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Matters Criminous crime / mystery / detective literature:a critical list with discussions Buying New Books From Amazon Through This Site"'In the meantime,' continued Mr. Larkin, 'how would you like to sell some books? 'That's always fun.You'd be surprised at the great quantity of odd people who read books. Some even buy them. I wonder why?'" --Rain in the Doorway, Thorne Smith The Mystery GuildWhile, as I discuss below, Amazon remains the prime source for new books at the best prices, the venerable Mystery Guild is an attractive alternative for those books that it issues in its own editions (almost invariably less costly even than Amazon's prices, albeit for physically different editions), and--most especially--for its frequent omnibus editions of series or related books. Those omnibus editions are often not only the best way but the only way to obtain clean new copies of some classic works. I have an entire small page on the Mystery Guild, including a link direct to their special-offer "join-up" page. (In the interest of full disclosure: if you follow my link and join the Guild from it, I get a very, very modest bounty from them.) Amazon.com and MeSome of the books listed on this site--those currently available new--can be bought direct through this site from whichever of Amazon's divisions (U.S.A., U.K., Canada, Germany, France, or Japan) carries them (often all do). Before I discuss the mechanics, I had best say a few words about this site and my connection with Amazon. Whenever commercial considerations appear in connection with a web site, that entire site then runs the risk of appearing to exist solely or primarily as a shill to draw visitors into, in this case, buying books to the enrichment of the site owner. Let me dispel some of that smoke. No one--or at least no "one" who is not a gigantic commercial entity running a web site with visitors in the six and seven digits monthly--is making significant money off book referrals. The percentages that referring affiliates get are small, and the number of actual purchases is not usually much to write home about. All in all, any site that manages to make enough in book commissions just to pay its service-provider and domain-name fees is doing well. From the point of view of the visitor--you--Amazon is as good a place to buy new books from as any other and better than most. The price you get by buying a book through this, or any other Amazon affiliate booksite, is exactly the same price you would get visiting the Amazon site on your own: Amazon pays out its minims to affiliates entirely from its own gross. (If a book is not available new, or if you would rather buy it used to save money, I also provide--for every book listed here--a one-click access to the Abebooks list of copies available; Abebooks is a listing service for about a zillion individual used-book sellers, and you actually buy your used book from one of those sellers through the Abebooks interface. There is more information on all that on the Buying Used Books page.) Amazon require affiliates to present a message from them: this is a link to that message. About Shipping CostsAmazon offers free shipping on qualifying orders. "Qualifying" orders are those meeting a certain modest minimum amount--which varies from division to division as shown in the table below--of "qualifying" items, which includes virtually all new books. The region within which qualifying orders ship free also of course varies from division to division, but invariably includes at least the domiciling nation. Exact details are on the corresponding Amazon sites, but virtually all new books qualify. Click on a division name in the table below to see their shipping-info "help" page.
I have created a separate page to discuss the complexities of international book buying, which is sometimes the only way to obtain a particular book new. Particular EditionsIf, anywhere in this site, you click on a link to a new-copies (as opposed to used-copies) listing for a particular title--such links only exist when there are copies available new at all--or do a general Amazon search for a title, you will be taken to a details page for that edition. The page initially defaults to showing the Amazon U.S. information for the title. An edition-details page is always taken "live", so the price and availability data shown are exactly current. Perhaps equally useful, each individual-edition page also carries all of whatever editorial and reader reviews Amazon has available for that title (take care to note that those reviews are not necessarily for the particular edition shown--Amazon does not segregate them by edition, and there's no way for me, or anyone, to peel them apart after the fact). The top part of such a page will look pretty much like this:
That is all, again, pretty self-explanatory: the book title as Amazon has it (often only a rough approximation to what appears on the cover!); the author's name; the type of binding; the publisher; the price, in the currency of that particular Amazon division; that proce translated, using reasonably recent data, to its equivalent in other some currencies, to give you an idea of the cost in units with which you may be more familiar; Amazon's claims (too often exaggerated) as to how quickly they would ship an order out; and a button allowing you to place the book in your Amazon "Shopping Cart" for that Division (if you don't already have such a Cart, Amazon will wlak you through creating one). Note that as with all "Shopping Carts", you have not bought the item till you go to your cart and "proceed to checkout", which is when you really order and pay for the book. Below the Amazon"buy" information are some two other things: an Abebooks link, and some "related items". The Abebooks line is based on data extracted in real time when you clicked up this page, and shows you what used cpies of this exact edition can be had for; the price is always in the same currency as the Amazon Division in questions uses. (The Abebooks price is just that--the price--and does not include the seller's shipping charges.) The "related items" is an Amazon feature, by which they use their records of other customers' buying habits to try to determine what other books you might be interested in if you're interested in the one this page is for. It's harmless, and occasionally interesting or useful. Below the page part shown above appear two other areas of interest: editorial descriptions of the book, and reader descriptions of the book. Without burdening this explanatory page with a mile of actual reviews, those parts might look like this:
It is not always the case that Editorial or Reader descriptions are available. If one is not, the simple message (none available) will appear. I have, though, set things up so that for the Amazon Divisions of Canada, Germany, France, and Japan if no reviews show up, the page then looks elsewhere for information--first to Amazon USA, then (if there is still no result, as may well be the case for books published in Britain) to Amazon UK; if it finds reviews at one of those Divisions, it uses them, but always with a note telling you that the reviews are from a "foreign" Division's records. Note well that the Reader Descriptions are arranged in descending order of "Usefulness" as voted on by other readers. That way, the reviews that the greatest number of others found useful appear first, which helps you at least a little in deciding how much credibility to assign those reviews. (I believe, but would not swear, that Amazon's system omits from these listings reviews from readers who are--albeit by their telling the truth--under age 13, so hopefully silly kiddy stuff won't even appear here, though that does not signify that "reader descriptions" are necessarily worth much critically.) Those one-edition/one-Division pages all end like this:
The "teaser" What do you know about . . . ? line is simply a link to a randomly selected topic at an online encyclopedia; it is there for your amusement if you want a brief diversion (it opens a new browser window). The rest is self-descriptive, but let me add that if you are not yet using the Firefox browser, you are cheating yourself--it is, without doubt--by far the best browser available, and, amazingly, it is 100% free. You really owe it to yourself to check it out. (And don't overlook the treasure chest of "extensions" and other "add-ons" available for Firefox, super-easily (one-click) added, well, extensions to its already formidable abilities. Final NotesBy and large, each editions-detail page will be short and load quickly, but there can be exceptions--books with huge numbers of reader reviews will, as one might expect, be a little slow to fully load as all those reviews need to be fetched for your examination. And--again--remember to be sure, for your own benefit, that you do not have hidden scumware running as a parasite on your computer. (Why not look in at Is it a blog yet?) You loaded this page on Saturday, 17 May 2008, at 16:31 GMT it was last modified on Tuesday, 6 February 2007, at 02:47 GMT What do you know about OmniKnow? |
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Site Mechanics:
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Site Directory:
The site's Front Page |
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(essential one-time reading) |
Introductory Material: | ||
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Literate Mystery Series:
a brief list of the series discussed here |
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(the heart of the site) |
The Series (alphabetical by character last name): | ||
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Roderick Alleyn (Ngaio Marsh) |
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Father Brown (G. K. Chesterton) |
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Mr. Campion (Margery Allingham) |
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Adam Dalgliesh (P. D. James) |
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Gervase Fen (Edmund Crispin) |
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Sherlock Holmes (Conan Doyle) |
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Inspector Maigret (Georges Simenon) |
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Philip Marlowe (Raymond Chandler) |
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The Continental Op (Dashiell Hammett) |
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Solar Pons (August Derleth) |
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The No. 1 Ladies Detective Agency (Precious Ramotswe) (Alexander McCall Smith) |
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The Saint (Simon Templar) (Leslie Charteris) |
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Lord Peter Wimsey (Dorothy Sayers) |
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Nero Wolfe (Rex Stout) |
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Yellowthread Street (William Marshall) |
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(new, used--find any book, anywhere in the world) |
About Buying Books From Here: | ||
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Buying Books New:
· about buying books from Amazon · searching for new books at any Amazon division · international book-buying considerations |
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Buying Books Used:
searching for used books anywhere in the world |
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About the Mystery Guild: info & online signup |
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(often the most interesting part of any site) |
Miscellaneous Topics & Info: | ||
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Other Resources: internet & print resources of crime-mystery-detection interest |
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Scumware! read this if nothing else whatever |
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Change Log: what was done when |
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Your Host: a comically little about me |
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Site Info:
Comments? Criticisms? Questions? Please, e-mail me by clicking here. (Or, if you cannot email from your browser, send mail to webmaster@matterscriminous.com) All content copyright 2008 The Owlcroft Company This web page is strictly compliant with the W3C (World Wide Web Consortium) So if your browser experiences any difficulties with this page (It's free!) |
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The late Brian Keith, regrettably and amazingly, has no star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame; click to find out how you can help get a Star for Brian.