DD-OK wrote on 04/09/07 at 18:07:02:
Of course the "shop from Amazon" phenomenon is intricately tied to the fact that most local bookstores have poor chess book selections, with feedback loops going both ways.
Although I have been buying mostly through Amazon due to both the pricing and the selection, I do try to funnel some purchases through the local B&N, in part to reward them for their decent stock (i.e. to fight the Amazon feedback loop). It is nice to be able to flip through a book before committing to purchase. As a recent example, after I saw all the reviewers on Amazon complain that Dvoretsky's end game manual had near impossible-to-read blue ink (which is the code for the must-read parts of the book!), I was very happy that I could go to the B&N, check it out, see that I could read it, and buy it on the spot.
Oh, I fully agree. For me, browsing is the main point of visiting a bookstore. It amuses me that always at the Borders checkout, they ask you, "Did you find what you were looking for?" And these people are booksellers? Usually, I go into a bookstore
not knowing what I'm looking for. Books aren't like hardware, for crying out loud.
But in any case yes, there does appear to be a suboptimal equilibrium, from the point of view of chess hobbyists, emerging in the book trade. Indeed, a great many of the threads here seem to be intended to elicit the sort of information about given books that would best be learnt by browsing.