My guess is that it's now organized by titles that have lower circulation numbers. The stuff I'm seeing at the top of my list is the most esoteric, least popular stuff I've marked.
I realize that I use the Wishlist in an odd way: every week I look through books added in the past week, and add any I might someday want to read to the Wish List. *Any* title. If I need a book right now, I look at the Available Now list; if I'm looking for something great to reserve, I look at the whole list. Sometimes, I want to reserve something that *might* be available in week or two; then, I use the page numbers to jump to an older section of the list.
This new arrangement is really kind of a pain, since it does not give me any temporal feedback. Sure, I know that for older titles, the date added to the site, and the date added to my list, are not indicative of a "new" book, but when arranged by age of my request, I can often follow my train of thought when I added them to the Wishlist. With the current arrangement, I find I often don't remember why I added it to the wishlist, and poof!! It's gone.
Maybe this was all a plot to get us to clean up our WishLists?
|