Those in Slough/Surrounding area no doubt have seen the new "Curve" Library nearing completion. The old Library is now selling off a large number of books and DVDs in preparation for the move. Some good books can be had for as little as 20p! You can fill a carrier bag of books for £1 (not including CDs and local history books)
Please do not post with negative comments about the town, I am posting this to help out people nearby who might want to get some cheap books and DVDs. Thank you :-)
From a local newspaper:
"Book lovers are converging on Slough library to grab amazing bargains as a big sell-off of all stock gets underway.
Older or less popular books are being sold off to make room for up to date stock as the library in High Street gets ready to move to new premises at the Curve in Wellington Street.
It will reopen on December 19 as part of a new cultural centre that also includes a cafe, Slough Museum, and a performance venue.
All the money raised by the sell-off will go into the new library."
Sale will continue for at least another week.
Top comments
Splashmo
31 Oct 1514#8
Is this national? Actually, I will just assume it is and go fill up my bags in my local library.
Edit: I just got arrested :disappointed:
rakinmorjaria1 to amzzzzyyyy
31 Oct 1512#15
Not really, because it means we live in Slough.
Besford
31 Oct 156#16
Please send them to Birmingham's library: they spent £190M on a new building and now they can't afford to stock it (or man it). Typical Labour council! :disappointed:
seancampbell to Oneday77
31 Oct 153#7
I wouldn't worry too much about that. Library books are liabilities as well as assets (because it costs money to catalog and store books as well as the Public Lending Right contribution paid to authors via the British Library). Selling at 20p is a clever way of getting rid of the on-going liabilities attached to less popular titles while also letting library patrons bag a bargain. That then frees up space/ budget at the new library for new books, eBooks, and all the other invaluable services that libraries provide.
All comments (50)
amzzzzyyyy
31 Oct 15#1
Lucky for people near by
rakinmorjaria1 to amzzzzyyyy
31 Oct 1512#15
Not really, because it means we live in Slough.
xxbluedragonxx
31 Oct 15#2
My wife is shopping there and she tells me books are actually from 20p (children's books for example) and you can fill a carrier bag for £1 (except CDs and local history books)
noshywoshy
31 Oct 15#3
wish I lived nearby!
chrisjdhuckle to noshywoshy
31 Oct 152#27
are you sure?
daydreamer44 to noshywoshy
31 Oct 152#28
No, you don't.
anselmofa
31 Oct 15#4
I live in Slough, will definitely take a look. Thanks :smile:
Oneday77
31 Oct 151#5
I live 100s of miles from Slough but this is a good deal.
My only concern is are they selling stuff too cheap if they want to plough funds into Slough's new library.
jasee to Oneday77
31 Oct 151#6
Yes I heartily agree, I think they should surcharge people who come from faraway places like Aberdeen
seancampbell to Oneday77
31 Oct 153#7
I wouldn't worry too much about that. Library books are liabilities as well as assets (because it costs money to catalog and store books as well as the Public Lending Right contribution paid to authors via the British Library). Selling at 20p is a clever way of getting rid of the on-going liabilities attached to less popular titles while also letting library patrons bag a bargain. That then frees up space/ budget at the new library for new books, eBooks, and all the other invaluable services that libraries provide.
Splashmo
31 Oct 1514#8
Is this national? Actually, I will just assume it is and go fill up my bags in my local library.
Edit: I just got arrested :disappointed:
alexus
31 Oct 152#9
Glad to hear your getting a new library. Does seem cheap so heat for local bargains. Got to say though am generally concerned about the cuts we are seeing to library services. Our local library cut hours after a so called community consultation where we had too options mon-sat 9-5 or 9.30-5.30. Gone are Sunday openings and evening openings. Library funding I always thought was a good long term investment for communities. But short term cost savings seem all councils and the government can see.
Gallus
31 Oct 15#10
Is Sluffs nightclub still around?
charliemaine1bee to Gallus
31 Oct 15#11
no it's a premier inn now :-(
bold_guy
31 Oct 15#12
If anybody can find fitness, kettlebell and anatomy books I would be interested in buying them from you so long as price is reasonable
Gallus
31 Oct 15#13
Man, that was a grab a granny place back in the late 1980's.
I remember staying at the holiday inn.
smelladeal
31 Oct 15#14
Gallus, did you grab-a-gran, then do a Bobby Shafto at the Holiday Inn?
Gallus to smelladeal
31 Oct 15#25
I live in and am from Glasgow, but I lived in Staines for 2 years.
Sluffs was a strange club.
Besford
31 Oct 156#16
Please send them to Birmingham's library: they spent £190M on a new building and now they can't afford to stock it (or man it). Typical Labour council! :disappointed:
SouthStandEllandRoad to Besford
31 Oct 151#23
Aye, and all those cuts to local services and Labour council budgets at the hands of a Tory government has nothing to do with it :disappointed:
chapchap
31 Oct 151#17
What's a book?
TehJumpingJawa to chapchap
31 Oct 152#18
A read-only web page that requires a copy be made for every concurrent user, has finite size, costs money to distribute, takes up physical space to store, deteriorates each time it's read, and has no automatic search, indexing, hyperlinking, or copy/paste functionality.
ScoobyZ
31 Oct 152#19
Send them to Andy:
Oneday77 to ScoobyZ
31 Oct 151#21
Maybe Tara would benefit more.
Oneday77
31 Oct 152#20
So it doesn't need batteries and will outlast all gadgets in production today.
GuyFawk
31 Oct 15#22
if they have a brand new library why bother selling stock, why not simply put it in the new library , what use is 20p
CK2009 to GuyFawk
31 Oct 15#35
Or better still give them to a charity to sell ?
Besford
31 Oct 15#24
Quite right, nothing to do with it. The start of this farce pre-dates the current government by years and is a local matter anyway. Birmingham can't even manage some pretty basic council responsibilities (eg child protection is officially unfit for purpose, green recycling is chargeable, etc.) yet it engages in this kind of vanity project. A perfectly serviceable (if 1960s ugly) library existed yet, just as libraries are becoming redundant, this bunch of clowns spend £190M knocking it down and building an even uglier one.
So glad I live just far enough away not to pay my council taxes to them.
ronin1
31 Oct 15#26
Yeah...
nomoneyleft
31 Oct 15#29
Sutton libraries do this as well. Great selection.
johnsmith1997 to nomoneyleft
31 Oct 15#36
Sutton libraries do this because they got no libraries left for their books.:smile:
They closed down Ridge Road library a couple of years ago,Carshalton library closed,reduced opening hours at the other remaining libraries and now want to close Beddington library and stop mobile library as well.
danielson1978
31 Oct 15#30
Has anyone been to absolutely ten pin in Slough? Thinking about holding a work party there
TeeDizzle
31 Oct 151#31
Come friendly bombs...
danielson1978
31 Oct 151#32
Heat added though, A real bargain for lIbrary books in Slough - As they'll never have been used
ewanyengi
31 Oct 15#33
Did you know Ali G?
Gallus
31 Oct 15#34
The irony is that Ali G would never live in Staines.
That's the point.
It's very middle class.
johnsmith1997
31 Oct 15#37
Why not?
Will be living next door to the Queen.:smiley:
Can even see her house aka Windsor Castle on the M4.:smiley:
Krizzo3
1 Nov 15#38
BOOK BURNING PARTYYYY
septimoose
1 Nov 15#39
They're clearing it out for the Apocalypse, obviously. Bunker under the Slough Library?
elbs
1 Nov 15#40
funding cuts or not is irrelevant - spending £190m on a library building and then, due to that spending not having the funds to stock or run it, is farcical under any circumstances/under any party
disarm
1 Nov 15#41
and is lovely to read and hold in your hand.
duncancosgrove
1 Nov 15#42
so is my kindle, to be fair.
mwa
1 Nov 15#43
Awesome memories of weekly visits to slough library while growing up. The place seemed gargantuan back then, recently passing through slough and needed to print off some documents I'd forgotten to bring with me so detoured to the library and was surprised how much smaller it seemed.
xxbluedragonxx
1 Nov 15#44
For those interested here is some info about the new library which is getting ready to be opened:
It's part of a large regeneration of the whole area the council has been, and will, implementing over a number of years. This started a while back with the demolition of the old bus station. I don't think it's to worry about what's happening with the books. As mentioned above it costs the library to keep older stock so they're saving money and making space for newer stock.
The new library is a multi purpose building with various facilities to help support it as well as more modern approach (e-learning suite, computer rooms) the old library had introduced a bunch of computers and things and this one I believe is basically moving forward to change with the times.
The council has invested quite heavily into it and will continue to invest in the surrounding area as part of the "Heart of Slough" long term project (along with a few other parts of Slough as well) I did ask that people please refrain from bashing the town (yes we all know that poem!) and concentrate on the deal at hand, this is just to illustrate there is a reason for it and one I think is the right approach, to modernise and revamp the library service to the more online world we have now.
disarm
1 Nov 15#45
There's something a lot more natural and organic about holding a paperback and reading print.
bazward75
1 Nov 15#46
I know i shouldn't be saying this cos i would feel the same if it was my local authority. I am going to wait
till the library itself is up for auction on that Amercican container auction show and then i will bid for the library. My only concern is how am i going to tow it to my back garden? Answers on a postcard please .
TK2013
1 Nov 15#47
I hope these are in some sort of order so you can find an author easily. I wonder if it's only current stock or whether they have older books no longer on shelves? Thanks op!
Wmffre
1 Nov 15#48
Why would anybody post negative comments about Slough?
cyanidexxx to Wmffre
3 Nov 15#49
. Why climb Everest ?
seaniboy
4 Nov 15#50
And recycling... renovation and a lick of paint over spending millions of tax payers money on a 'curved' building, the amount of squares in Slough didnt mind a square library, now go add insult to injury all these books are public owned being sold off like a Tory asset under value of cost v the value of a book in a library is priceless.
Opening post
Please do not post with negative comments about the town, I am posting this to help out people nearby who might want to get some cheap books and DVDs. Thank you :-)
From a local newspaper:
"Book lovers are converging on Slough library to grab amazing bargains as a big sell-off of all stock gets underway.
Older or less popular books are being sold off to make room for up to date stock as the library in High Street gets ready to move to new premises at the Curve in Wellington Street.
It will reopen on December 19 as part of a new cultural centre that also includes a cafe, Slough Museum, and a performance venue.
All the money raised by the sell-off will go into the new library."
Sale will continue for at least another week.
Top comments
Edit: I just got arrested :disappointed:
All comments (50)
My only concern is are they selling stuff too cheap if they want to plough funds into Slough's new library.
Edit: I just got arrested :disappointed:
I remember staying at the holiday inn.
Sluffs was a strange club.
So glad I live just far enough away not to pay my council taxes to them.
They closed down Ridge Road library a couple of years ago,Carshalton library closed,reduced opening hours at the other remaining libraries and now want to close Beddington library and stop mobile library as well.
That's the point.
It's very middle class.
Will be living next door to the Queen.:smiley:
Can even see her house aka Windsor Castle on the M4.:smiley:
http://www.slough.gov.uk/business/regenerating-slough/the-curve.aspx
It's part of a large regeneration of the whole area the council has been, and will, implementing over a number of years. This started a while back with the demolition of the old bus station. I don't think it's to worry about what's happening with the books. As mentioned above it costs the library to keep older stock so they're saving money and making space for newer stock.
The new library is a multi purpose building with various facilities to help support it as well as more modern approach (e-learning suite, computer rooms) the old library had introduced a bunch of computers and things and this one I believe is basically moving forward to change with the times.
The council has invested quite heavily into it and will continue to invest in the surrounding area as part of the "Heart of Slough" long term project (along with a few other parts of Slough as well) I did ask that people please refrain from bashing the town (yes we all know that poem!) and concentrate on the deal at hand, this is just to illustrate there is a reason for it and one I think is the right approach, to modernise and revamp the library service to the more online world we have now.
till the library itself is up for auction on that Amercican container auction show and then i will bid for the library. My only concern is how am i going to tow it to my back garden? Answers on a postcard please .