Thrift Books
If there are any good things to come out of recent limitations and hardships, Thrift Books is one of the positive experiences.
Like many people these days, I am ordering far more by mail and delivery than I was just six months ago. All I do these days is stay home and work on the new website and a couple of books. I have also started an all-out effort to track down old friends as well as stay in touch with all my friends; more than I have in the past several years.
When it came time to blog about books and art, I searched out sources for information to pass along as well as sources for the purchase of vintage, out-of-print books. For years, I have relied on whatever I was lucky enough to find in used book stores. Sometimes I spent years scouring store shelves for titles logged into a notebook always carried with me. No matter what you are hunting, when you bag something, the sense of accomplishment is overpowering.
The last few years have found me going to Amazon for titles I did not want to wait for.
Also, since moving away from the Dallas/Ft. Worth metroplex, there are no longer numbers of used book stores to visit. So, into my life came Thrift Books. This is an online bookstore with warehouses all over the U. S. There is so much to see on the site. Shipping is expeditious and reasonable.
New and trending as well as best sellers from years past are offered.
Classics can be found as well as children’s books. They have themed collections to choose from, such as a Shakespeare Festival. For the homebound student, everything from math and science to language arts are available to make learning from home productive. Material is broken down by grade. For children pre-K to high school, there is literature, activity books and school supplies.
Parents of home schooled children have titles to aid in teaching their children. How about Homeschooling for Dummies, or better yet, Homeschooling and Working? These are just two titles to help you as a parent-turned-school teacher.
Thrift Books carries movies of many genres and TV shows on DVD.
Although you won’t find the unending list of titles as you would on Amazon, it is still worth a look when there is something on your shopping list. Scan their selections from time to time to see what might be available. They do offer a waiting list for both DVD’s and books, so you could receive a notice when a copy came into one of their many warehouses.
Tired of studying/teaching? Take a break with a puzzle. Thrift Books has all kinds. And, as a sign of the times, several are sold out.
Try some games, or replace your dog-eared deck of cards with new ones sporting the theme of your choice: Day of the Dead, Parks and Recreation, Great Outdoors, Andy Warhol; I could keep on going. These decks will give poker, bridge, solitaire and go-fishing a fresh new look.
Thrift Books is definitely the place to go for the collector of many titles and genre.
My interests for collecting these days focuses on cookbooks and illustrated books. I have been lucky enough to find some titles with both interests combined in the same book. I was able to go straight to the search button to see if anything by Clementine Paddleford or Susan Branch was in stock. Well, yes there was. A biography of Clementine Paddleford and her famous book, How America Eats were available and now part of my library. More on her in a future post. Susan Branch’s books are just delightful and a break from my usual reading. Thanks to Thrift Books, I will be purchasing more of her titles in the future.
As we look at a longer stay at home, I want to encourage you to go to the website of Thrift Books.
See if there is anything in the vast inventory offered that will take the sting out of being sequestered away from the usual interface with your world. But, as your library grows, just remember to give a friend a phone call or send a message. We all appreciate a little human contact.