This was an odd and interesting way to get a book.
Amazon.com recently began offering "locker delivery" in New York for some of the products it sells. Instead of having items delivered to your home or office you might instead want to pick it up at your leisure at one of Amazon's 8 Manhattan locker locations.
I thought this sounded hilarious, and just for the heck of it I gave it a try.
I quickly encountered this service's obvious limitations: These lockers exist only for delivery of products sold by Amazon.com. This might not seem like such a problem at first, since Amazon.com appears to sell every freakin' thing on earth. But this restriction is more limiting than it sounds. Locker space is limited, making a significant part of Amazon's catalogue unavailable for this type of delivery. Additionally, only items that are sold by Amazon are eligible, eliminating everything in the Amazon Marketplace as an option.
The first few items I tried to order were not available for locker delivery, and no specific reason was given as to why each of these items was not allowed. I assume the problem was with the size of the items, though they did not seem especially oversized to me. I guess that Amazon's "frustration free packaging" bulks these items up, making the shipment too large to fit into any of these particular lockers. Or maybe the shipped item actually was an acceptable size but the larger lockers were already filled.
I originally intended to pick this up on a Monday, but I couldn't make it that day. Amazon sent me a friendly reminder that my item had been shipped, and to pick it up soon, or it would be returned. I didn't really appreciate that, as I thought this service was all about picking things up at my leisure, but I guess it makes sense that Amazon would want to move products through these lockers as expeditiously as possible.
I am pretty certain I will never use this service again. Amazon must know what they are doing by offering locker delivery, but I find it hard to imagine that throngs of people will gravitate toward it. If you have an itinerant lifestyle or livelihood then you might find this valuable. Or maybe if you were homeless or otherwise without a postal mailing address -- but then you'd be unlikely to buy much stuff online under those circumstances.
I will stick with my P.O. box in midtown. It allows me to receive products from Amazon.com, and from virtually any other retailer, online or off.

- My New Temporary Address
My new temporary (very temporary) address. This item was shipped via UPS. UPS used to be unable to deliver to USPS post office boxes. These days some retailers use UPS' "Mail Innovations" as a bridge between UPS and USPS-restricted delivery addresses, such as my P.O. box. I've had mixed luck with items delivered through UPS Mail Innovations. One package took months to arrive after languishing in a Jersey City post office for 5 or 6 weeks. - Amazon Locker
I did not use the buttons or anything but the touchscreen to open the locker. - Amazon Locker 11 is now open
Locker 11 is now open! Wow! - Amazon Locker 11
Locker 11 popped open after I touched the "Open Locker" button on the screen. - Amazon Locker
Inside was a familiar-looking Amazon box. In case you are wondering the book I ordered was "Samuel Johnson: The Major Works." - Amazon Locker: Package is in Locker 11
After entering the valid 6-character code the screen said "Your package is in Locker 11. Open Locker." - Amazon Locker 11
Locker 11 - Amazon Locker: Enter Pick-up Code
Amazon e-mailed me a 6-character pick-up code. I entered the code here. - Amazon Locker
Here is the Amazon Locker. The screen says "Touch screen to Start" - Amazon Locker is in the downstairs dining area of Morton Williams Supermarket
The Amazon Locker I used was down here, in the dining area of the Morton Williams supermarket on West 57th Street.