Bezos started with books and ran a book selling operation for, what, a decade and a half? Before moving into other products
in my library’s book buying operation we used Amazon in those early days for various kinds of bibliographic information including availability because it was, at the time, better than our main suppliers’ databases. Certainly it was glitzier.
So, I have a soft spot in my heart for Amazon because we used it for years and did not buy books from them, ha ha. I suppose you all would think that’s a great FU to Bezos.
One of the downsides of having Amazon on the web available to everyone is that our library employees would be frustrated when we would tell them “sorry, we can’t get [a particular title.]” And they would whine “ but it’s available on Amazon, just look there! “
The reality of those days was that stock availability didn’t really show on Amazon just the fact that the book existed, once existed, or was scheduled to exist in the future. Lots of pre-publication promotion took place for books that never were published.
A great thing about Amazon and later bibliographic databases was that they blurred the line between the old-fashioned “out of print “ and currently available status. Now it doesn’t really matter whether a book is “in print” with copies available from the publisher because near-new used copies are available all over the place.



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