College Textbooks are Expensive: How to get them for Less

This semester I had 4 books that would have cost me upwards of $100 dollars from the ASU bookstore or other equivalents, and in total I would have spent $491.50 on textbooks there. I did my research and used sites such as AbeBooks.com to help me find my text books for a total of $253.92, giving me back 48% in savings.

One of the tricks publishers play is making “Custom Edition” versions of books designed specifically for your class or school, often considerably marked up from the regular editions. Often times these books only have a different cover and front insert, but the content is the same. This allows them to get a new ISBN number for the book, so when you search for it nothing else comes up. However, oftentimes these books are packaged with other materials such as study guides or answer books. By going to the publisher’s websites (Pearson/Prentice Hall, Cengage, Houghton Mifflin Company, etc) you can look up the supplementary books, and often times they will list the books they are meant to accompany. If your study guide packaged with your “Custom Edition” is listed as a supplement for a non-custom version on the publisher’s website, then the material inside the book is more than likely identical to that of a regular copy.

The same can be said for books that are packaged with an “online code”. If the book includes an online code, they can change the ISBN number again. Sometimes you don’t need this code at all, and can buy the regular book outright. Other times you can go online to the publisher’s website again and buy the code directly from them for less.

The best way to find cheaper books however, is to find an “International Copy”. Books in the United States are expensive because they know that a lot of students are on scholarships, loans, grants and have help from mom and dad. We know that books are expensive, but we keep buying them. Often times these books are published overseas and sold for much, much less than they are sold for in the United States. The best place I have found to search for books like this is AbeBooks.com.

When searching for international copies often times the ISBN and cover will not be the same. The book description will sometimes list the ISBN number of the US equivalent, othertimes it will not, and you will not have a written gaurentee that the book is exactly what you need. The important things to look for are that the Title of the book is the same, the Author(s) are the same, and the language of the book is in English.

It will take some hunting to find your books, but hopefully you can save a lot of your hard earned money!

Clean Up

I’m going to be cleaning up my website soon. Right now I have 14 SQL databases and 13 sub-domains, for 4 active web sites. Its pretty inefficient. In addition to that, all those sub-domains are running different versions of wordpress (ugh) and are just sitting there using up space. I’ll say this now:

If you haven’t logged in in the last month, I’m freezing your account.

I’ll park your domain, backup your database and files, burn it to a disk, send it to you, and that will be the end of it. Nothing personal, I just need to cleanup my hosting.

Active users will be upgraded to the latest version of wordpress. Dumping all the old databases will help me keep those active databases nice and organized. All of this is probably going to go down in the next week!

Too long

Its been far too long since I’ve written, so this is going to be a catch-up attempt.

Since I’ve last written anything down I’ve gotten out of my sling, finished summer school, gone to California, and started CA training at ASU. I’ve been out of my sling for 6 weeks now, and I’m 12 weeks post-op from my left shoulder, and 22 weeks post-op from my right. My right shoulder should be 100% in 4 more weeks, and my left will be 100% in 15 more weeks. My doctor origionally had some concerns with my left shoulder, but they have since resolved themselves and I’m on the road to recovery.

I got an A in calc two this summer, and ended up scoring a 98% on the final (awesome). And with that, my university mathmatics requirement has been satisfied.

I housesat and dogsat for my uncle who lives in LA the week before CA training started. The trip was only three nights, but it was just a nice chance to relax. I went to the beach, saw Mariah Carey play a free show, and just relaxed.

CA training has started now, and I’m really enjoying myself. I have a great staff, and I really enjoy myself in these kinds of roles. My experience so far reminds me a lot of being a SAW at NAUSMC, not quite the same but similar in many different fashions. I’m looking forward to meeting my residents this week.

Friday Grant held his 3rd annual end of summer party, this year themed “Welcome Back/Going Away”. It was good to see everyone before we all headed our seperate directions.

This post has kind of just been a catch-up post, I’ll add more content soon.

A Few Things

First order of business, breathesmoke.com expires in about a month. I’m considering keeping breathesmoke.com, but I’m also open to new ideas. Anyone?

Second order of business is a small relization that I cannot take credit for. I write on this site, but I also read other people’s “blogs” if you will, and was reading yesterday’s post from Clay Collins’s blog, The Growing Life. The blog is focused around self-realization and growing through life, and is worth reading. Yesterday’s entry touched on the topic of stepping stones, and how so many people’s lives are just one stepping stone to the next one.

Collins talks about how people often do well in High School just so they can go to a good college. They go to a good college to get a good job. The good job is only so they can make money. Committies and performance thereafter is only to make more money or to impress employers. Collins continues to talk about “productivity” in the workplace, and how it saps people of their zest for life. He affectionately refers to these people as “real” people. “Real” because they are grownups, they have “real” jobs and “real” lives.

Those people who are left are the “unreal”. Those who went against the grain and live unconventional lives and sometimes work unconventional jobs. An alternative lifestyle, if you will. Clay Collins doesn’t want to be real anymore. He says that real people live in the shadows of expectations their predecesors cast for them.

I feel like this is kind of what I’ve been doing recently to cope with the surgery and such. I can’t run, lift, muay thai, or do anything physical what so ever. Because I can’t do all these things I love so much I feel like I’ve been planning a “real” life to compensate. I’ve got to get such and such degree, I need to get such and such certification, jobs, internships, all preparing me for one day far, far away. There is a lot of security in the fact that society tells us that these things will bring us happiness, and I think for a bit I was slipping.

I’m not naieve enough to think that I just need to dump my business degrees and start engaging in some alternative lifestyle, because I think the extreme “unreal” is just as bad as the extreme “real”. Like all thing in life, balance is the key. I’ve got to find that balance between doing what I love every day, and doing what I need to support the kind of lifestyle I want to live. Sure, I could drop out of school, get really good at the trombone, trumpet, and bass and be a musician. Could I do it? I certainly could. Would it be fun? Hell yes. It would be much more fun than 3 more years of school. Do I really want to live paycheck to paycheck, with no steady consistant source of income? No. And if the sacrifice for a steady income means I have to work a 9 to 5, I’m okay with that. Muay Thai starts at 5:30 anyways, and I can have the best of both worlds.

Balance. Balance really is the key to all things in life. At this point in time I guess that what I’m trying to reach, a good balance between doing what makes me happy and keeps me passionate, but making some sacrifices here and there so I can live a lifestyle I am comfortable with. And as Dr. Seuss once said, “So be sure when you step, step with care and great tact. And remember that life’s just a great balancing act.

Warped Tour

For the last 5 years I have been unable to attend Warped Tour due to attending the NAU Summer Music Camp. This summer has been the first time I have been in the valley for Warped Tour, and so I took my brothers and a friend to Warped Tour this year!

Warped Tour is a concert/extreme sports event that tours America every year. Bands hop on tour and leave throughout the two months that the event crosses the country. We arrived at noon and stayed until the last band (Gym Class Heroes) finished their set. I got the oppourtunity to see a lot of really good bands perform.

Including “Tat”. A three-piece punk band from London that I had never heard before. I watched their set and fell in love with their lead singer, shes gorgeous, she plays music, has a hot accent, shes too much! If you listen to their music you can hear her accent as she sings. Really good stuff from them, they make some quality music.

Other bands I saw included As I Lay dying, Protest the Hero, the Maine, Katy Perry, Gym Class Heroes, Reel Big Fish, Oreskaband, Street Dogs, the Devil Wears Prada, and tons of others. The day finished without any of us getting sunburned but we were all completely exhausted.