I'd be almost afraid to rent textbooks for my daughter. What happens if the book is lost/stolen/damaged? What are the fines? Do you have to buy a brand new book to replace it?
I've been buying all her textbooks at half.com. EASY, quick and above all, darn cheap!!
Kris
The college's library should have all of the text books.
Some of them are on a special shelf, where they can't leave the library, some you can just check out. DH always checked there first. He was able to check out 80% of his text books every semester.
THEN.. see which edition the professor is using. Go to amazon, and buy an older edition. DH spent $3 on some of his books this way. The page numbers will not be the same, and it takes a *bit* of effort to correspond with the professor's notes. But not much. His professors always had no problem at all with this.
Not necessarily. I work at a college library and we do not make a special effort to order every textbook. We do have some of the college's textbooks on the shelf and there are about six textbooks on reserve for classes at this moment. We also get college textbooks from students donating their books to us. Oftentimes, it is because the bookstore would not buy them back.
I buy my books through amazon and check the "used" prices. I paid $8 for a book with minimal highlighting instead of the $80 the bookstore was charging.
The college's library should have all of the text books.
Some of them are on a special shelf, where they can't leave the library, some you can just check out. DH always checked there first. He was able to check out 80% of his text books every semester.
THEN.. see which edition the professor is using. Go to amazon, and buy an older edition. DH spent $3 on some of his books this way. The page numbers will not be the same, and it takes a *bit* of effort to correspond with the professor's notes. But not much. His professors always had no problem at all with this.
I swear this is intentional on the part of the publisher! Oftentimes, they don't change the questions, just add a few more so that the numbering changes. Grrrr!Prior editions may or may not be OK. Sometimes problem sets for math or science texts, for example, are redone substantially.

I'd be almost afraid to rent textbooks for my daughter. What happens if the book is lost/stolen/damaged? What are the fines? Do you have to buy a brand new book to replace it?
I've been buying all her textbooks at half.com. EASY, quick and above all, darn cheap!!
Kris

As someone mentioned previously, this is often a problem in math and science texts where the author/publisher frequently changes up the questions at the end of the chapters. It sort of feels like planned obsolescence, but hey.In the past I have asked many of my profs if I could buy the older edition and they have OKed it (the only classes I did NOT do this for were math classes b/c the homework examples were different).
