Sentences with phrase «when going to the bookstores»

When I ask my daughter what was the best memory of the week she always mentions our date mornings when we go to the bookstore to read books and have some tea.
:) I'll check out your list of books when I go to the bookstore.
I get excited when I go to a bookstore and see my author's books on shelves.
Another cool thing is that you get free book samples so that you can preview the books before buying them, kind of like when you go to the bookstore.
Yes — mostly out - of - print / used that are unavailable on ebook; also I'll still browse the bargain books when I go to the bookstore to relax and have a cup of coffee.
When you go to the bookstore, either physically or online, what generally attracts you to a book?
When I go to a bookstore, I can't even find Ignore everybody.

Not exact matches

Just when you thought it was safe to go back to the bookstore, along come two more of those business novels that purport to communicate valuable lessons in story form.
Who wants a virtual bookstore when you can go to Barnes & Noble or Borders?
I love gift cards for movies, b / c it makes me feel like I'm spending less when I go and to bookstores!
Long gone are the times when bookstores used to carry just books.
Hit the library, stop by the independent bookstore on the corner, toss a few items in your AmazonSmile shopping cart (when you do, a portion of your purchase can go directly to Facing History), or start downloading to your e-reader.
Back when my first novel was published in 1997, authors went on book tours, scheduling talks and signings at bookstores, groceries, and even stopping at drugstores and big - box retail stores to sign books on the shelves.
When Borders, then the nation's second - largest bookstore chain, went bankrupt and liquidated all its stores in 2011, it seemed as if it could be good news for Barnes & Noble, which would have a chance to grab former Borders customers.
This is another book I'd been meaning to read for a long time, and when I came across a signed paperback copy at a bookstore in Brooklyn, I decided to go for it.
Ray: If you're reading this column and you're not reading Highest House, what are you doing with your life???? In all seriousness, this will be a classic in bookstore form for years to come, and you're all going to wish you had the single issues when it's a hit Netflix miniseries.
Yes, an avid reader and the reason she loves her Kindle are exactly the 3 reasons you give, Anne: - big font - light - instant purchase when a book is finished without the hassle of going to a bookstore or a lending library (she has a hard time moving around — her brain is just fine, the body, well, so - so...)
Really good advice in this podcast, especially to do impromptu book signings at airports when traveling (using Twitter to get the word out) and going into non-traditional book stores such as airport bookstores, spas, hotels and other places that sell books and talk to the manager.
When readers go to bookstores, they often look for a specific type of book.
When a specific book jumps out at customers perusing the shelves of their local bookstore, the first place they go to is the inside flap (or back cover in some instances).
I never could find an answer and so I left it all with Amazon, but continued to wonder how to get the books to bookstores and elsewhere when they wouldn't go through Amazon.
Who was going to patronize the indie bookstore when Amazon could offer practically every book ever printed, and do it with overnight shipping?
When you think of book discovery in the past, it normally involved going to your local bookstore and seeing what they were promoting, in other cases you may consult a newspaper such as the New York Times.
I went in to one today and walked out shaking my head saying, «I remember when bookstores actually had books.»
When authors who can not find support from local or chain bookstores are able to sell their content through Amazon, of course they're going to drive traffic to the retailer.
(I am often forced to roll my eyes when I tell people that and they look at me bewildered and say «But I see tons of people in the bookstore when I go, how can that be?»
When you're making your marketing materials or you're making your title sell sheet or any of this information, you're going to be using to present your book to other folks such as a bookstore or a library, you're always going to list Amazon as a place to buy your book.
When he wanted his book in Chicago, he called everybody he knew in Chicago to go to a certain bookstore and order his book.
When you go to your favorite bookstore in search of a specific title, and it's not prominently displayed, you generally end up asking for it at the information counter.
When we go into town, the only places I want to visit are the libraries, bookstores, and occasionally an art museum.
I originally quoted this and was going to ask when Amazon opened bookstores in the US.
When I was little I had to desperately wait to go to the library or see what books my dad's coworkers would give him for me since we couldn't really afford to go to the bookstore.
Indie bookstores simply are not in the average customers mind when they think of places to go, to buy e-books.
When people go to a bookstore they can see the graphics and it helps them make a decission on whether to buy or not, so it only makes sense to do the same thing online and do it with ebooks too!
And one of the first things I noticed when I went to explore the local Christian bookstore for the first time was the plethora of novels with young girls on the cover wearing goofy looking hats... Call me crazy, but what gives with all the prairie romances???
My biggest caution I give authors when it comes to print is not to expect your books to start showing up in bookstores just because you go with Ingram.
When it launched the Kindle, Amazon began with an unbeatable combination of the 4 Cs — customer base (more online customers than any bookstore in the world), catalogue (more online titles than any bookstore in the world), connectivity (easy, seamless, free wi - fi and 3G allowing customers to download any of its Kindle titles in seconds from almost anywhere), and convenience (the bookstore environment that it began building in the mid -»90s appeared in the Kindle Store on Day One, so that every customer knew how to use it from the get - go, and it only got better).
Several people doubt whether they will have to go the bookstore when Amazon becomes one of the main distribution channels.
I go to Amazon or another Internet bookstore and when I try to purchase a new ebook, I all too often get the message, «this book is not (yet) available for sale in your country.»
When I was most miserable in my job, I would go to the bookstore at lunchtime and indulge in retail therapy to escape my life for a time.
Go to any bookstore and look for these books and trainers; they promise the world, claiming to have invented a new «cruelty free» type of training (not telling you the greatest cruelty is what happens when they fail you and your dog, and your dog ends up in a veterinarian's office with a needle in its forearm while you cry and the dog slowly drops into a quiet death).
I also help load books to go to the bookstore when we have a lot of them.
When I did my third year of undergrad in Paris I didn't speak any French, so I went to a bookstore and bought a copy of Döblin's Berlin Alexanderplatz and moved on to Thomas Mann, Hesse, Kafka, Borges, and Cocteau.
So Eli did the manly thing and went and bought about a hundred bucks worth of tools, observed that the toilet not only didn't flush down, but also needed a complete gut replacement, went back to the hardware store, bought a complete set of innards, stopped by the bookstore to get a book on useful expletives for when nothing works and took the damn thing apart getting the blue stuff all over himself and the floor, that book came in useful, and we learned that contrary to rumor brass screws used in toilets do corrode so you have to go back to the hardware store and get WD - 40 and when that doesn't work you go back yet again and get a nut cracker (nononono, not that kind).
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