chain in Pennsylvania, though, has a small section of mass-market paperbacks. Almost nothing I'd want to buy, mind you. But it's there.When was the last time you saw a paperback spin rack at a 7-Eleven?
Odd that they would offer returns at all.

Overlooking the misspelling (I didn't catch it either, until I looked it up on OneLook, to get the etymology; it's one B and two Ts), the French term sounds too euphemistic to my ear, and so, for that matter, does "meat packing plant." Just say, "slaughterhouse." If I knew of a dysphemism, I'd suggest it.It was the abbatoir of author's dreams.
"Kristallnacht" is a rather pretty word for one of the most profoundly ugly events in European (and indeed World) history.
The last place I saw a paperbook spinner rack was at the Dollar Store. (I recently saw an old comic book rack at a auto repair place as a decoration, stocked with silver age comic books.)Sadly, this has been coming for a long time. Not only are ebooks taking over the niche previous occupied by mass-market paperbacks, but the "mass-market" outlets they were designed for -- drug stores, supermarkets, bus stations, newsstands, convenience stories, etc -- are no longer carrying books in a big way.
When was the last time you saw a paperback spin rack at a 7-Eleven?
That was my first Star Trek book purchase too! I was in the 6th or 7th grade and bought it through the school's book program from the Scholastic Reading Program catalog. Was that it's name? Not Weekly Reader (which I got too, at some point).Here's a little tidbit, to put the whole issue of current costs into perspective: the first Star Trek novel I bought, Spock Must Die! cost only .60 when it was published (1970).
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And why, when giving best wishes to authors, wishing them "few returns" is a good thing.

Now why does that remind me of the title of Abbie Hoffman's most infamous opus?the unfortunate tag line: "Strip me."
That was my first Star Trek book purchase too! I was in the 6th or 7th grade and bought it through the school's book program from the Scholastic Reading Program catalog. Was that it's name? Not Weekly Reader (which I got too, at some point).
I have been thinking about the idea of running into someone with a whole hardcover in his pants nonstop ever since I saw this post. AmazingI find the large pockets in cargo pants works well for carrying trade paperbacks and even hardcovers around, though with larger hardcovers it can create an awkward drag effect.
“Is that a hardcover in your pants or are you happy to see me?”I have been thinking about the idea of running into someone with a whole hardcover in his pants nonstop ever since I saw this post. Amazing
I was in high school during the heyday of JNCO jeans, and knew a guy who carried around an entire two-liter bottle of Mountain Dew in his knee pocket. You couldn't tell until he took it out. Those were some damn big jeans.I have been thinking about the idea of running into someone with a whole hardcover in his pants nonstop ever since I saw this post. Amazing
And yet Star Trek still claims the 20th century was uncivilizedI was in high school during the heyday of JNCO jeans, and knew a guy who carried around an entire two-liter bottle of Mountain Dew in his knee pocket. You couldn't tell until he took it out. Those were some damn big jeans.
Beat me to that one. Congratulations @ace2k.“Is that a hardcover in your pants or are you happy to see me?”
I would say that pants with pockets big enough to hold a 2l bottle inconspicuously would support that claim.And yet Star Trek still claims the 20th century was uncivilized
Only because pockets were outlawed in the 22nd Century.I would say that pants with pockets big enough to hold a 2l bottle inconspicuously would support that claim.
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