Groucho Marx, in penning "Groucho and Me" back in 1959, groused and grumbled about the worst scourage of the day:
"I'd like to say a few unkind words about the miserly Scrooge known in bookish circles as "the browser." I'm sure you have seen him in many a bookstore. He reads a review...that sounds pretty tasty. Fortified with this briefing, he casually enters a bookstore, ferrets out a copy of the book, and if he is a rapid reader (or "skimmer" as he is known in the trade) he gets through it pretty thoroughly in forty-five minutes. He then scrams unobtrusively through a side door so that he can come back another day and help pauperize some other hard-working author."
Groucho's gripe came to mind the other day when I was in The Bookcellar, the used bookstore at the Webster Library. They raise funds (about $100,000 a year) for not only that local branch, but the entire New York Public Library. I volunteer there several days a week, curating and sorting the records, DVDs, VHS tapes and CDs that come in. Well, one nice young lady came in, and asked for a particular new title. An alert volunteer (not me) guided her right to a bookshelf. There it was, a virtually new copy of that new book, probably $19.95 trade paperback retail, for $4. No better deal could be had on line, where $4 postage is usually tacked on.
What did the girl do? She smiled meekly, and said, "Is that the...um...best price?" And a volunteer said, "Oh, I understand, you're a student. Students don't have much money." And he asked the lady at the cash register, "Can you help her? She's a student."
"Let's see," came the reply, without a smile. A quick look at the new book: "How about three?" Sold.
Now, this is a bookstore run for charity. Someone else would've bought the book at $4 in a day or two. Would this college girl go into Starbuck's and ask them to shave a dollar off their $4 mocha-latte-deluxe? Would she even think twice about dropping $4 on a drink to refresh herself on the way to the rest of her shopping? Of course not. How do you compare the $4 for a momentary snack, and the $4 for a book that will give hours, and hours of entertainment and education?
Wrote Groucho in 1959:
"A man will think nothing of paying four or five dollars for a pair of pants, but he'll think a long time before he'll pony up the same amount of money for a book."
No comments:
Post a Comment