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but what's the difference between 'hardback' and 'paperback'?
Whoever: Sayin most textbooks are softbacks are misleading... in the US (at least, in the Texas part of the US), almost all textbooks are hardback.
And, by the way, the OotP hardback takes up a LOT of space.
Sonkem wrote:you know, in Britain hardback is what a book is when it comes out brand new, propably because it looks more impressive and is easier to stand up for display in a shop window, they have a very stiff thick fancy cover with a paper sleeve over the top to protect the fancy hard cover within but when you read it the paper sleeve gets all messed up and bugs me like crazy. Hard backs are always huge, bigger cover, font, better paper, better quality altogether....
Sonkem wrote:paperback then comes out sometime later with a thin flexible cover in the same design as the paper sleeve usually and these tend to be considerably smaller with thinner paper, smaller font and because of the flexible cover they are more suitable for travelling and are of course half the price so if you love a book its cheaper to read them paperbacks than hardbacks
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