Tag Archives: Digital Change

Comment & Features

Poll: Are Free Author Ebooks A Good Or Bad Idea?


As we reported earlier in the week. Oisín McGann has launched a free ebook partly for promotion and partly as an experiment. But is this development a good idea? Does it devalue content or increase the reader/author link? Let us know what you think!


Links

Daily Links 13/04/2010

A somewhat delayed Daily Links, service will return, hopefully uninterrupted!
Editor

The Impending Press Release
Nice note on press releases!
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Defendini to Join Open Road Integrated Media
Defendini was pretty central to building the exemplar of niche communities, tor.com, this is an interesting move.
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An Introduction to QUEEN OF THE HILL by STUART NEVILLE
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Fiction – The Dead Republic
The Tribune does NOT like The Dead Republic
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New Irish Writing – Hennessy X.0 shortlist 2009
The Tribune shares notes on each of the Hennessy X.O. Literary Award nominees
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Irish Times iPhone app
An app from the Irish Times eh?
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Vote for these Northern Irish authors
Lots of Nothern Irish writing news.
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Is Print a Subsidiary Right?
If this doesn’t scare publishers, I don’t know what will!
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Minority report
Interesting book!
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Grimy crime tale set in grim times
Arlene Hunt profile
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Reeling in the Charlton years
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Book review: Where the love gets in
Tara Heavey reveiw
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Is this Ireland’s answer to john the baptist . . .?
Who was John Waters preparing the way for then?
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I love my bed!
Much sympathy with this book today!
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Cashel: Easter events for children
You know what, Tipperary Libraries are very active!
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Motoko Rich: It’s The Economy, Stupid!
Agree with this sentiment!
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PA applauds the passing of the Digital Economy Bill
I’m deeply suspicious of this bill in many ways. I expect “UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES”
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News

Penguin Ireland Sold 100 ebooks in 2009

Penguin Ireland Logo Penguin Ireland MD, Michael McLoughlin, has revealed that Penguin Ireland sold only 100 ebooks in 2009.

Speaking at the Irish Branch Conference of the Booksellers Association in the Hilton Hotel, Dublin, Saturday, McLoughlin said that so far in 2010 Penguin Ireland had sold over 1000 ebooks and he expected that sales would increase over time.

McLoughlin also said that Penguin as a whole expect digital sales to reach a minimum of 15% of all sales over the next five years.

In a wide ranging speech McLoughlin said that change would come to Ireland and that Publishers ‘can’t wait another year or two, because everything is changing so fast’. He finished his speech with the thought that this Autumn would see the ‘first digital Christmas, the question is how big is it going to be?’

McLoughlin’s speech came just a few days before the launch of the Apple iPad which many commentators expect to bring even greater change to book publishing. Penguin Ireland recently overtook Gill & Macmillan to become Ireland’s largest trade publisher, although Gill & Macmillan remains larger when educational publishing is counted.

Comment & Features

Guest Column: Lapwing and Google

Lapwing LogoLapwing Publications is a poetry press based in Belfast. It was founded by Dennis and Rene Greig in 1988. Since then it has published some of Ireland’s best known authors. IPN contacted them because they have been partners in Google’s Book program for some time. They have kindly agreed to allow us republish this piece by their co-founder Denis Greig.


In the late eighties I laughed at a man in a writers’ group I was associated with. Now I eat my words, everything he spoke about in terms of technical development in regards to books has come to be a reality. Likewise when I applied to the Northern arts council in 1999/2000 to develop the internet use and CD formats, I think they had a bit of a laugh and seemed more interested in what we could provide for ‘young’ people. Well, perhaps to be expected when they still used an old Amstrad dot-matrix printer. Not willing to run a brothel, become a drug dealer or do cars with go-faster stripes I put almost everything to do with technical development on a back burner.

So it was back to the failing conventions. One bookshop keeper informed me that ‘we don’t stock pamphlets’ – that was our main output form then. ‘Odd’ I thought as we chatted beside a mountain of poetry pamphlets. Then there was the hide them under the table trick.

I had a great computer programme but the business of setting up a website was torturous. Yes, with a bottomless pocket of cash I could have got ‘someone’ to do the business.

Then along came Google Booksearch Partners project.

Even in the earlier years, we were attracting hundreds of ‘hits’ a week. That meant up to 500 people a week were browsing our listing. Last year 14,000 plus Lapwing publications were browsed and 56,000 plus pages on Google. That is a lot of people reading a lot of poetry. Some titles have been ‘browsed’ between 1000 and 3000 plus times. And although the number of pages that can be accessed is very limited, the Booksearch has become a ‘virtual library’. Necessary now that the barbarians are threatening to close libraries in the UK and the Blackening North.

The Google site also links to major booksellers and resellers. What’s more, it is universally available, it is a worldwide shop window.

Britain and Ireland are feeling the effects of cultural changes, possibly linked or related in GB’s case to the deconstruction of education for the less wealthy children and young people. Related to that is the rise of commercialism where it is a case of quantity counts instead of ‘quality’. Oh yes, the dumb and ghost-written stuff is well produced as machine-made ‘products’ but the literary commercial culture seems to be all about cooks, crooks, tarts and old farts bumping up their pension plans. So ‘kiss and tell’ will sell. Fine, as long as it lasts. The problem is one of confusing public opinion with ‘taste’. Then again a recent study suggests that 5% of poets actually buy poetry books and of those 65% tend to be Heaney titles followed by Simon Armitage. I wonder how ‘they’ worked that out.

However, some 800 bookshops closed in the UK last year alone. Stalinist central buying and high discount levels demanded worked both for and against publishers. For, when people happily added gunge to their lifestyle bric-a-brac, against when the public stopped or cut buying. Why bother when the remainder shops will have the £20 stodge a a few quid a copy. The other pressure has been the simple cost of occupancy. Employers can impose impoverishing regimes on their staff but when it comes to rents, rates and other forms of official robbery, they have no option but to put up or close up. Hughes & Hughes in Ireland seem to have fallen foul of a complex of problems related to occupancy. A certain chainstore in Britain – with an Irish presence – seems to be suffering as well and if rents escalate some places will become unviable.

With Google, the shop window is lit up 24-7 as the cliché goes.

As it is, poetry is a non-commercial venture. Almost 100 years ago, Ezra Pound helped print his own 200 copy edition of Il Lume Spento in Italy. Des O’Grady did likewise!

The market saturation point in Ireland is about 200 to 300 copies and usually a lot less. So, without state grant aid, there would be a lot less published. Granted the overseas market – not Europe I must add – may subsidise the home based business. Gains can be made by farming out work to India and China. Still, it is essential that traditonal publishers continue to be subsidised even if it means the perceived great and good get the lion’s share – at least it is a form of tokenism, a veneer on the masses who don’t read poetry or ‘fine’ literature and the embellishment of icons emerging poets may aspire to emulate.

Distribution tends to be in a few hands so independent bookshops throughout Ireland cannot obtain what distributors do not have on their shelves. The only other alternative is to use the internet to acquire books on order from customers. Yes, the big shops can do that and yes, a Kindle or iPod ebook reader can give access to a load of titles. That is another kind of distribution, the ins and out of which are still wriggling on the floor. Postage and distribution costs are high, so Lapwng offers titles that don’t need toys for boys and girls, simple PDF files and each title at a fraction of hard copy prices.

Finally, which is only a deferred finality, along came freewebs and Adam Rudden, a bright and brilliant young man who put together my attempt at site building, trimmed and polished and continues to develop the Lapwing ‘presence’. He also is making the best use of Google. The changes around us are happening whilst we sleep, ‘measure our lives with coffee spoons’ to paraphrase T.S.Eliot. In the meantime, in the parallel universe of corporate literary culture, retrenchment and a closing of doors is very evident by the cuts in ‘arts’ budgets and the continued Philistine philosophy around literature, if it doesn’t sell dump it. That is what is happening with ‘fine’ literature. It is not a matter of state organisations flooding the ‘industry’ with cash – it is obvious that small publishers and para-literary publications will be ignored. It would be simply a case of the same old song and same old singer blinged up a bit for the modern market. It will certainly not be a case of liberty, equality and fraternity for the establishment’s barricades are well and truly up already.

Dennis Greig

News

Collins Press Signs Digital Agreement With DirectEbooks


Cork-based independent publisher of Irish-interest titles The Collins Presss has signed a conversion and distribution deal with DirectEbooks.

The deal, to be announced today, will see DirectEbooks convert back list and front list titles for distribution through Amazon, CyberRead, Fictionwise and DirectEbooks.com (DirectEbook’s own sales platform).

Con Collins, Managing Director of The Collins Press, said ‘DirectEbooks will make it easier for our readers to access books written by our emerging authors across a wide range of platforms.’

DirectEbooks conversion service includes a Digital Rights Management system, a dashboard to track and monitor sales and an upload area for publishers.

It is currently the only dedicated ebook distributor based in Ireland.

Gareth Cuddy, Managing Director, DirectEbooks, said he was ‘delighted that Collins Press have chosen us for their digital distribution needs and we look forward to distributing their exciting titles worldwide.’

Speaking about the new Eason ebook store, Mr Cuddy said he hoped that we would ‘see Collins books on Easons before long’.

News

Eason Launches A New eBook store

Eason Launches eBook Store

Eason & Son has launched a new eBook store on its website Eason.ie. The company has created a new top level category for eBooks beside Books, Stationary and Bestsellers.

The store, which went live last week, was announced publicly on the Eason Book Club Facebook page. The store offers a range of titles from new releases to classics, a Best of Irish Section and includes some of the Top 50 Books Of The Noughties as voted by Eason Book Club Members.

Both Penguin Ireland and Transworld Ireland have titles in the store.

Prices range from around €8 up to nearly €30 and individual books appear to be priced close to the same price as their physical world counterparts. For instance Barack Obama’s Dreams From My Father is priced at €11.10 in ebook and on special value at €9.99 in paperback.

Eason has been selling Sony eReader devices for some time and these are also available for sale in the new ebook section.

News

Two Irish Kindle Firsts

The American Envoy Kindle Edition ImageThe O’Brien Press and Northern Ireland based Guildhall Press have both launched simultaneous paperback and Kindle versions of new titles.

Pricing
O’Brien Press made Niall O’Dowd‘s American Voice available on the Kindle priced at $19.58 including VAT and international delivery via Amazon’s Whispernet service. Guildhall released Garbhan Downey‘s The American Envoy on the Kindle at $10.52.

According to O’Brien the list price for the Kindle edition is $17.99 or €13.12, cheaper than the list price for print of €14.99, and that is what readers in the United States pay for their books.

Irish customers however are required to pay both VAT and international delivery fees, pushing the price to $21.58 or €14.25 which is a considerable premium to the print price currently available on the O’Brien website, €11.99 (including a Paddy’s Day 20% discount), though delivery costs for the print book drive the inclusive price to €14.69.

Guildhall’s list price for the print version of The American Envoy is £6.95 or €7.67 and the price including delivery in Ireland is £9.75 or €10.76. The Kindle price is $10.52 or €7.65 making their Kindle version considerably cheaper than the delivered paper book.

Independent Authors
Although several independent authors have made editions of their books available via Kindle devices, O’Brien and Guildhall are believed to be the first to make newly released titles available simultaneously with the release of the paperback.


In January, Irish Publishing News featured a guest column by Sheila O’Kelly who was both a proud Kindle Owner and a kindle published author via Smashwords

Links

Daily Links 10/03/2010

Sunrise
David points to the absence of Vampires in top tens!
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Elsevier To Do Titles with Blio
I’ve seen a demo of Blio and while it’s impressive, I still don’t know why a webpage couldn’t do most of it.
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With new opportunities come new challenges
Mike Shatzkin does some good explaining of why the digital shift is SO much trouble for trade publishers.
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Pighog Press Competition
Isn’t Pighog Press the best name you’ve ever heard for an imprint?
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Google partners with Italy for groundbreaking book scanning deal
This is interesting news
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Does Wat Thamkrabok Offer a Wonder Cure for Addiction?
An interesting note from author Paul Garrigan over at the Maverick House blog.
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Books overtake games as most numerous iPhone apps
I honestly do not think this matters!
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Brown Bag’s Night at the Oscars
Hard luck and well done to the Brown Bag folks!
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Books now on sale online and in shops
Great news for Little Island
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booktrade.info – Book Trade Announcements – HarperCollins Signs New Series With Picture Book Star Oliver Jeffers
Good news for Northern Ireland raised Oliver Jeffers
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Lapwing Catalogues & Information – Home
New to me but, it seems, far from new, is Lapwing a poetry press from Belfast. Let not the free website fool you, Lapwing offers nearly all the poetry on its list in pdf format for paid download, streets ahead of many Irish publishers.
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Kerry Babies Case-the tipping point for Irish Women’s Rights
Mike Cosgrave is Publisher at Cork University Press. He writes fine piece on his blog about the Press’ books. Well worth reading this one!
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News

O'Brien's Publishes iPaddy Apple iPhone/iPod App

iPaddy AppJust in time for St. Patrick’s Day, The O’Brien Press has published a new Apple iPhone/iPod App called iPaddy.

The App costs €2.99 and features an alphabet of Irish slang quotes which are read aloud by the App and offers alternative words and phrases.

The original title, iFeck, which would have tied in with the company’s ‘Feckin‘ series was rejected by Apple’s approval process.

O’Brien are the not first Irish owned book publisher to launch an App, Eddie Stack’s company Tintaun release an App version of his book The West, as previously reported here on Irish Publishing News.

Links

Daily Links 03/03/2010

Is POD a Possible Answer to Book Distribution Barriers?
Very good article on POD and distribution
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Writing video games…
hmmh
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Turn up for the books a novel idea
The indo covers the World Book Day bookcrossing thing!
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Informa says publishing business performed ‘exceptionally well’ in 2009
Not everyone suffers in a recession
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Irish trade assesses impact from Hughes and Hughes failure
I’ve a piece over at the bookseller about the trade reaction to the Hughes & Hughes events
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Publishing will always need its gatekeepers
I think it might be wise to replace gatekeepers with filters here!
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