The Affordable Way To Buy Text Books
The Affordable Way To Buy Text Books
With all the expenses of a college education, text books are just another burden on top of all the other costly requirements of working towards a higher degree. This is why so many students opt for used college textbooks instead of buying them new at the campus bookstore. And although the campus bookstore may offer some used selections, they are still far from the cheapest option, which is why many students have discovered the benefits of shopping online. The Internet has opened up opportunities to sell used textbooks as well as buy them. Whether you are looking for all the books for your classes at the beginning of the semester or trying to get some cash back for the books you’re done with at the end of the semester, online sites provide an excellent option. If you sell cheap used college books, then you will definitely find this to be a profitable option. And if you buy them, it can save money that you can put into so many other important things that come along. Text books don’t have to be as expensive as they once were. With the rising costs of tuition, housing and other college-related expenses, it is necessary for students and parents to cut corners and save wherever they can. One of the best ways to do so is to buy and sell used textbooks online. You can actually buy books at the beginning of the semester, and after your semester is over you can sell the book back to the same online store and get about 75 percent of the money back. This makes books a much more nominal part of the cost of college, when it was once a huge financial burden. If you want to shop for used college textbooks over the Internet, just make sure you have the title, author and ISBN number available. This will ensure that you get the correct books every time.
For more resources regarding Cheap Textbooks or even about Algebra Textbooks and especially about American Government Textbooks please review these pages.
The Bacchae (The Applause Classical Library, Featuring New)
- 112 Pages
- Published by Applause Books
- Softcover
THE BACCHAE was not only the last and greatest of EuripidesÕ tragedies, it was very close to the last of the great Greek tragedies. The story of the play is in part about this cultural dissolution in Athens. ItÕs also about the theatre itself, and how a sane society needs strong, intelligent theatre to survive. THE BACCHAE makes a perfect first entry in the new Applause series of classic dramas, because it argues so passionately and beautifully and convincingly for the need for such a theatre, in our era as much as in EuripidesÕ. Herbert Golder in his new translation has turned an ancient play into a new one, one just as potent for an applicable to our troubled times as EuripidesÕ own.
Rating:
(out of 1 reviews)
List Price: $ 9.95
Price: $ 6.60
Synopsis: The gang finds a way to get free textbooks “Slice N Deis” is an award-nominated scripted sitcom produced for Brandeis Television. It follows a group of friends at Brandeis as they handle typical Brandeis issues. According to The Hoot, it is “a fluid mix of Seinfeld and South Park splashed onto a Brandeis canvas.” It’s a comedy that combines humor both outrageous and subtle to satirize life at Brandeis University. “New Textbooks” was nominated for Best Screenplay at Sundeis 2008! Theme song parody: The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air
Question by C-Los: Where can I find the best deals on new/used text books online?
Or if you live in the southern Colorado area do you know of a local bookstore that sells new/used textbooks? Preffrebaly used?
Best answer:
Answer by Pierre
For a location near you, you should ask around campus but if my knowledge is correct amazon has some decent prices on books. i would ask around campus first though because if you can find a location near you the sells cheap books you dont have to deal with the hassle of shipping.
Give your answer to this question below!
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Review by Lawrance M. Bernabo for The Bacchae (The Applause Classical Library, Featuring New)
Rating:
“The Bacchae” was written by Euripides when he was living in Macedonia in virtual exile during the last years of his life. The tragedy was performed in Athens after his death. These factors are important in appreciate this particular Greek tragedy because such plays were performed at a festival that honored the Dionysus, and in “The Bacchae” he is the god who extracts a horrible vengeance. The tragedy clearly demonstrates the god’s power, but it is a terrible power, which suggests less than flattering things about the deity himself.Pentheus was the son of Echion and Agave, the daughter of Cadmus, the founder of the Royal House of Thebes. After Cadmus stepped down the throne, Pentheus took his place as king of Thebes. When the cult of Dionysus came to Thebes, Pentheus resisted the worship of the god in his kingdom. However, his mother and sisters were devotees of the god and went with women of the city to join in the Dionsysian revels on Mount Cithaeron. Pentheus had Dionysus captured, but the god drove the king insane, who then shackled a bull instead of the god. When Pentheus climbed a tree to witness in secret the reverly of the Bacchic women, he was discovered and torn to pieces by his mother and sisters, who, in their Bacchic frenzy, believed him to be a wild beast. The horrific action is described in gory detail by a messenger, which is followed by the arrival of the frenzied and bloody Agave, the head of her son fixed atop her thytsus.Unlike those stories of classical mythology which are at least mentioned in the writings of Homer, the story of Pentheus originates with Euripides. The other references in classical writing, the “Idylls” written by the Syracusean poet Theocritus and the “Metamorphoses” of the Latin poet Ovid, both post-date”The Bacchae” by centuries. On those grounds, the tragedy of Euripides would appear to be entirely his construct, which would certainly give it an inherent uniqueness over his interpretations of the stories of “Medea,” “Electra,” and “The Trojan Women.” I see “The Bacchae” as being Euripides’ severest indictment of religion and not as the recantation of his earlier rationalism in his old age. The dramatic conflicts of the play stem from religious issues, and without understanding the opposition on Appollonian grounds of Pentheus to the new cult readers miss the ultimate significance of the tragedy. This is not an indictment of Appollonian rationalism, but rather a dramatic argument that, essentially, it is irrational to ignore the irrational. As the fate of Pentheus amply points out, it is not only stupid to do so, it is fatal. Consequently, “The Bacchae” is one of the most important of Greek tragedies.
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I heard that Amazon sells used books VERY CHEAP.