10 Tips to Get the Most Out of Library Book Sales (Guest Post from Chronicle of an Infant Bibliophile)

I hope you will join me in welcoming Lynn to Frugal Family Fun Blog for this gem of a guest post with lots of valuable money-saving tips. Thank you, Lynn!



Update: We have a guest post up on Lynn’s blog today. Be sure to visit her!


Hi. I’m Lynn, mom to a 2 year old lover of books, and I blog over at Chronicle of an Infant Bibliophile, where we record and review everything my son reads. We’re delighted to be guest posting at Frugal Family Fun today. When it comes to frugal, and fun, it’s hard to beat your public library. While visiting the library and borrowing books is wonderful, there is also a certain joy in owning your own books. That’s where the subject of today’s post comes in — getting the most out of library book sales.

As a child, I remember descending the stairs of my local library once a year, entering a small room jam-packed from floor to ceiling with books and eager patrons elbowing each other for the best selections. The excitement was palpable. My mother would buy me a brown paper bag for a set price and set me loose to fill it. I was in heaven. Now I am fortunate enough to live in a city with a huge public library that holds book sales multiple times per year.

Fresh from our most recent sale this week, I am sharing 10 tips for getting the most bang for your buck out of library book sales. Our focus is on children’s books, but many of these apply to all types of books.



1. Go early. When they’re gone, they’re gone, and the best selection will be in the opening hours. If you are a Friend of the Library (my husband signed our family up as a stocking stuffer last year for $25), check to see if there are free members-only preview sales the night before.

2. Volunteer. If you really want first dibs, sign up to volunteer for the sale. I don’t know what the official rules are about snagging books for yourself when you volunteer, but in the last city I lived in, the crafts section was always completely empty, and those kindly older women working the checkout line looked mighty smug about it.

3. Set a budget. This is fairly obvious, although admittedly, I don’t usually do it. It might work especially well if you have older children with you. Give them each $5 (or less, depending on how much books cost) and let them figure out what they can buy.

4. Go late. Check with the library about the last few days of the sale. Prices might be cut in half, or the fill-a-bag sale might only be brought in on the last day. I know I also recommended going early. It’s a trade-off between greater availability and the best bargains. Last year, I found that I was struggling to fill an inexpensive bag with books we really didn’t want on the last day, so I limited myself to the first day of the sale this year.

5. Be neighborly. This tip makes the whole experience more fun. At large sales, ask others around you if they’re searching for a particular topic and ask them to let you know if they see what you’re looking for. If you feel weird asking, you can also just express your thoughts loudly to your young child: “I hope we can find you some books about cars!” This inadvertently scored us four great finds last week.

6. Choose wisely. Check board books for chewed corners (my personal peeve, which eliminates most board books at the sale), and especially every page in pop-up and lift-the-flap books for missing sections. If you see a book in great condition by an author you know and love, don’t waste time reading it — toss it in your bag and move along. It’s a keeper.

7. Put your kids to work. If, like me, you visit the sale with your child(ren), put them to work. How much they can do will vary by age, of course, but even my two year old helps out. We have a rule that he’s allowed to run around as long as he stays in the same aisle as me. I engage him by asking him to deliver books I pick to a pile on our stroller and to yay or nay borderline choices. Hotwheels from my purse buy me extra time when he matter-of-factly declares that he is “all done!”. At the last book sale we attended, someone had set their three year old on the floor with a PDA playing movies. I don’t recommend that approach, but it seemed to work well as a tactic to block us from a few shelves full of good books…

8. Go through all of your selections one last time before you buy. Ask yourself if you really want to own the book or if you’d be content to borrow it from the library.

9. If you get a book home and realize that you don’t like it, fear not. Use sites like paperbackswap.com or bookmooch.com to trade for other books that you would enjoy more. I suspect many use the big book sales expressly to get books for trading online. I don’t have that kind of drive, but you can use it selectively for books that you change your mind about once you get them home. Personally, we pop them right back into the library donation bin.

10. Feel good — your purchase is helping to keep our libraries running!

Do you have other tips? We’d love to hear them. I already have the next sale marked on my calendar…