How about chegg, or another rental site? I've used chegg for many semesters.
Aemon Send a noteboard - 15/01/2010 05:56:36 PM
It works like this. You go to their website, put in an ISBN, click "rent," pay, and you get books shipped to you within a couple days. You keep them for the whole semester, and then ship them back with a pre-paid label and no additional fees.
...And it works great. They have just about any textbook you can think of, and their rates range from "slightly better than buying used" to "fantastically cheap." It all depends on the demand for the textbook you're renting.
For example, I needed to get three textbooks this semester. Two ran for a bit over $100 new, and they were about 40 apiece to rent them for a semester from chegg. The third one was over 250 new, and I rented it for just over $20. So you see the prices range considerably. Occasionally it's not worth renting if the used price is close and you think you might want to keep the book, but chegg is usually quite a bit cheaper. It's saved me LOTS of money over the years. Oh, and if you're the environmental hippy type, they also plant a tree for every book you rent. Whoo?
One more thing: all the textbooks I've gotten have been of superb quality. About half of them were brand new, actually. Anyway, check them out if you think it might interest you.
EDIT: If you decide to rent from chegg, check a coupon site like retailmenot.com, or something. There's almost always a "10% off + free shipping" coupon going around.
...And it works great. They have just about any textbook you can think of, and their rates range from "slightly better than buying used" to "fantastically cheap." It all depends on the demand for the textbook you're renting.
For example, I needed to get three textbooks this semester. Two ran for a bit over $100 new, and they were about 40 apiece to rent them for a semester from chegg. The third one was over 250 new, and I rented it for just over $20. So you see the prices range considerably. Occasionally it's not worth renting if the used price is close and you think you might want to keep the book, but chegg is usually quite a bit cheaper. It's saved me LOTS of money over the years. Oh, and if you're the environmental hippy type, they also plant a tree for every book you rent. Whoo?
One more thing: all the textbooks I've gotten have been of superb quality. About half of them were brand new, actually. Anyway, check them out if you think it might interest you.
EDIT: If you decide to rent from chegg, check a coupon site like retailmenot.com, or something. There's almost always a "10% off + free shipping" coupon going around.
This message last edited by Aemon on 15/01/2010 at 05:57:32 PM
Textbooks are expensive
15/01/2010 05:44:35 PM
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Usually best to just buy used ones...
15/01/2010 05:55:24 PM
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Buying and selling back to the bookstore is the worst option
15/01/2010 06:35:31 PM
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That doesn't apply beyond freshmen and sophomore classes or popular majors I tihnk
15/01/2010 07:17:25 PM
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Possibly. Campus bookstores are still a ripoff, though
15/01/2010 08:23:56 PM
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While it depends on the major, you're a bit dated.
16/01/2010 01:55:06 AM
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Definetly dated then, thanks for making me feel old *NM*
16/01/2010 02:42:49 AM
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Happy to.
16/01/2010 03:55:59 AM
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How about chegg, or another rental site? I've used chegg for many semesters.
15/01/2010 05:56:36 PM
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You can by them from my wife we she takes on to many classes and then has to drop half
20/01/2010 07:06:11 PM
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