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Borrow it till you can buy a copy Isaac Send a noteboard - 15/01/2010 06:23:27 PM
If the cash flow problem is of a relatively temporary nature, then since obviously everyone you go to school with whose a year ahead or more will have the book (unless they just changed it) then your solution is probably to just ask one of them if you can borrow it for a few weeks, or just long enough to run copies off of the first couple chapters. If it's a situation where the things get used so regularly even after the class then obviously you'll never find a used copy or someone to loan it to yu, but if not, borrow it and buy it when you have the funds. Most physics books, doesn't really matter after the class which text on the individual subject you reference from, so nobody minded loaning a book to someone else because we had other texts that had all the equations and of course, due to the environment, if we just suddenly needed that specific book and it was on loan, we could just grab a copy from the shelf of a fellow grad or prof's office. If your situation is different, well, best adivce I can give you would be to just try all the major bookvendors or even the publisher's site, some sell direct IIRC since grad-level texts always have such short print runs. I really can't imagine a case where any grad-level student couldn't get their hands on a copy of any text they'd need to have by simply borrowing it, even if it's a brand new book than one of the profs who reviewed it for approval has a copy.

Hope that helps, but short of borrowing, I doubt you'll find better than 20% below campus bookstore, except used, and even that's probably optimistic. I'd also highly doubt a grad-level text would appear on ebay except as a hard to find accident, people just don't usually get rid off them and when they do it's usually to the campus bookstore.
The intuitive mind is a sacred gift and the rational mind is a faithful servant. We have created a society that honors the servant and has forgotten the gift.
- Albert Einstein

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Chancellor of the Landsraad, Archduke of Is'Mod
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Textbooks are expensive - 15/01/2010 05:44:35 PM 586 Views
Usually best to just buy used ones... - 15/01/2010 05:55:24 PM 425 Views
yah, that works fine for undergrad. - 15/01/2010 05:59:18 PM 545 Views
Borrow it till you can buy a copy - 15/01/2010 06:23:27 PM 382 Views
Buying and selling back to the bookstore is the worst option - 15/01/2010 06:35:31 PM 374 Views
That doesn't apply beyond freshmen and sophomore classes or popular majors I tihnk - 15/01/2010 07:17:25 PM 523 Views
Possibly. Campus bookstores are still a ripoff, though - 15/01/2010 08:23:56 PM 449 Views
Re: Possibly. Campus bookstores are still a ripoff, though - 15/01/2010 08:58:59 PM 468 Views
True- hard sciences use the texts more, and more often *NM* - 16/01/2010 04:03:53 AM 152 Views
70? darn americans and their cheap textbooks. *NM* - 15/01/2010 10:53:06 PM 148 Views
While it depends on the major, you're a bit dated. - 16/01/2010 01:55:06 AM 441 Views
Definetly dated then, thanks for making me feel old *NM* - 16/01/2010 02:42:49 AM 166 Views
Happy to. - 16/01/2010 03:55:59 AM 380 Views
So put upon, sigh... - 16/01/2010 06:22:09 PM 438 Views
- 16/01/2010 09:29:53 PM 376 Views
Excellent, face had been saved *NM* - 16/01/2010 09:40:10 PM 154 Views
How about chegg, or another rental site? I've used chegg for many semesters. - 15/01/2010 05:56:36 PM 676 Views
I love chegg. - 15/01/2010 08:38:26 PM 499 Views
Amazon and eBay were always the best for me.... - 15/01/2010 06:15:42 PM 366 Views
abebooks.com might help. *NM* - 15/01/2010 06:40:52 PM 190 Views
abebooks. I have found none better. *NM* - 15/01/2010 11:53:45 PM 140 Views
Whore yourself out to 10 fat guys for $100 bucks a pop - 16/01/2010 02:48:23 AM 376 Views
textbooksrus *NM* - 16/01/2010 04:07:52 AM 167 Views
www.bookdepository.co.uk - 18/01/2010 07:43:27 PM 493 Views
Just wait till you try to sell them back. - 20/01/2010 04:36:15 PM 536 Views

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