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by
Amelia
(new)
May 10, 2021 11:45AM

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I can't read it in paperback for this reason! Oddly, one of my very favorite photos of myself as a teen is all dressed up from some school dance or other, leaning on my mom's car, reading the paperback of this.


I can't read it in p..."
I have IT in paperback and I remember it being tough with the small print. The Stand was the same way.






It's pretty cool that you can put many shelves of King books on one tiny device.

Most ebooks are pretty expensive upon release, but I know from experience that if you watch Amazon for Kindle books and Barnes & Noble for Nook books, you can usually get them for less that $5 if you wait a bit. That's one advantage that new King readers have. They can go back and buy the books for much less.
Also, if you like audiobooks, Chirp has been my source for them. All of the King audiobooks I own (that aren't CDs or tapes) have come from there, and I never paid more than $5 each.

You have to watch for them to be on sale. I know they are generally not, but I subscribe to a few email lists that notify you of e-book sales, and they DO go on sale, but usually only for a few days. It's a pain, but I keep an eye on it because I find it easier to read an e-book nowadays and already own them all in book form (and pre-order physical books as they are released) and don't want to pay full price for a duplicate e-book.

It is really annoying that they are so expensive, considering that they have been out for such a long time.

And here's something crazy: They've been splitting the novella collections into separate ebooks. The stories in Different Seasons, for example, run from $9.99 to $10.99. But you can get Different Seasons with all four for $11.99.

And here's something crazy: They've been splitting the novella collecti..."
They call that MARKETING. Pretty sad.


It's really quite a thrill when you find one. As he has gotten older, those Easter eggs have become more of the "name dropping" variety, as if characters exist on multiple levels of the beam, as opposed to actually appearing in more stories. Reinforces the "twin" aspect of The Talisman,
