Hmm. My handy dandy internal letter generator doesn't have a legend either. Maybe it's just for non-mailed letters.
'Dirty Girls'
Natter 52: Playing with a full deck?
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Also, books are often available before the release date, and it's not usually a big deal -- witness my parents' local non-B&N book store already having sold their copies of Vampire People.
Is it actually illegal to buy a book ahead of the release date? I mean, I would think that most people do not know when most books are released!
The bigger-name-authored books have "street dates," which are contracted with bookstores to adhere to, and lawsuits can and have resulted from breaking the street date. When I was working at Waldenbooks, a store in the district was caught selling a Danielle Steele title a few days before the street date, and the entire management staff was fired by the home office. If her publisher wanted to, they could have sued Waldenbooks for the breach of contract.
Naked and capitalized.Reading this out of context gave me a moment of pause.
It's not illegal, but it may be a contract violation. It's not like the cops are going to come.
I mean, right, lawyers?
Thanks for link! I had to issue a mea culpa.
Is it actually illegal to buy a book ahead of the release date?
not for the purchaser. The place where they bought it may have civil legal issues for breaching a contract not to sell until a certain time.
eta: ooh, x-posty!
It's not illegal to buy it ahead of the release date either, but there are probably some theories of civil liability there. They are dubious but not out of the question. But getting sued for buying it early is pretty unlikely.
I would think that, even if the bookstore was unpacking books in front of customers, and a customer happened to see a copy of the next Nora Roberts unpacked and demanded to buy it, even if the bookstore employee told her that the book had to go into the back room until X date, then it's still the bookstore's responsibility to hold to the contract and refuse to sell it. The customer is not always right.