Man, tracking down 'Apropos of Nothing' felt like a scavenger hunt! I first checked big retailers like Amazon and Barnes & Noble—super easy to find there, both in hardcover and Kindle versions. But if you’re like me and prefer supporting indie spots, Bookshop.org is a gem. They partner with local stores, so you snag a copy while helping small businesses. AbeBooks is another solid pick for used or rare editions if you want that vintage vibe.
Oh, and don’t sleep on audiobook platforms! Audible has Woody Allen narrating it himself, which adds this hilarious, chaotic energy. Libraries often have it too—Libby or OverDrive might save you some cash. Honestly, half the fun was discovering how many weird little book nooks stock it. Found a copy in a tiny Parisian shop last summer, wedged between French cookbooks. Classic.
If you’re after 'Apropos of Nothing,' start with the obvious: Amazon’s got it new, used, or digital. But dig deeper! I stumbled on a signed copy at Powell’s Books’ website once—totally worth the extra wait. For audiobook folks, Libro.fm lets you buy it while supporting local bookstores, which feels way better than feeding the Bezos machine.
ThriftBooks is my go-to for cheap physical copies, though stock comes and goes. Pro tip: set an alert there for when it pops up. And if you’re into ebooks, Kobo often has sales that undercut Kindle prices. Saw it for half off last Black Friday. Randomly, Walmart’s online store sometimes has shockingly good deals on hardcovers—no idea why, but I’ll take it.
eBay’s my wildcard for 'Apropos of Nothing.' Snagged a first edition there for less than retail, though you gotta dodge the overpriced listings. For instant reads, Google Play Books or Apple Books have the ebook ready in seconds. Physical copies? Target’s website occasionally runs buy-one-get-one deals on memoirs—pair it with something trashy for maximum contrast.
Secondhand shops like Half Price Books are hit-or-miss, but their online inventory’s worth a peek. Found mine tucked between dusty self-help tomes, smelling vaguely of incense. Weirdly charming.
2026-05-21 07:04:04
3
View All Answers
Scan code to download App
Related Books
Who Is the Nobody Here?
Sweet Beet
10
54.4K
I grew up abroad. My mother feared I might marry a foreign man, so she arranged an engagement for me with a talented and handsome man in Flodon. She insisted that I return home to get engaged.
I came back and started shopping for an engagement dress at a luxury boutique. I selected an off-white strapless gown and decided to try it on.
Suddenly, a woman nearby glanced at the dress in my hand and told the saleswoman, “That’s a unique design. Let me try it.”
The saleswoman immediately yanked it out of my hands.
I protested indignantly, “Excuse me, I was here first. Don’t you understand the principle of ‘first come, first served’? Or do you just not care about common decency?”
The woman scoffed and retorted, “This dress costs $188,000. Do you really think a broke nobody like you can even afford it?
“I’m Lucas Goodwin’s sister in all but blood. He’s the chairman of Goodwin’s Group. In Flodon, the Goodwin family sets the rules.”
What a coincidence! Lucas Goodwin was my fiance!
I immediately called him and said, “Hey, your ‘sister in all but blood’ just stole my engagement dress. Do something about it.”
Surrounded by luxury and comfort, Dominique Le Blanc does not miss anything, except excitement. His life as the owner of the largest casino in Monaco requires a lot of time and dedication to enjoy this refined and electrifying, but unimportant, environment. Bets and money are no longer able to excite you. Could that change with a gunshot-covered escape in a hospital parking lot?
Without knowing why, a young woman flees from her armed captors. The reason for the chase is unknown, but the escape leads her to get into the first open car she sees. Driven by the instinct to fight for her own life, she hides in the vehicle, while the passengers agree to flee the scene quickly. The young woman carries nothing with her, no belongings, no clothes, no name and much less memories. What is the first thing she should look for?
“An Inconsequent Desire” is a dark novel full of action and chaos, with two protagonists who know very well what they want… or almost. Tension, desire, luxury and danger mix as Dominique and the fugitive try to resolve their relationship and their desires in a world as opulent as it’s reckless. Violence and attraction go hand in hand for a couple covered in the past, immersed in the present and with almost no future. What is the price of unearthing their memories? How much can it change what is yet to come? Love or obsession. Salvation or ruin. In the end, everyone has something to lose... and maybe that's everything.
She fell in love with a lie.
Elena Cross has nothing. No money, no safety net, no parents left to call. She has a voice that stops rooms and a stubborn refusal to let the world win. When she meets Danny Miller, a quiet sound engineer with sad eyes and steady hands, she does the one thing she swore she wouldn't do: she trusts him.
He falls for her too. For her fire. Her music. The way she fights for her little brother and refuses help from anyone. Danny Miller wanted someone to love him without knowing his last name.
Because his last name is Ashford. As in Ashford Global Industries. As in billions.
When the truth explodes in public, his family goes to war. Not against him. Against her. His mother smiles for the cameras while orchestrating Elena's destruction. His brother, who wants Daniel erased from the inheritance, uses Elena as the weapon. A famous ex-girlfriend pretends to help while twisting the knife.
Elena loses her career, her home, her reputation, and the man she loved in the same week. She discovers she's pregnant in the wreckage.
She runs. She rebuilds from silence. She turns her pain into songs that millions hear.
Daniel walks away from everything to find her. No money. No name. No family. He becomes the nothing she always was, searching for the woman who loved him when he pretended to be nobody.
But his brother has one final lie: he tells the world the baby is his.
Now Elena and Daniel have to fight an empire, a public scandal, and every person who ever tried to keep them apart.
Some love stories are fairy tales. This one is a war.
In the quiet, watchful town of Willow Creek, nineteen-year-old Rihanna has learned that loving too loudly is dangerous. Once betrayed by her first love and turned into a subject of gossip, she has spent a year and a half building walls around her heart. She is vibrant, outspoken, and endlessly warm—but in a town that mistakes kindness for weakness, she is labeled as someone unworthy of being chosen.
When a pandemic lockdown brings an unexpected message from Dennis, the wealthy boy she has admired from afar her entire life, Rihanna allows herself to hope again. What begins as playful late-night conversations and secret meetings soon grows into something far more fragile and intense. Dennis sees her in ways no one ever has—but he is also bound by fear, reputation, and a need for control that clashes with Rihanna’s free-spirited nature.
As their connection deepens, Rihanna is forced into her own survival game: choosing between shrinking herself to fit someone else’s expectations or standing fully in who she is, even if it means losing love. When Dennis offers her only something casual, she must confront the truth about what she deserves—and whether she is willing to risk her heart again.
*Almost Yours* is a story about emotional survival, self-worth, and the courage it takes to grow beyond heartbreak. In a world that demands women make themselves smaller to be loved, Rihanna’s journey asks a powerful question: when love returns, will she choose it—or herself?
“Camille, I’ll love you forever!”
Jameson let out a low, agonized growl. Just as he was about to climax, his phone suddenly began to buzz. He ignored it, of course. Now was hardly the time.
However, his phone lit up again. The moment he saw the text on the screen, his body froze.
Camille heard him answer the call. “Hello?”
In the deep silence of the night, the voice on the phone cut through the stillness, clear and unmistakable. “Jameson, did you know that Sylvia—”
Jameson switched languages and cut in with a sharp command, “Keep it down. It's not a good time.”
The other person switched languages too, though he was still loud. “The hospital results came in. Sylvia is in the final stages of cancer. She only has a month left! Her last wish is to become your wife. Can you grant her that before she passes?”
Jameson’s expression changed immediately. “What?! Wait for me!”
He ended the call and turned to Camille. “Camille, something urgent came up. I need to step out for a bit. Be good and stay home. I’ll be back after you’ve had some sleep.”
Before she could respond, he rose to wash up, changed his clothes, and left without looking back.
Moments later, her phone buzzed.
Sylvia: [Camille, you lost. I told you—Jameson has always been mine.]
Right above it was a message from three days ago: [If I tell him I have cancer, do you think Jameson will leave you and come to me? I bet he will.]
Camille’s gaze slowly shifted from her phone screen to the open bedroom door. What Jameson did not know was that she had already picked up a new language. She understood every word of that call.
After a long moment, a faint, bitter smile appeared on her face.
“Yeah, I lost...”
After being married for five years, my husband, Harvey Jepson, brings his first love, Debbie Grayson, home after a six-month business trip.
Debbie is over three months pregnant. Harvey says it's hard for her alone, so she's temporarily living with us. I say no, and Harvey warns me to know my place.
His scornful tone seems to hint that he's forgotten this villa was a wedding gift to me. He and his family have been leeching off me for the past five years. This time, I'm cutting all of them off.
I smile and call my assistant. "Draw up a divorce agreement for me now. To think a live-in husband would have the nerve to bring his mistress home so boldly."
You can grab 'Nothing to See Here' from most major book retailers, both online and in-store. Amazon has it in paperback, Kindle, and audiobook formats—super convenient if you want it delivered instantly. Barnes & Noble stocks it too, and their physical stores often have quirky displays that make browsing fun. For indie lovers, check Bookshop.org; they support local bookshops while shipping straight to your door. Don’t forget libraries if you prefer borrowing—many offer digital loans via Libby.
Secondhand options like ThriftBooks or AbeBooks are gold mines for budget readers. Prices vary, but I’ve snagged near-perfect copies for half the cost. If you’re into signed editions, peek at the author’s website or events. Some indie bookstores host signed stock long after tours end. The book’s versatility—whether you crave a beach read or a deep dive—makes it worth hunting down your ideal format.