Quote:
Originally Posted by GtrsRGr8
Thanks! Obviously, I didn't finish my homework. ha
Your work motivated me to do a little bit more of my own. Come to find out, there are many more O.P. titles at the $1.99 price point at Amazon, also. More unfinished homework on my part. ha
At first I thought that these might be priced at $1.99 regularly, but I did a spot check on one and found that it has been marked down from $8.69.
I had to dig through all of the lower-priced O.P. titles ($1.49--lots of them, from an O.P. series, don't know yet if those are markdown prices or not) to get to the $1.99 ones. Unfortunately, I haven't learned yet how to do a search at Amazon for a specific price or price range (note to self: when I get time, I've got to go back and read up on how to do that!). Maybe some kind soul will post the URL for such a search.
As a sidebar . . . . It's now 70 years since the end of World War II, but interest in it does not seem to be slowing down. Anecdotal evidence, in fact, suggests just the opposite. New websites seem to be popping up all of the time, and new books continue to be written and published. The psychoanalyst in me (strictly as a hobby. ha) would love to know why.
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Could it be the fact that it was our parents, grandparents, great-grandparents or in the case of teenagers their great great grandparents.
Come to think of it, I had a grandfather and an uncle in World War 2.
Grandfather was mom's side. Uncle was dad's side.