I think it's back in print--I saw a number of copies in the dealer's room at Wiscon last weekend.
I really need to read Pat Murphy's other stuff.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
I think it's back in print--I saw a number of copies in the dealer's room at Wiscon last weekend.
I really need to read Pat Murphy's other stuff.
The copy I have was new - so I am certain it is back in print.
I have been playing with my new CueCat. Yay Library Thing, for it is the coolest thing ever. I think I will make a poster of my cover collection.
I've found the CueCat's scanning capabilities don't always recognize the 80's paperbacks I tried to feed it, but I figure the time I'll save cataloguing the newer stuff will make up for having to type in some of the titles.
Look for codes on the inside of the front covers, Katerina. Sometimes they are they are weird lengths and dont' really look like UPC codes, but scan just fine. And sometimes you just have to enter the codes by hand, of course.
My plan was to enter all my books into Library Thing when they came out of storage, as I was shelving them.
Too bad I forgot to pack the CueCat.
LibraryThing has added a friendslist-like feature. It is quite possible that I will never get anything done again ever.
The issue with my 80's paperbacks wasn't that they didn't have bar codes - at least, some of the late-80's ones did. Neither Amazon nor Library of Congress recognized those I scanned. Alas. Then I typed in the titles, and bam! THERE they were.
Fortunately, I'm a superfast typist, so entering a bunch of titles doesn't seem like hard work to me. The trouble will mainly be a) accessing all the books and carting them over to the keyboard/workspace, and b) finding that pesky motivation to do so.
Did they not recognize the ISBNs either? If you key that into LibraryThing, it should recognize it.
We did try an ISBN, which did work. However, looking at those closely and typing 'em carefully would take me longer than dashing off the title. Me and numbers aren't all that friendly; not like me and the 26 letters.
KB, a lot of paperbacks have a bar code on the inside of the cover as well as the one on the back. In those cases, they're two different bar codes, and only the inside bar code is the ISBN (the one on the back is more like a grocery-store bar code, with a completely unrelated number).
(Confusingly enough, if a book only has the barcode on the back, then that one almost always is an ISBN.)