abebooks.com is outrageously expensive

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
http://books.guardian.co.uk/news/articles/0,6109,1299898,00.html

I just read an article about how the 'net has revived used book sales (link is above). The article mentions the popularity of abebooks.com, which is based in Canada. Well, I'm Canadian and the cost of buying a book via abebooks.com is way too expensive.

As an example, I chose a cheap paperback, "Chicago Loop" by Paul Theroux at $1.00 US. The bookseller is in the US. With shipping and the exchange rate, the price jumps to $14.19 CAD!

That's absurd. Only the wealthy can afford to purchase from them. Yet, they supposedly sell 20,000 books a day. Unless the book you're looking for is rare or out-of-print, what is the point of buying from abebooks.com?

Are there any affordable ways to purchase used books online? Have people had good luck with Amazon's used book service or eBay?

Vic, Friday, 10 September 2004 04:39 (twenty-one years ago)

Try Bookfinder.com. As a "meta-search engine," it checks numerous used book sites (including Amazon and ABE Books) for available titles. I don't know if that necessarily solves your particular problem (perhaps you should be writing to your local politicians about the weak Canadian dollar or the outrageous cost of mailing items to Canada), but it does ensure that you are checking the widest range of sites available.

One caveat, though -- Bookfinder isn't perfect, as I've occasionaly found the book (or found it cheaper) on one of the regular sites after Bookfinder turned up nothing. The site is a good place to start, but it isn't infallable by a stretch.

Mark Klobas, Friday, 10 September 2004 06:18 (twenty-one years ago)

Amazon is much better for regular books. I thought abebooks was specifically for somewhat rare and expensive books? I'd go there if I wanted, like, a specific edition of some obscure avant-garde book of poetry, not so much for regular book buys.

Casuistry (Chris P), Friday, 10 September 2004 07:01 (twenty-one years ago)

We sell on Abe, and they are based in both Canada and Germany, thanks to bizarre banking laws that make it cheaper to locate a company's hq in one of those places.

Abe's automatically generated shipping rates are usually at least twice the real shipping rate, so I'd check with the bookseller about that, but I don't see how Amazon is going to get your shipping rate down any lower than the actual cost of posting things to your country.

That said, Abe is definitely trying to position itself as a marketplace for hard-to-find books, first editions, old manuscripts and so on, and that's what most people list on there, because it's not cheap to list there (€15 a month for 50 books) so I don't know how people make money from the stack-em-high sell-em-cheap paperbacks.

accentmonkey (accentmonkey), Friday, 10 September 2004 12:52 (twenty-one years ago)

If you're willing to put up with amateur standards of quality control (ABE is professional) and stick to fairly recent books, half.ebay.com runs cheaper than ABE. But for a $1 book from the US, your problems will be the same. See if you can persuade ABE to filter for country-preference?

rams (rams), Saturday, 18 September 2004 20:17 (twenty-one years ago)

one month passes...
try searching for abebooks on amazon.co.uk. they're signed up as one of amazons marketplace sellers. there you'll pay amazons marketplace p+p instead of the ammount abebooks requests (or something like that). see:
http://s1.amazon.co.uk/exec/varzea/ts/user-glance/A3ENSIQ3ZA4FFN/

i.t., Thursday, 4 November 2004 15:36 (twenty-one years ago)


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.