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Barnes & Noble: Epic Book Fail

December 29, 2010 by Brad Titus in Life, Technology

barnes, noble, barnes and noble, barnes & noble, book, books, bookstores, booksellers, book, sellers, fiction, nonfiction, retail, coffee, overpriced, expensive, amazon, amazon.com, com, dot, .com, borders, indianapolis, indiana, brad, titus, bradley, bltitus, bltitus.com, bradtitus.com, For Christmas, I got a gift card to Barnes & Noble. I appreciate this, because I love books. I've been interested in doing some studying about what the Bible says about things, then developing a set of opinions for politics, economics, et cetera. That seems like the proper order of things.

But I digress.

The massive chain bookstores have replaced local booksellers because, somehow, they are cheaper than the local variety. I have no idea how this is true, because Barnes & Noble is the most ridiculously expensive bookstore in the world. I found a book I wanted to get, but it was $40.00. I looked it up on Amazon.com, and the exact same book was $26.99. Barnes & Noble doesn't do price matching.

So what do I do? I've got this stupid gift card that limits my spending options to one place, so I'm stuck paying too much for a book. I bought some coffee, picked up a collection of Dilbert comics, and left. In the future, I'll just be going to Barnes & Noble to drink coffee and read the books that I bought more cheaply at Amazon.com (or, more likely, something in my Kindle that I bought online for way cheaper than anything in the store).

Seriously, how can a bookseller justify being so expensive? And why don't more people shop at Amazon.com?

December 29, 2010 /Brad Titus
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Life, Technology