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Well! What a good question, and an excellent topic for a blog entry.
First port of call for me is always the library. It’s good for the world and good for your bank balance. You can also keep your eye out for a good olde library sale, that time of the year when they clear out a huge number of books for a myriad of reasons (which is of course how all this began). However not everyone wants to be on a waiting list for a book, and the library doesn’t always have what you’re looking for.
So where can you turn in today’s materialistic capitalist society? This may come as a shock, but you don’t always have to go to a big bad bookstore.
One place, Better World Books (which mum sent me the link to just the other day!) is an online second hand bookstore that finds a home for old books and raises money for literacy programs, lovely!
You could also scour ebay for that book you are looking for. Once again though, if you’re looking for something in particular it may take you a while to find it.

In this case, try the following;
Booko is a very useful Australian site to search for a book (or a dvd) online. It will search a number of sites and list all places that stock the book from cheapest to most expensive including postage.
I've mentioned The Book Depository before, they have pretty much everything a book-lover could ask for, at very competitive prices and free delivery worldwide.
Then we get to the 'big bad bookstores' such as Borders, which can be pricey, however if you sign up to their newsletter you get the odd 40% off coupon. Angus and Robertson and Dymocks don’t often have special offers, but you never know.

There are of course many places you can find a book, these are just some of my personal preferences. Now with ebooks and readers becoming so popular, perhaps the idea of a book and a bookstore is becoming somewhat archaic (I do hope not).
So now that my avid reader has bought all the books they want, I imagine that they might come back to me one last time and ask; “I now have a whole lot of books that I’m not going to read again, what do I do with them?”

And so ends my make believe journey. I hope you gained some helpful tips on how to procure a book thanks to my imaginary reader. Although I have now confused myself as to whom I am addressing. Perhaps I am slowly going out of my mind, much like George in A Spot of Bother.
164 days remaining, 23 books to go.
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