Lifestyles of the Cheap and Frugal: Part 3

Books.

Finally, a good thing to say about being cheap: libraries. I grew up splitting my summers between the Jersey shore and the kids’ book club at the library. For my parents, it was a win-win deal: it got my brother to read books for free pizza at Pizza Hut, and, well, I just got free pizza at Pizza Hut. I must have blown through the Babysitters Club series and its spinoffs in three summers or less.

I occasionally troll Yahoo Answers primarily to yell at idiots, and a very common question in the Books and Authors section is WHAT WEBSITE WILL SEND ME FREE BOOKS or something to those ends. Hey, goofballs, the library is 100% free. Unless you keep their stuff for too long. Ride a bike over there or something, because only a criminally insane parent wouldn’t take their kid to a library.

Books are among the only things we splurge on. My county library holds a book sale each year and their profits set a new record each year. I’ve been to each and every one of these sales since I was eight years old and the sale itself consisted of a dozen boxes on the park benches outside the library building. Now, the sale lasts three days and fills both buildings of the local National Guard armory, and people have to be  bussed over from the library’s much larger parking lot. On the final, half-price day, hardcovers and trade paperbacks cost one dollar. I personally spent close to two hundred dollars this year, and many of the books were considerably cheaper mass market paperbacks. Do the math. I needed to build new shelving in my apartment to handle the newcomers.

At a store, cost will still be taken into account due to my incredible cheapness. Why spend $14 a pop on a load of Kurt Vonnegut novels when I can order them used for $7 apiece plus discounted shipping online? Bookstores are still great for impulse buys, like the very wonderful Jhumpa Lahiri collection Interpreter of Maladies, the stationery section, and the bargain section.

The other thing I like about books is that no technology is required of me to read one.

Nice, nice, very nice.

Lifestyles of the Cheap and Frugal, Part 2

Replacement and/or mixing of foodstuffs.

In my household it is frowned upon when two mutually exclusive items, such as corn flakes and rice krispies, or orange juice and grape juice, or APPLESAUCE and CANNED PEACHES, are mixed together in the serving containers and put back into the general foodstuff population. It is considered rude and disgusting to the person who does not enjoy such a combination, but instead wanted to eat just one of the mixed ingredients.

This practice stills occurs occasionally, in the name of saving cabinet space. YUCK!

A less visible but more palatable food travesty is the ol’ switcheroo: when a small container of a brand-name product never seems to go empty – because it is constantly refilled from a bulk container of the generic brand. Now, don’t get me wrong - Marshmallow Mateys taste just like Lucky Charms. Really! And they’re pirate-themed! But when it comes to something like coffee or liquor, you get what you pay for. Really. A single shot of Grey Goose instantly weaned me off Smirnoff. Try it, unless you can’t afford to pay more than ten dollars for a half gallon of vodka. With the handle built into the bottle.

Dinosaurs, oh dinosaurs

I’m a dinosaur. For my 21st birthday I asked very nicely for and received from my parents a tape recorder for doing interviews and such. Fifty bucks or thereabouts for an almost totally obsolete technology – I’m very happy for Staples being able to still turn a profit on such things. Look up my anti-Blu-ray rant if you have the time.

Oh, and I didn’t get tanked last night. Maybe I’m just boring.

Publications vs. Comcast Triple Play

In my household we regrettably pay a ridiculous amount of buxx for television, one because it’s Comcast and two because we pay for premium channels. Rather, the boy pays for it. After Comcast screwed up on our very first bill I swore never to give them a penny of my own money, despite the fact that I’d probably go a little crazy without Internet access. And I think the phone service is totally unnecessary because we have cell phones. The bill is not itemized, so let’s say $30 for the phone and $30 for the Internet (both of which have cheaper alternatives, but le sigh, the boy locked us in for two years) and the remaining $70 for the TV.

$70×12 is $840. How many newspaper and magazine subscriptions could I pay for with that much?

The Wishlist

The New York Times Weekender – $234
Newsweek – $20
Publishers Weekly – $279
Writer’s Digest – $14.95
Rolling Stone – $14.95
Army Times – $54
The New Republic – $59.97
Bead & Button – $25
Vogue – $7.20
Consumer Reports – $15.95
Entertainment Weekly – $19.97
Beadwork – $24.95
The Writer – $19.96
McSweeney’s – $55
Discover – $18.90

The grand total is $843.84. Wow. If only I could cancel my cable.

Published in: on 25 April 2008 at 1:49 pm Leave a Comment
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