Half-Price Books - What do you think?
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Post Posted: Fri Jun 08, 2007 10:02 am 
 

JohnGaunt wrote:It's Friday; I might as well do my best to annoy people.

Texans:

If one drives from Dallas to Houston in search of Half-Price Books, which stores are the best to hit over a two-day period?  I see eight stores in the Houston area; in what order should I hit them?

Also, will I frickin' melt in the June heat and humidity of Houston?  The last time I was there I lost 10 or 15 pounds in a matter of weeks.


JG;

I have stepkids in the Houston area, so I hit the stores there about once or twice a year...I usually space it out over two days since there is a lot of area to cover.

First, yes, the heat and humidity are brutal in Houston, "The Toilet that never flushes" as one of my friends so admirably referred to that city..... 8O

I would ignore the Rice Village store and the Clearwater (Egret Bay) store....havent' found anything useful at either the last few times I've been.  Plus, the Clearwater store is WAY south and not near any of the others (unless you want to combine a trip there with a trip to NASA, which is close by).  They rarely have any decent gaming stuff. The Rice store is an ass whipping.  No parking, always packed full of people, and a gaming section maybe half a shelf wide filled with crap.  Avoid at all costs. The Copperfield store you might also cross off your list; it is way, way up in the NE sector of the city, and most times not worth the long drive.

My favorite stores in the last few years have been both the stores on Westheimer; The Sugarland (south) and Humble (west) stores; and the North Oaks center store.  All have yielded treasures at one time or another.  If you visit the store on East Westheimer, be sure to visit Nan's which is a few blocks away.  It used to be Houston's premier game store; a gigantic building filled with all sorts of goodies.  Alas, the years, and flooding, have removed all the coolest stuff.  Still, very well stocked and every once in a great while you can come across a treasure.

You can probably hit the five stores i mentioned in one day if you start early; I have done it before.  It may take all day, but with so many good places to eat in Houston who cares...! Be sure to stop at Taco Milagro at least once. (The Kirby store)

Damn, I wish I was going now!!!! :D

Mike B.


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Last edited by Badmike on Fri Jun 08, 2007 10:09 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Post Posted: Fri Jun 08, 2007 10:04 am 
 

Kingofpain89 wrote:I only plan on going to the Plano LSC.

Oh, come join the madness . . .  what could be crazier than driving hundreds of miles for free stuff?

If I get one copy of the Goodman Games DCC module, I'll be happy.  Given the franchise nature of LSC, I fully expect that a combination of the following will happen at any given store:

(1) Be told that I must buy something to get the swag.
(2) Be told that I must sit down and play a scheduled game to get the swag.
(3) Be told that the DCC is sold out.
(4) Be handed some leftover comics from Free Comics Day.
(5) Be told that other LSC stores have called about the idiot wanting free RPGs, and that I must go away.
(6) Be told to wait in line for a long, long time.
(7) Be given a blank stare when asking about Free Games Day.

I could be wrong and wind up with half-a-dozen DCC modules, in which case I can offer some to the overseas members.  I don't  plan on getting and keeping more than two copies of the DCC module.

  

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Post Posted: Fri Jun 08, 2007 10:17 am 
 

JohnGaunt wrote:Oh, come join the madness . . .  what could be crazier than driving hundreds of miles for free stuff?

If I get one copy of the Goodman Games DCC module, I'll be happy.  Given the franchise nature of LSC, I fully expect that a combination of the following will happen at any given store:

(1) Be told that I must buy something to get the swag.
(2) Be told that I must sit down and play a scheduled game to get the swag.
(3) Be told that the DCC is sold out.
(4) Be handed some leftover comics from Free Comics Day.
(5) Be told that other LSC stores have called about the idiot wanting free RPGs, and that I must go away.
(6) Be told to wait in line for a long, long time.
(7) Be given a blank stare when asking about Free Games Day.

I could be wrong and wind up with half-a-dozen DCC modules, in which case I can offer some to the overseas members.  I don't  plan on getting and keeping more than two copies of the DCC module.


Being LSC is a toy store masquerading as a comic/game store, I would have to agree with all the above points. Every single ass-whip you wrote, and probably some we didn't think of, might be occuring that day. I'm going to try at least my local two stores in case a brain cell is functioning by an employee and I can actually walk out with some goodies.  I'll check with Wayne (owner of Generation X) this week to see what his procedure is going to be, hopefully it's no hassle unlike the LSC.
 As an aside, the original LSC owner's son now runs the stores, and word is he despises comics and games.  If he had his druthers, he'd sell them all and deal in toys/figurines exclusively. The stores I go to are very spottily filled with games, but not every system, and they run out of their comic shipments pretty quickly.  As badly run as the chain is, there is little competition, so no wonder they stay in business.  I've heard their internet business makes ten times what the brick and mortar stores bring in, not surprising.....

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Post Posted: Sun Jun 24, 2007 5:56 pm 
 

Since I work at one of the HPB stores in Indiana, the idea that the other stores in the chain are treating their customers this way is just mind-blowing.  At the same time, it doesn't surprise me one bit (the Ohio stores especially seem to have all sorts of problems with pricing out-of-print materials for some reason).

I don't run the Games & Humor section at my store, but I wind up pricing nearly all of the gaming stuff that comes through, whether it is current or out of print, because I'm the resident gamer of the store.  I've been collecting TSR 1st and 2nd edition products for twenty years now, and I've never had a problem selling the classic stuff out of my store.

I'm certainly not claiming to be a know-it-all (I'm far from it, in fact, and quite prone to mistakes), but I know how to treat the stuff so collectors and casual browsers alike will be apt to buy it.  I've got a huge personal collection, so I know what to look for in most items.  Modules and boxed sets are checked very carefully for completeness before being polybagged, and any missing item that I find deducts money from the price of the item.  I also write up descriptions on post-it notes included in the bag to indicate what edition, what print run, and whether or not the set is complete; if it is incomplete, I list what is missing.  The price sticker is also placed on a post-it note before being attached to the cover of the item, which makes it very easy to remove once you've gotten it home and pulled it out of the bag.  Needless to say, we very rarely have these items sit on our shelves for very long - all the collectors in the city know to come to us for a very fair price on their gaming goods, and an indication of when something is missing a map, a handout, or some cardboard counters.

I've told my managers about the Acaeum and requested that it be listed on the Intranet page with the other links to sources like Amazon, AbeBooks and eBay for helping pricers get their stuff right, but so far that hasn't happened.  This isn't surprising, since all of that stuff is taken care of out of Dallas, Texas and not locally by us. :)

A lot of what you get out of HPB (or any other used bookstore, really) depends on who is in charge of the sections.  When you get somebody who knows LPs in charge of the LP section, you get a great selection of stuff at cheap prices, and someone who has an eye for the collectable items that should go out for more than fifty cents or a buck.  When you have somebody who knows nothing about LPs doing the section, you get a lot of trash to sort through in the hopes that you get a couple good deals and almost nothing pulled aside and showcased for the collectors.  Sadly, from what I know from personal experience, many stores in the company do not have these types of people in these jobs and their shelves suffer for it.

Just thought you might like to hear from somebody who works for the store and actually tries to get stuff right. :)

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Post Posted: Sun Jun 24, 2007 6:02 pm 
 

MichaelC wrote:Since I work at one of the HPB stores in Indiana, the idea that the other stores in the chain are treating their customers this way is just mind-blowing.  At the same time, it doesn't surprise me one bit (the Ohio stores especially seem to have all sorts of problems with pricing out-of-print materials for some reason).

I don't run the Games & Humor section at my store, but I wind up pricing nearly all of the gaming stuff that comes through, whether it is current or out of print, because I'm the resident gamer of the store.  I've been collecting TSR 1st and 2nd edition products for twenty years now, and I've never had a problem selling the classic stuff out of my store.

I'm certainly not claiming to be a know-it-all (I'm far from it, in fact, and quite prone to mistakes), but I know how to treat the stuff so collectors and casual browsers alike will be apt to buy it.  I've got a huge personal collection, so I know what to look for in most items.  Modules and boxed sets are checked very carefully for completeness before being polybagged, and any missing item that I find deducts money from the price of the item.  I also write up descriptions on post-it notes included in the bag to indicate what edition, what print run, and whether or not the set is complete; if it is incomplete, I list what is missing.  The price sticker is also placed on a post-it note before being attached to the cover of the item, which makes it very easy to remove once you've gotten it home and pulled it out of the bag.  Needless to say, we very rarely have these items sit on our shelves for very long - all the collectors in the city know to come to us for a very fair price on their gaming goods, and an indication of when something is missing a map, a handout, or some cardboard counters.

I've told my managers about the Acaeum and requested that it be listed on the Intranet page with the other links to sources like Amazon, AbeBooks and eBay for helping pricers get their stuff right, but so far that hasn't happened.  This isn't surprising, since all of that stuff is taken care of out of Dallas, Texas and not locally by us. :)

A lot of what you get out of HPB (or any other used bookstore, really) depends on who is in charge of the sections.  When you get somebody who knows LPs in charge of the LP section, you get a great selection of stuff at cheap prices, and someone who has an eye for the collectable items that should go out for more than fifty cents or a buck.  When you have somebody who knows nothing about LPs doing the section, you get a lot of trash to sort through in the hopes that you get a couple good deals and almost nothing pulled aside and showcased for the collectors.  Sadly, from what I know from personal experience, many stores in the company do not have these types of people in these jobs and their shelves suffer for it.

Just thought you might like to hear from somebody who works for the store and actually tries to get stuff right. :)


Thanks for posting, Michael. While I don't like my HPB employees to be TOO knowledgable about the game items (I'd never get a good deal  :lol: ), I do appreciate it when they at least do their job well. It sounds like you are one of the few that knows what they are doing, and helps the customers rather than hindering them.  

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Post Posted: Sun Jun 24, 2007 6:12 pm 
 

Yeah. And remember HALF PRICE is just that.

So when you come across an OCE WHITE BOX, remember, half of $12.00 is SIX DOLLARS.

:)

We have a real jackass at one of the three stores around here - he runs the games section, and is a gamer himself. When the "good stuff" comes in (he does this by his own admission), he prices the items at 1/2 price and then sets them aside for himself to purchase with his ADDITIONAL employee discount.

All of the gamers in greater Cleveland used to wipe out that  1/2 Price's gaming section quite frequently...now, there's four shelves of so-so garbage priced at what he "thinks" collectors can pay. I had to laugh at the beatdown 1E Monster Manual marked at $9.98.

What a tool.


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Post Posted: Sun Jun 24, 2007 6:17 pm 
 

The 3 Half Price Books stores in the Indy area have been a great place to find stuff for me.  Unfortunately, I don't get down there enough to really take advantage of them.

  


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Post Posted: Sun Jun 24, 2007 6:42 pm 
 

Center_Stage_Hobbies wrote:Yeah. And remember HALF PRICE is just that.

So when you come across an OCE WHITE BOX, remember, half of $12.00 is SIX DOLLARS.

:)

We have a real jackass at one of the three stores around here - he runs the games section, and is a gamer himself. When the "good stuff" comes in (he does this by his own admission), he prices the items at 1/2 price and then sets them aside for himself to purchase with his ADDITIONAL employee discount.

All of the gamers in greater Cleveland used to wipe out that  1/2 Price's gaming section quite frequently...now, there's four shelves of so-so garbage priced at what he "thinks" collectors can pay. I had to laugh at the beatdown 1E Monster Manual marked at $9.98.

What a tool.

Then he's violating store policy.  Nobody is allowed to price the stuff he or she intends to buy.  Those items are to be given to a manager for pricing.  Nice of him to flaunt that to his customers...

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Post Posted: Sun Jun 24, 2007 7:03 pm 
 

MichaelC wrote:Since I work at one of the HPB stores in Indiana


Do you know of any plans to open a HPB store in Huntsville, AL?  Or perhaps Nashville, Chattanooga, or Birmingham? (All are within 100 miles of Huntsville).

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Post Posted: Sun Jun 24, 2007 7:09 pm 
 

Keith the Thief wrote:
Do you know of any plans to open a HPB store in Huntsville, AL?  Or perhaps Nashville, Chattanooga, or Birmingham? (All are within 100 miles of Huntsville).

Thanks,
Keith

Wish I could help you there, Keith, but that's not in our region, so we don't usually hear about it until we read about the grand opening that happened two weeks ago in the corporate newsletter. :)

I'll keep my eyes open though.  Right now they seem to be focusing a lot on the midwest: new stores and renovations for Illinois and Ohio seem to be the word right now.  There's a new Chicago store that's going to open up either at the end of 07 or start of 08.  Other than that, I'm not aware of any new stores going up.

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Post Posted: Sun Jun 24, 2007 7:14 pm 
 

*uses mental control* Need to open a store in Buffalo, NY.... get out of the near-Midwest and go east, damnit.


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Post Posted: Sun Jun 24, 2007 7:21 pm 
 

MichaelC wrote:Right now they seem to be focusing a lot on the midwest: new stores and renovations for Illinois and Ohio seem to be the word right now.  There's a new Chicago store that's going to open up either at the end of 07 or start of 08.  Other than that, I'm not aware of any new stores going up.

- Michael


Bummer.  I'd been hoping for a store down this way.  Thanks for responding. :)

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Post Posted: Sun Jun 24, 2007 8:32 pm 
 

Thanks for the good post Michael.

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Post Posted: Sun Jun 24, 2007 8:52 pm 
 

brute wrote:Thanks for the good post Michael.

No problem. :)

http://www.halfpricebooks.com/find_a_store.html

That might be of interest for people to check from time to time.  Looks like they keep a log of where the new stores are opening and when the grand openings are.  Apparently, Illinois, Texas and Pennsylvania are all getting new stores this year.

For those who want stores in new areas, I'd urge you to write to or call the corporate headquarters down in Dallas.  While I wish I had something to do with where new stores were opened, alas, I'm just a regular ol' peon.

Customer Service can be reached via e-mail at [email protected], or via their 800 number of (800) 833-2114.

Corporate HQ sadly is a long-distance call for anybody who doesn't live in Dallas, but the number is (214) 360-0833 if you want to talk to a human being.  Also, every store should have comment cards available at the cash register; ask for one the next time you're there, fill it out, and in the comments section tell them where you'd like to see a new store.  It's probably no exaggeration to say that one of those cards gets more attention than one hundred employees telling their managers where someone said they wanted a new store.

I hope this helps (also, I'm not a corporate shill, I swear).  I just wanna help some fine folks get good deals on filling in their collection gaps. :)

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Post Posted: Sun Jun 24, 2007 9:55 pm 
 

Hey, thanks. That's not too bad. Pittsburgh has 2, and its only about 3 hours away... I could do that trip sometimes.


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Post Posted: Sun Jun 24, 2007 10:40 pm 
 

serleran wrote:Hey, thanks. That's not too bad. Pittsburgh has 2, and its only about 3 hours away... I could do that trip sometimes.


Serl, I wouldn't waste my time if I were you, unless of course you have an wierd desire to pick up sh*t loads of 2nd edition splat books.  Thats about all you ever find in the HPBs here.... :?


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Post Posted: Mon Jun 25, 2007 1:03 am 
 

serleran wrote:*uses mental control* Need to open a store in Buffalo, NY.... get out of the near-Midwest and go east, damnit.


Need to get out of midwest and east and open in Colorado . . . Colorado Springs, Denver, and Pueblo...!!! 8)

  


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Post Posted: Mon Jun 25, 2007 1:12 am 
 

sleepyCO wrote:
Need to get out of midwest and east and open in Colorado . . . Colorado Springs, Denver, and Pueblo...!!! 8)

There's a pretty funny reason why they haven't opened a HPB store anywhere in Colorado (at least, it's funny to me - I imagine the corporate people don't think it's very amusing).

When HPB first trademarked its business name, they didn't do it in all fifty states, just Texas.  (Keep in mind, this was like 30 years ago and the two people who started it were hippies without Harvard Business degrees).  A few years after they opened up the first HPB in Texas, a little old lady got the idea to open a used bookstore called Half Price Books, Inc. in Colorado (Englewood, as it turns out).  She trademarked the name in Colorado only, since she was just doing a local business.

Fast-forward a few years, and Half Price Books attempts to trademark their name in all fifty states.  49 states give them no problem...but there's something wrong in Colorado, since this woman already trademarked the name there in 1986.

Over the years, HPB has made every effort to acquire the "Half Price Books" trademark from this woman, but she has steadfastly refused to sell it to the company because she doesn't want to re-name her business.  Keep in mind - this is basically a one-woman operation, and the people who have been there say it's a very, very small store.  Yet this woman has single-handedly prevented HPB from opening up a single store in Colorado because of this. :)

A couple years back, I understand the woman who owned the store passed away and willed the store to her children, who continue to tend it to this day.  I hear that HPB is still making them all kinds of offers on the trademark, but from what I understand they haven't sold it and have no plans to do so.

So, until one of this woman's kids finally caves in and sells the Colorado-based HPB trademark to the Texas-based HPB, you won't see any Texas-based HPB stores anywhere in the entire state.

http://half-pricebooksinc.com/index.html

There's a link to their website.

Does this strike anybody else as being gut-bustingly funny?  Because I cannot help but laugh every time I think about it. :)

I guess you could send them an e-mail asking them to sell the name to the Texas-based HPB so they can open up stores in your state, but it doesn't strike me as being a tactic that is very likely to work...

- Michael

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