Page 4 -The Michigan Daily/New Student Edition-Arts-Thursday, September 9, 1993 Textbook buying and paperback browsing in Ann Arbor by Darcy Lockman You learned to read long ago. You like to read. In fact, you've done alotof it. Well, fasten your glasses boys and girls, you're about to embark on the biggest reading list of your life and it's called college. The days of two novels a semester apd textbooks that served no other pur- pose than to clutter up your half of the locker ended when you shook the principal's hand at graduation. If your vision's 20-20 today, enjoy. Then wave bye-bye as the early fall breezes blow it out of your life forever. Welcome to 2,000 pages a week. , Okay, don't pick up that phone to gall the admissions office just yet. Ev- eryone gets through it - well, most everyone. You'll learn when to skim, what to skip and yeah, how to read stuff damn quick. But before you start on your thirteen books for American Cul- Used book stores dot the Michigan campus packed tight with treasures surpassed only by those in your grandmother's attic... and the musty odor of their novels brings a real sense of exotica to the reading experience. These aren't just bound volumes, they're books with a past. ture 201 (a great class and worth every page) you need to know where to pur- chase these voluptuous volumes. For class or for pleasure reading, and sometimes the twain do meet, A- squared is a bastion of book stores. Expensive or cheap (a term used only loosely in Ann Arbor), new or used, you're coming to the right city. Let's get the painful part out of the way first: books for class. As a first year student, where you'll buy your books usually just depends on which campus book store you stumble into first. The same corporation owns the big three, Ulrich's - pronounced ul-rick's - on East University, Michigan Book and Supply onNorth University and the Michigan Union Book Store in the Michigan Union, so don't bother com- parative shopping. You'll be equally ripped off at each of the three. Uhrich's (clue: calling it ul-rich-es is as telling as walking around campus with amap, soonceagain it's ul-rick's) wins for least difficult to figure out. You just give the worker behind the counter your schedule, and off they go to find your load. Drawbacks: the lines are long, and you'll wait in two of them at Ulrich's (pronounced ul-rick's), the first to get your books, the second to purchase said books. In addition to the double line deal, since the workers get your books for you, you are unable to delve through the endless stacks looking for the least highlighted, torn and other- wise decrepit of the used bunch. Used books are the same price no matter the battered extent of use, so you might as well get the least mauled texts for your money. This leads us nicely into the advan- tages of the Union Book Store and Michigan Book and Supply (my per- sonal favorite, or should I say least hated, of the big three). At these two, the books are out on the shelves for the picking. Neatly organized and rela- tively easy to find (uniformed upperclass workers lurk behind the shelves, but don't let them scare you, they linger only to assist), at these two west side stores you get your books for yourself, leaving you the choice of which tattered or new copy to pick up, and the time saver of having only one line in which to wait. For those of you enrolled in classes just left of mainstream academia, Sha- man Drum, located at 313 South State, will be your campus bookstore. Tucked away in a second floor haunt between The Continental Restaurant and Van Buren's Apparel and owned by a very nice small businessman, the more avant garde professors give their business to this quaint magasin, the book land of coffee houses. One caveat: while Shaman Drum is smaller, more personal and indeed more personable, its prices are unfortunately no lower than the aforementioned big three. So maybe now you have the im- pression that you'll have little time or funds for extracurricular reading. You catch on quick. But let's say you take a light load one term, stay a spring and summer without taking classes, be- come a junior and realize-that book buying has little correlation with earned grade average. But you'll still feel the 0 6 0 The Lou Gehrig, the Marion Brando of book stores, Border's Book Shop, quietly spins its magic web around unsuspecting book-lovers. FILE PHOTO need, the need to read. On your quest for extracurricular verbiage, you'll learn there's more to Ann Arbor than texts Border's Book Shop ... is the cream of the crop, the best of the bunch, the book store to end all book stores. Cliches cannot do it justice. (It's) the ideal place to spend a rainy Saturday ... (and) the most enjoyable way to kill time between classes. and high prices. Used book stores dot the Michigan campus packed tight with treasures sur- passed only by those in your grandmother's attic. These stores are inexpensive in the true sense of the word, and the musty odor oftheir novels brings a real sense of exotica to the reading experience. Used books drown in mystery. They aren't just bound vol- umes, they're books with a past. Dawn Treader Book Shop (at 514 East Liberty and 1202 South Univer- sity), David's Books (622 East Liberty) and West Side Book Shop (113 West Liberty - it's a bit of a walk, but it's definitely worth it) offer selections which are as varied as the Big Three are predictable, peppered with Herman Wouk novels, Joan Didion essays and New York Tunes instruction manuals. You want it, they might have it. Go looking for particulars, or even better go injust to browse. Just like grandma's house, they're hard to leave empty handed. Note: used book stores often have some of the same reads in stock that you'll find on your prof's set list. The money you'll save if you find your books at any of these hot spots balances out the time you'll put in to locate them there. So then you've got your specialty shops. Dave's Comics (623 East Will- iam) has the biggest comic book selec- tion on campus, as well as other as- sorted collectibles. The Common Lan- guage Book Store (214 South Fourth Avenue) is best known for its feminist texts, but carries other sorts of literature as well. And any city with a mall has your basic token book chains. Ann Arbor's Briarwood Mall is no excep- tion, but Doubleday and B. Dalton are hardly worth your bus fare. Saving the proverbial best for last, Border's Book Shop (303 South State) is the cream of the crop, the best of the bunch, the book store to end all book stores. Cliches cannot do it justice. Border's is the ideal place to spend a rainy Saturday, the first thing to show your out of town guests and without a doubt the most enjoyable way to kill time between classes. Border's two floors hold any book you might ever hope to read. New titles, psychology, history, religion, sex - and those are just downstairs. Maga- zines, children's books (complete with toys and lots of room to sit down with a good Dr. Seuss), travel, cooking, enter- tainment books, art: all upstairs. And my personal favorite, fiction, has its very own room, also on the second floor. Don'tforgetto checkout the bargain tables outside, too, for a great place to buy presents for yourself and others. You'll find yourself walking to class and then suddenly paralyzed before the bargain tables as the books poised there silently, effortlessly lure you in. Cheap plug, aside, the ecstasies of Border's are endless. Words cannot ad- equately describe this haven filled with that very thing (words, that is). See it through your own lenses. So now you're briefed, set, ready to move, primed for your first year at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. Enjoy. Take time to stop and read the pages. And remember, it's ul-rick's, .r. !M.TI *Pool Tables " Dartboards *Multiple TV' ^FKP; m s GOBL -- V A man plumbs for hidden treasures in the browser-friendly environs of the West Side Book Shop. aad A C!"eecj&aC4 gold bond cleaners Quaity 'Dry Ceaning anrSfuirt Service 332 Maynard St. I 1F SCENES FROM 2 for 1 Movie Rental with this coupon LIBERY ST. Expiration Date 10-9-93 j VIDEO -LARGE SELECTION- Foreign * Classic Cult * Independent m IA