Archive

Posts Tagged ‘microsoft reader ebooks’

Publishers try to read the industry’s future – Regina Leader

May 15th, 2012 No comments

There’s a revolution in reading filled with innovative and exciting possibilities underway, but whether the book industry will be able to sustain itself remains to be seen.

Ebooks have transformed the experience of reading — everything from interactive fiction, where readers choose the outcome of a story, to books with embedded links to video or audio is possible. But ebooks have also caused a sea change in the publishing business model.

“There are great things that are happening, but the revenue isn’t following,� said Robert Ballantyne, associate publisher of Arsenal Pulp Press and president of the Association of Book Publishers of British Columbia. “What’s happening now is just turmoil and uncertainty. Where we will be in five years, you can’t tell.�

Former Vancouver Public Library city librarian Paul Whitney said the fact that many bookstores are disappearing doesn’t help.

“The bottom line is it’s a mess and everybody’s worried because they can’t yet see the end game,� said Whitney, who has written a number of reports about ebooks as a consultant.

The book publishing industry in Canada is a $2-billion business, according to Statistics Canada. In B.C. alone, the book publishing industry has annual sales in excess of $150 million, according to a recent report on B.C.’s creative industries.

While a Canadian breakdown is difficult to come by, figures provided by Whitney to the The Sun show ebooks capturing 18 per cent of market share in North America in 2011, a year dominated by ebook growth.

Noah Genner, president and CEO of BookNet Canada, which monitors book supply, said there is not a concise picture of the ebook market share in Canada, but his organization is working on it.

“Our educated guess is that it is around eight to 10 per cent, but we don’t have the numbers,� Genner said. “The number has grown significantly over the last two years and was almost non-existent, or at least too small to be important, pre-2010.�

In January, Amazon announced that their ebook sales exceeded paperback sales, while in February, the New York Times added separate ebook bestseller lists to their book review pages.

Ebook numbers are likely to keep growing as more people make the switch to digital books, but the prices might go down: a lawsuit in the U.S. claims that Apple Corp. colluded with book publishers to set ebook prices higher than those set by Amazon. If Apple and the book publishers are found guilty, a similar class-action lawsuit underway in Canada will probably mean Canadians who have bought electronic books in the past two years could be compensated.

The Apple price-setting model allowed publishers to determine the selling price of a book, and has been dubbed the agency model. With Amazon, as with bricks-and-mortar bookstores, the publisher sells the product for a wholesale price and sets a suggested retail price, but the retailer decides the selling price.

While the lawsuit sounds like good news for consumers, it’s possible it could be detrimental for publishers and authors who could be forced to sell their products for even lower prices to compete with Amazon.

“We hope it doesn’t lower prices, because that would harm revenues for publishers — and by extension authors — and we’re going to end up without any books,� Ballantyne said. “With retail [business] crashing, publishers don’t need the lower prices�

Amazon, the massive online retailer with worldwide revenues of $13.18 billion in the first quarter of 2012, is a leader in the ebook market after jumping out of the gate early with its Kindle ereader in 2007. As a comparison, in Canada, the Kobo was not released until 2010.

Jesse Finkelstein, chief operating officer at Vancouver publisher Douglas McIntyre, said some of Amazon’s deep discounting of book prices would’ve meant the company was taking a loss on some books, but they were willing to do that to encourage people to buy the Kindle ereader.

“A loss leader approach is understandable if you’re trying to make sure that your device and your retailing venture is the one that wins out in the long term,� Finkelstein said.

The more book prices are cut, consumer expectations for cheap books increase and book publishing becomes unsustainable, Finkelstein said.

While bookstores and publishers may see Amazon as a formidable competitor who could swallow them whole, some authors say Amazon has removed the gatekeeper and enabled them to publish their books quicker and easier than through traditional publishers.

Sunshine Coast author Lars Guignard has published three books on Amazon, starting with Lethal Circuit, and says he is making a good living on ebooks alone. He makes about the same amount whether he sells a book in electronic or traditional format. The terms of payment for authors who use traditional publishers depend on their contract, which will be split between the publisher, the bookstore and the author.

Vancouver author Timothy Taylor said he would not consider giving up his relationship with his publisher (Random House) to create a self-published ebook because he values the editing and promotion provided by a traditional publisher. Self-published authors can either put a book up on Amazon unedited, or pay someone to edit their work.

The changes in publishing have meant readers have many more books to choose from, he said.

Taylor said that despite his reservations, he is excited about the creative potential for ebooks, as well as the potential to reach readers who might not have otherwise discovered his work.

“It almost feels like we could open up new markets — people who aren’t buying physical books might buy ebooks,� Taylor said.

D M published an enhanced ebook app of David Suzuki’s The Legacy in 2010, but found it tough to compete against other apps, because most apps are sold for extremely low prices. Although the project was very positive for the publisher in terms of technical production experience and experimentation, consumers were not prepared to pay much more than the cost of the ebook for the experience.

“I don’t believe consumers are willing to pay a premium for enhanced ebooks. The market is not there yet,� Finkelstein said.

There have been some notable examples of writers who have self-published an ebook and later received either critical acclaim or commercial success, such as Amanda Hocking, who writes paranormal books, or the Julie and Julia cooking blog that was later made into a movie. Atop the New York Times bestseller lists for ebooks is Fifty Shades of Grey, an erotic novel that gained popularity as an ebook and has since been published as a paperback. Right now, books that are viable as ebooks alone tend to be books that are written either by a well-established author or those written in a popular genre, such as romance, which have dedicated, voracious readers, Whitney said.

Margaret Reynolds, executive director of Association of Book Publishers of British Columbia, said it’s important to remember that the success stories of self-published ebook authors are the exceptions.

“That’s one in a million. It’s not going to happen for everyone,� Reynolds said.

On the other hand, “if you have an exceptional work, you will be found,� Ballantyne said. Ballantyne cited DOA frontman Joe Keithley’s pictorial history of the band as one notable ebook project taken on by Arsenal Pulp Press, with support from Apple.

While the potential of reader-controlled storylines — like the Choose Your Own Adventure books of the ’70s and ’80s — or other forms of interactive books filled with podcasts, visual effects or music is limitless, some readers might prefer the quiet of reading a traditional book. Whitney said part of the appeal of reading is avoiding other distractions, such as email.

“I think the born-digital generation will be seeking out offline time,� Whitney said.

Hal Wake, artistic director of the Vancouver International Writers Festival, said he thinks there will always be a place for print books as well as ebooks. “There will remain the desire to use one’s imagination completely and utterly and there will be others who say, ‘let’s see what we can do.’ They’re both potentially equally valuable,� Wake said.

Sun Books Editor

tsherlock@vancouversun.com

Article source: http://www.leaderpost.com/entertainment/Publishers+read+industry+future/6608205/story.html

BooksOnBoard’s Top Ten Authors and eBooks This Week in the US

May 15th, 2012 No comments

The runaway success of the erotic Fifty Shades trilogy by E.L. James has sparked questions regarding BooksOnBoard’s erotica policy—specifically, where readers can find BooksOnBoard’s erotic content.

“Because some erotic content may be offensive to our readers and too easily accessible to children who visit our site, we have an erotic filter on the site that prevents almost all erotica titles from being viewable unless readers authorize it in their accounts,” explained Bob LiVolsi, BooksOnBoard’s founder and CEO. “Without an account, our visitors are unable to see erotica. However, once they have registered an account, they can check off the ’Show Erotic Content’ box found in their account profile.”

Readers have been opting in to view erotic content this week, bringing E.L. James’s ebooks onto the Bestselling Romance eBooks lists in both the US and the UK.

1. Deadlocked – Charlaine Harris
2. 11th Hour – James Patterson and Maxine Paetro
3. City of Lost Souls – Cassandra Clare
4. Bitterblue – Kristin Cashore
5. The Inquisitor’s Key – Jefferson Bass
6. Act of Terror – Marc Cameron
7. The Sacred Scroll – Anton Gill
8. Red Blood, Black Sand – Chuck Tatum
9. Guilt by Degrees – Marcia Clark
10. The Evil that Men Do – Jeanne M. Dams

Bestselling Romance eBooks
1. Fifty Shades of Grey – E.L. James
2. The Last Boyfriend – Nora Roberts
3. Lady Maggie’s Secret Scandal – Grace Burrowes
4. Beauty – Laurell K. Hamilton
5. Worth Fighting For – Sondrae Bennett
6. Fifty Shades Darker – E.L. James
7. Under a Vampire Moon – Lynsay Sands
8. The Duchess of Love – Sally MacKenzie
9. The Duke’s Perfect Wife – Jennifer Ashley
10. Beguiling the Beauty – Sherry Thomas

Bestselling Authors
1. Charlaine Harris
2. James Patterson
3. Jefferson Bass
4. Cassandra Clare
5. Kristin Cashore

Bestselling Romance Authors
1. E.L. James
2. Nora Roberts
3. Lynsay Sands
4. Grace Burrowes
5. Jennifer Ashley

BooksOnBoard is the largest independent online retailer of eBooks, with an inventory of over one million titles. BooksOnBoard is also one of the largest retailers of downloadable Audio Books, and carries formats compatible with eBook Readers such as: Android devices, Kindle Fire, Apple iPad, iPhone, iPod Touch, Sony PRS-300 eBook Readers, Cybook Opus Pocket eBook Readers, Cybook Gen3 eBook Readers, and Astak EZReader Pocket Pro eBook Readers.

Related Links The largest independent retailer of ebooks and audio books Bestselling ebooks and audio books For the latest deals, follow us on Twitter

WebWireID156460

  ebook ebooks audio book audio books ereader Contact Information Nathan Johnson Director of Operations BooksOnBoard info@booksonboard.com

This news content may be integrated into any legitimate news gathering and publishing effort. Linking is permitted.

News Release Distribution and Press Release Distribution Services Provided by WebWire.

Article source: http://www.webwire.com/ViewPressRel.asp?aId=156460

2StopSmokingTips.com Gives Out Free Ebook on How to Quit Smoking Without Side Effects

May 15th, 2012 No comments

Lagos, Nigeria, May 14, 2012 –(PR.com)– 2stopsmokingtips.com, a leading quit smoking company, today announced the availability of a new free ebook aimed at helping cigarette addicts to kick their smoking habit permanently. The Lagos-based smoking cessation firm said the creation of the new ebook was motivated by the challenges smokers, that are looking to attain a lasting non-smoking status, gain social recognition and enjoy good health, face in their attempt to quit.

“Smoking cessation is beautiful, good and life-saving,” stated Iyabo Oyawale, founder of 2StopSmokingTips.com. “Our new ebook shows nicotine addicts how to permanently quit their smoking habit using time-tested and failure-proof strategies.”

The new ebook covers a range of topics including nicotine replacement therapies, medication to cease smoking, natural remedies to quit smoking, reprogramming the mind for quit smoking success, battling nicotine withdrawal symptoms and the health risks of smoking. It is available for immediate download. No optin is required.

According to Oyawale, while smoking cessation is no effortless undertaking, too many smokers give up too soon in their attempt to quit. The ebook aims to stop that tendency by showing smokers and their families how permanent addiction recovery can launch them into the non-smokers’ league, no matter how daunting a task that may seem.

Full details on the new stop smoking ebook can be found at http://www.2StopSmokingTips.com.

About 2StopSmokingTips.com.

2StopSmokingTips.com leverages nearly a decade of stop smoking research to help smokers and their families get into the non-smokers’ league while spending little. The company employs tried and true smoking cessation techniques to ensure permanent recovery for its customers.

Article source: http://www.pr.com/press-release/412585

New eBook, “How To Be Happier with the One You Love,” Offered Free Online by Hypnosis Downloads

May 15th, 2012 No comments

New Self Help Product Launch: 10 Steps to Overcoming Insecurity in RelationshipsPRLog (Press Release)May 14, 2012 – A new eBook, “How To Be Happier with the One You Love,” includes chapters on loving your imperfect partner, trusting again, overcoming jealousy, dealing with fear of rejection, and more. For a limited time, it’s available free of charge from Hypnosis Downloads at http://www.hypnosisdownloads.com/freegift/insecurity-rela….

“How To Be Happier with the One You Love” is based on a 10-part hypnotherapy course called 10 Steps to Overcome Insecurity in Relationships, created by a team of four qualified hypnotherapists to help people develop and enjoy deeper, more trusting and more intimate relationships.

Actor and film star Cary Grant once famously remarked of his first wife, “My possessiveness and fear of losing her brought about the very condition I feared: the losing of her.” Divorce isn’t just for Hollywood…about half of all first marriages end in divorce in the United States.

“What’s even more shocking? Over two thirds of second marriages fail,” says Roger Elliott, a certified hypnotherapist and managing director of Hypnosis Downloads. “You may expect that divorced people would know how to avoid a repeat of a failed relationship. But it appears that in the case of a second or third relationship, there may be a lot more emotional ‘baggage’ involved that should be cleared out to give the new relationship the best possible chance to succeed. That’s where hypnosis can be so effective.”

If jealousy, insecurity or fear of abandonment is ruining your relationships, hypnotherapy offers hope. Hypnosis is a natural state of focused concentration that healthy humans enjoy several times a day. “If you find yourself engrossed in a bestseller, or lose yourself in the plot of a television show to the exclusion of everything around you, you may have entered the ‘trance state’ we call hypnosis,” says Elliott. “When you’re hypnotized, your subconscious mind is more open to suggestion. And the subconscious is where many negative beliefs, drives and attitudes originate.”

Anyone who has tried to quit smoking “cold turkey” knows the power of the subconscious to drive negative behaviors, even after you’ve consciously decided to end them. “The subconscious mind is the part of you that automatically reaches for that missing pack of cigarettes for days after you’ve quit,” says Elliott. “That’s why hypnosis is so effective to help people quit smoking–it deals with subconscious urges.”

Hypnotherapists take advantage of this power of the subconscious mind to help clients make positive changes. “Under hypnosis, we help clients replace negative, self-defeating attitudes and behaviors with positive, resourceful ones. For example, if you’re a raging perfectionist, you may risk driving your partner (and yourself) batty with impossible-to-meet standards. Listening to a hypnosis download can help your subconscious mind discover more appropriate standards and attitudes, so you can stop sabotaging your relationships with unrealistic expectations,” says Elliott. “Hypnosis can help you release previous hurts and forgive yourself and others, find more self-confidence, and even be more romantic.”

The free eBook, “How To Be Happier with the One You Love” includes tips for understanding insecurity in relationships, overcoming perfectionism and jealousy, trusting again, and more. For a limited time, it’s available free of charge from Hypnosis Downloads.

About 10 Steps to Overcome Insecurity in Relationships from Hypnosis Downloads
Available for instant download from Hypnosis Downloads, 10 Steps to Overcome Insecurity in Relationships is built around a series of hypnotherapy recordings that help people overcome jealousy, stop obsessive thoughts, learn to trust again, overcome insecurity, and more. The home-study course also includes a workbook and progress charts to help the user make permanent changes and fully integrated the lessons across all aspects of their lives.

The home-study course 10 Steps to Overcome Insecurity in Relationships is now available from Hypnosis Downloads for $97.

About Mark Tyrrell, eBook and Course Author
Mark Tyrrell HGDip, DipHypNLP(BHR) has been working as a hypnotherapist and trainer since 1995. He has worked with the London Metropolitan Police, business people and individuals looking for help to improve their lives. He has also given lectures to thousands of health professionals on self esteem, detraumatization and workplace bullying. He is co-author of Giant Within and has authored and co-authored over 500 hours of self help products.

Photo:
http://www.prlog.org/11875030/1

Article source: http://www.prlog.org/11875030-new-ebook-how-to-be-happier-with-the-one-you-love-offered-free-online-by-hypnosis-downloads.html

Publishers try to read the industry’s future

May 14th, 2012 No comments

There’s a revolution in reading filled with innovative and exciting possibilities underway, but whether the book industry will be able to sustain itself remains to be seen.

Ebooks have transformed the experience of reading — everything from interactive fiction, where readers choose the outcome of a story, to books with embedded links to video or audio is possible. But ebooks have also caused a sea change in the publishing business model.

“There are great things that are happening, but the revenue isn’t following,� said Robert Ballantyne, associate publisher of Arsenal Pulp Press and president of the Association of Book Publishers of British Columbia. “What’s happening now is just turmoil and uncertainty. Where we will be in five years, you can’t tell.�

Former Vancouver Public Library city librarian Paul Whitney said the fact that many bookstores are disappearing doesn’t help.

“The bottom line is it’s a mess and everybody’s worried because they can’t yet see the end game,� said Whitney, who has written a number of reports about ebooks as a consultant.

The book publishing industry in Canada is a $2-billion business, according to Statistics Canada. In B.C. alone, the book publishing industry has annual sales in excess of $150 million, according to a recent report on B.C.’s creative industries.

While a Canadian breakdown is difficult to come by, figures provided by Whitney to the The Sun show ebooks capturing 18 per cent of market share in North America in 2011, a year dominated by ebook growth.

Noah Genner, president and CEO of BookNet Canada, which monitors book supply, said there is not a concise picture of the ebook market share in Canada, but his organization is working on it.

“Our educated guess is that it is around eight to 10 per cent, but we don’t have the numbers,� Genner said. “The number has grown significantly over the last two years and was almost non-existent, or at least too small to be important, pre-2010.�

In January, Amazon announced that their ebook sales exceeded paperback sales, while in February, the New York Times added separate ebook bestseller lists to their book review pages.

Ebook numbers are likely to keep growing as more people make the switch to digital books, but the prices might go down: a lawsuit in the U.S. claims that Apple Corp. colluded with book publishers to set ebook prices higher than those set by Amazon. If Apple and the book publishers are found guilty, a similar class-action lawsuit underway in Canada will probably mean Canadians who have bought electronic books in the past two years could be compensated.

The Apple price-setting model allowed publishers to determine the selling price of a book, and has been dubbed the agency model. With Amazon, as with bricks-and-mortar bookstores, the publisher sells the product for a wholesale price and sets a suggested retail price, but the retailer decides the selling price.

While the lawsuit sounds like good news for consumers, it’s possible it could be detrimental for publishers and authors who could be forced to sell their products for even lower prices to compete with Amazon.

“We hope it doesn’t lower prices, because that would harm revenues for publishers — and by extension authors — and we’re going to end up without any books,� Ballantyne said. “With retail [business] crashing, publishers don’t need the lower prices�

Amazon, the massive online retailer with worldwide revenues of $13.18 billion in the first quarter of 2012, is a leader in the ebook market after jumping out of the gate early with its Kindle ereader in 2007. As a comparison, in Canada, the Kobo was not released until 2010.

Jesse Finkelstein, chief operating officer at Vancouver publisher Douglas McIntyre, said some of Amazon’s deep discounting of book prices would’ve meant the company was taking a loss on some books, but they were willing to do that to encourage people to buy the Kindle ereader.

“A loss leader approach is understandable if you’re trying to make sure that your device and your retailing venture is the one that wins out in the long term,� Finkelstein said.

The more book prices are cut, consumer expectations for cheap books increase and book publishing becomes unsustainable, Finkelstein said.

While bookstores and publishers may see Amazon as a formidable competitor who could swallow them whole, some authors say Amazon has removed the gatekeeper and enabled them to publish their books quicker and easier than through traditional publishers.

Sunshine Coast author Lars Guignard has published three books on Amazon, starting with Lethal Circuit, and says he is making a good living on ebooks alone. He makes about the same amount whether he sells a book in electronic or traditional format. The terms of payment for authors who use traditional publishers depend on their contract, which will be split between the publisher, the bookstore and the author.

Vancouver author Timothy Taylor said he would not consider giving up his relationship with his publisher (Random House) to create a self-published ebook because he values the editing and promotion provided by a traditional publisher. Self-published authors can either put a book up on Amazon unedited, or pay someone to edit their work.

The changes in publishing have meant readers have many more books to choose from, he said.

Taylor said that despite his reservations, he is excited about the creative potential for ebooks, as well as the potential to reach readers who might not have otherwise discovered his work.

“It almost feels like we could open up new markets — people who aren’t buying physical books might buy ebooks,� Taylor said.

D M published an enhanced ebook app of David Suzuki’s The Legacy in 2010, but found it tough to compete against other apps, because most apps are sold for extremely low prices. Although the project was very positive for the publisher in terms of technical production experience and experimentation, consumers were not prepared to pay much more than the cost of the ebook for the experience.

“I don’t believe consumers are willing to pay a premium for enhanced ebooks. The market is not there yet,� Finkelstein said.

There have been some notable examples of writers who have self-published an ebook and later received either critical acclaim or commercial success, such as Amanda Hocking, who writes paranormal books, or the Julie and Julia cooking blog that was later made into a movie. Atop the New York Times bestseller lists for ebooks is Fifty Shades of Grey, an erotic novel that gained popularity as an ebook and has since been published as a paperback. Right now, books that are viable as ebooks alone tend to be books that are written either by a well-established author or those written in a popular genre, such as romance, which have dedicated, voracious readers, Whitney said.

Margaret Reynolds, executive director of Association of Book Publishers of British Columbia, said it’s important to remember that the success stories of self-published ebook authors are the exceptions.

“That’s one in a million. It’s not going to happen for everyone,� Reynolds said.

On the other hand, “if you have an exceptional work, you will be found,� Ballantyne said. Ballantyne cited DOA frontman Joe Keithley’s pictorial history of the band as one notable ebook project taken on by Arsenal Pulp Press, with support from Apple.

While the potential of reader-controlled storylines — like the Choose Your Own Adventure books of the ’70s and ’80s — or other forms of interactive books filled with podcasts, visual effects or music is limitless, some readers might prefer the quiet of reading a traditional book. Whitney said part of the appeal of reading is avoiding other distractions, such as email.

“I think the born-digital generation will be seeking out offline time,� Whitney said.

Hal Wake, artistic director of the Vancouver International Writers Festival, said he thinks there will always be a place for print books as well as ebooks. “There will remain the desire to use one’s imagination completely and utterly and there will be others who say, ‘let’s see what we can do.’ They’re both potentially equally valuable,� Wake said.

Sun Books Editor

tsherlock@vancouversun.com

Article source: http://www.windsorstar.com/entertainment/Publishers+read+industry+future/6608205/story.html

BooksOnBoard’s Top Ten Authors and eBooks This Week in the UK

May 14th, 2012 No comments

The runaway success of the erotic Fifty Shades trilogy by E.L. James has sparked questions regarding BooksOnBoard’s erotica policy—specifically, where readers can find BooksOnBoard’s erotic content.

“Because some erotic content may be offensive to our readers and too easily accessible to children who visit our site, we have an erotic filter on the site that prevents almost all erotica titles from being viewable unless readers authorize it in their accounts,” explained Bob LiVolsi, BooksOnBoard’s founder and CEO. “Without an account, our visitors are unable to see erotica. However, once they have registered an account, they can check off the ’Show Erotic Content’ box found in their account profile.”

Readers have been opting in to view erotic content this week, bringing E.L. James’s ebooks onto the Bestselling Romance eBooks lists in both the US and the UK.

1. Deadlocked – Charlaine Harris
2. 11th Hour – James Patterson
3. Bitterblue – Kristin Cashore
4. Dark Matters – Vicki Pettersson
5. The Evil That Men Do – Jeanne M. Dams
6. The Innocent – David Baldacci
7. Under Suspicion – Hannah Jayne
8. The Sacred Scroll – Anton Gill
9. Guilt by Degrees – Marcia Clark
10. Under Attack – Hannah Jayne

Bestselling Romance eBooks
1. Under a Vampire Moon – Lynsay Sands
2. Fifty Shades of Grey – E.L. James
3. The Duchess of Love – Sally MacKenzie
4. Fifty Shades Darker – E.L. James
5. Fifty Shades Freed – E.L. James
6. No Longer a Gentleman – Mary Jo Putney
7. Crystal Gardens – Amanda Quick
8. Under Fire – Catherine Mann
9. Worth Fighting For – Sondrae Bennett
10. A Gentleman Says “I Do” – Amelia Grey

Bestselling Authors
1. Charlaine Harris
2. Hannah Jayne
3. Kristin Cashore
4. James Patterson
5. David Baldacci

Bestselling Romance Authors
1. E.L. James
2. Lynsay Sands
3. Hannah Jayne
4. Amanda Quick
5. Stephanie Laurens

BooksOnBoard is the largest independent online retailer of eBooks, with an inventory of over one million titles. BooksOnBoard is also one of the largest retailers of downloadable Audio Books, and carries formats compatible with eBook Readers such as: Android devices, Kindle Fire, Apple iPad, iPhone, iPod Touch, Sony PRS-300 eBook Readers, Cybook Opus Pocket eBook Readers, Cybook Gen3 eBook Readers, and Astak EZReader Pocket Pro eBook Readers.

Related Links The largest independent retailer of ebooks and audio books Bestselling ebooks and audio books For the latest deals, follow us on Twitter

WebWireID156461

  ebook ebooks audio book audio books ereader Contact Information Nathan Johnson Director of Operations BooksOnBoard info@booksonboard.com

This news content may be integrated into any legitimate news gathering and publishing effort. Linking is permitted.

News Release Distribution and Press Release Distribution Services Provided by WebWire.

Article source: http://www.webwire.com/ViewPressRel.asp?aId=156461

Lost voyages to the North Pole and more: Catching up with Download the Universe

May 14th, 2012 No comments

Over at Download the Universe, we’ve added another crop of entertaining reviews about ebooks that you definitely should–or, in some cases, definitely should not–check out:

“When an Autism Diagnosis Comes as a Blessing”: Steve Silberman writes a powerful review about the reality of autism and a Kindle memoir about living with the condition.

“Meandering Mississippi: An early journalism iBook is all wet”: Seth Mnookin reads an account of last year’s Mississippi floods and wonders why newspapers are squandering the opportunities that ebooks are offering them.

“A Lost Explorer Returns: Todd Balf’s Farthest North: David Dobbs revels in a well-told story of an ill-fated scientific voyage across the Arctic.

“Leonardo: The First Great Science Ebook”: I take a look at a lavishly-produced ebook about Leonardo da Vinci’s forgotten work as a pioneer of anatomy. Staggeringly impressive.

“A Time Machine for the Face of Earth”: My review of a coffee-table-like ebook about how humans (and other forces) are changing the surface of the planet.

“Artificial Epidemics: You’re Not Sick, You’re Just Overdiagnosed”: Neuroscience blogger “Scicurious” is unimpressed with an ebook that claims that depression and prostate cancer are all in your head. (Confused? You should be.)

“Titanic: The e-Book Nobody Loved”: Jennifer Ouellette looks at one of the least successful Titanic anniversary tie-ins. Again, a wasted opportunity.

And, finally, Seth Mnookin, Annalee Newitz, Maia Szavalitz, and I engaged in a three-day roundtable discussion about ebooks: how people read them, how they get published, and the future of books:

Day 1: Crap futurism, pleasure reading, and DRM

Day 2: Walled gardens, cruftiness, and a race to the bottom

Day 3: Pirates, parties, pulps, and PowerPoint: Part 3 of a Download the Universe roundtable on e-reading






Share






May 14th, 2012 11:37 AM
by in Download the Universe | 0 comments | RSS feed | Trackback

Article source: http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/loom/2012/05/14/lost-voyages-to-the-north-pole-and-more-catching-up-with-download-the-universe/

Where to download crochet, knitting and craft patterns online

May 14th, 2012 No comments

Examiner.com is the inside source for everything local. We are powered by Examiners, the largest pool of passionate contributors in the world.

Examiners provide unique and original content to enhance life in your local city wherever that may be. Examiners come from all walks of life and contribute original content to entertain, inform, and inspire.

Article source: http://www.examiner.com/article/where-to-download-crochet-knitting-and-craft-patterns-online

Publishers try to read the industry’s future

May 13th, 2012 No comments

There’s a revolution in reading filled with innovative and exciting possibilities underway, but whether the book industry will be able to sustain itself remains to be seen.

Ebooks have transformed the experience of reading — everything from interactive fiction, where readers choose the outcome of a story, to books with embedded links to video or audio is possible. But ebooks have also caused a sea change in the publishing business model.

“There are great things that are happening, but the revenue isn’t following,� said Robert Ballantyne, associate publisher of Arsenal Pulp Press and president of the Association of Book Publishers of British Columbia. “What’s happening now is just turmoil and uncertainty. Where we will be in five years, you can’t tell.�

Former Vancouver Public Library city librarian Paul Whitney said the fact that many bookstores are disappearing doesn’t help.

“The bottom line is it’s a mess and everybody’s worried because they can’t yet see the end game,� said Whitney, who has written a number of reports about ebooks as a consultant.

The book publishing industry in Canada is a $2-billion business, according to Statistics Canada. In B.C. alone, the book publishing industry has annual sales in excess of $150 million, according to a recent report on B.C.’s creative industries.

While a Canadian breakdown is difficult to come by, figures provided by Whitney to the The Sun show ebooks capturing 18 per cent of market share in North America in 2011, a year dominated by ebook growth.

Noah Genner, president and CEO of BookNet Canada, which monitors book supply, said there is not a concise picture of the ebook market share in Canada, but his organization is working on it.

“Our educated guess is that it is around eight to 10 per cent, but we don’t have the numbers,� Genner said. “The number has grown significantly over the last two years and was almost non-existent, or at least too small to be important, pre-2010.�

In January, Amazon announced that their ebook sales exceeded paperback sales, while in February, the New York Times added separate ebook bestseller lists to their book review pages.

Ebook numbers are likely to keep growing as more people make the switch to digital books, but the prices might go down: a lawsuit in the U.S. claims that Apple Corp. colluded with book publishers to set ebook prices higher than those set by Amazon. If Apple and the book publishers are found guilty, a similar class-action lawsuit underway in Canada will probably mean Canadians who have bought electronic books in the past two years could be compensated.

The Apple price-setting model allowed publishers to determine the selling price of a book, and has been dubbed the agency model. With Amazon, as with bricks-and-mortar bookstores, the publisher sells the product for a wholesale price and sets a suggested retail price, but the retailer decides the selling price.

While the lawsuit sounds like good news for consumers, it’s possible it could be detrimental for publishers and authors who could be forced to sell their products for even lower prices to compete with Amazon.

“We hope it doesn’t lower prices, because that would harm revenues for publishers — and by extension authors — and we’re going to end up without any books,� Ballantyne said. “With retail [business] crashing, publishers don’t need the lower prices�

Amazon, the massive online retailer with worldwide revenues of $13.18 billion in the first quarter of 2012, is a leader in the ebook market after jumping out of the gate early with its Kindle ereader in 2007. As a comparison, in Canada, the Kobo was not released until 2010.

Jesse Finkelstein, chief operating officer at Vancouver publisher Douglas McIntyre, said some of Amazon’s deep discounting of book prices would’ve meant the company was taking a loss on some books, but they were willing to do that to encourage people to buy the Kindle ereader.

“A loss leader approach is understandable if you’re trying to make sure that your device and your retailing venture is the one that wins out in the long term,� Finkelstein said.

The more book prices are cut, consumer expectations for cheap books increase and book publishing becomes unsustainable, Finkelstein said.

While bookstores and publishers may see Amazon as a formidable competitor who could swallow them whole, some authors say Amazon has removed the gatekeeper and enabled them to publish their books quicker and easier than through traditional publishers.

Sunshine Coast author Lars Guignard has published three books on Amazon, starting with Lethal Circuit, and says he is making a good living on ebooks alone. He makes about the same amount whether he sells a book in electronic or traditional format. The terms of payment for authors who use traditional publishers depend on their contract, which will be split between the publisher, the bookstore and the author.

Vancouver author Timothy Taylor said he would not consider giving up his relationship with his publisher (Random House) to create a self-published ebook because he values the editing and promotion provided by a traditional publisher. Self-published authors can either put a book up on Amazon unedited, or pay someone to edit their work.

The changes in publishing have meant readers have many more books to choose from, he said.

Taylor said that despite his reservations, he is excited about the creative potential for ebooks, as well as the potential to reach readers who might not have otherwise discovered his work.

“It almost feels like we could open up new markets — people who aren’t buying physical books might buy ebooks,� Taylor said.

D M published an enhanced ebook app of David Suzuki’s The Legacy in 2010, but found it tough to compete against other apps, because most apps are sold for extremely low prices. Although the project was very positive for the publisher in terms of technical production experience and experimentation, consumers were not prepared to pay much more than the cost of the ebook for the experience.

“I don’t believe consumers are willing to pay a premium for enhanced ebooks. The market is not there yet,� Finkelstein said.

There have been some notable examples of writers who have self-published an ebook and later received either critical acclaim or commercial success, such as Amanda Hocking, who writes paranormal books, or the Julie and Julia cooking blog that was later made into a movie. Atop the New York Times bestseller lists for ebooks is Fifty Shades of Grey, an erotic novel that gained popularity as an ebook and has since been published as a paperback. Right now, books that are viable as ebooks alone tend to be books that are written either by a well-established author or those written in a popular genre, such as romance, which have dedicated, voracious readers, Whitney said.

Margaret Reynolds, executive director of Association of Book Publishers of British Columbia, said it’s important to remember that the success stories of self-published ebook authors are the exceptions.

“That’s one in a million. It’s not going to happen for everyone,� Reynolds said.

On the other hand, “if you have an exceptional work, you will be found,� Ballantyne said. Ballantyne cited DOA frontman Joe Keithley’s pictorial history of the band as one notable ebook project taken on by Arsenal Pulp Press, with support from Apple.

While the potential of reader-controlled storylines — like the Choose Your Own Adventure books of the ’70s and ’80s — or other forms of interactive books filled with podcasts, visual effects or music is limitless, some readers might prefer the quiet of reading a traditional book. Whitney said part of the appeal of reading is avoiding other distractions, such as email.

“I think the born-digital generation will be seeking out offline time,� Whitney said.

Hal Wake, artistic director of the Vancouver International Writers Festival, said he thinks there will always be a place for print books as well as ebooks. “There will remain the desire to use one’s imagination completely and utterly and there will be others who say, ‘let’s see what we can do.’ They’re both potentially equally valuable,� Wake said.

Sun Books Editor

tsherlock@vancouversun.com

Article source: http://www.canada.com/health/Publishers+read+industry+future/6608205/story.html

Kiwi romance readers set to get hooked online

May 12th, 2012 No comments


ROB STOCK

romance novel

Love is in the air at Fishpond, the country’s largest online bookstore, as Mills Boon’s back catalogue of romance novels is set to appear in ebook form.

Last week more than 600 Mills Boon ebook titles became available, with another 3000 or so soon to be added, a surprising number of which are by New Zealand authors.

The avalanche of e-romance was welcome, Fishpond general manager Ben Powles said, because to date New Zealand had been slow to embrace ebooks despite the format being a hit around the world.

Last Wednesday, Fishpond had just over 11,000 ebooks available – a tiny proportion of the more than eight million titles it boasts.

The Mills Boon release would swell that, Powles said, and the ebook was ideal for romance novels, because they were consumed quickly and often, and were not always kept. In the UK, Australia and US, romance ebooks have been flying off the online shelves, and in some instances making their authors rich.

Cristina Lee from Mills Boon publisher Harlequin, said one in every 15 of the 130 million Mills Boons sold every year was an ebook.

Mills Boon author Soraya Nicholas from Christchurch (latest book Back in the Soldier’s Arms) believes the marriage of ebook and romance was born of a voracious appetite for love. “Romance readers tend to read a huge number of books,” she says. “Ebooks are very easy to access and it is a lot easier to carry your Kindle or iPad than a pile of books.”

Lee said an average reader would buy four books at a time, and because many tended to have favourite writers from the stable of 1200 around the world, buying ebooks was easier.

She said there was comfort in knowing there was an upbeat climax on the way from page one, especially in tough times, but romance novels had not stood still and had diversified into “lines” for specific tastes.

Nicholas writes “sweet” romances, where “the bedroom door is shut before things go too far”, while her friend Natalie Buchanan does “sexy”.

Buchanan said Kiwi authors were well received overseas, in part because they sat somewhere between Americans and Brits, but their voice resonated with both.

There were a number on bestseller lists in America who went unrecognised here.

– © Fairfax NZ News

Sponsored links

Article source: http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/6911352/Kiwi-romance-readers-set-to-get-hooked-online

Powered by WordPress Lab