Tag Archives: kindle

News

The History Press Launches First Ebook

The History Press Ireland has launched its first ebook, a kindle edition of Conor McCabe’s, Sins of the Father: Tracing the Decisions that Shaped the Irish Economy.

The book, something of a departure for the history publisher, is an analysis of how the Irish economy has been shaped by decisions over many decades.

The release comes as data from Aptara shows ‘all but 6% of trade publishers are currently developing e-books‘ and that ‘1 out of 5 eBook publishers generates more than 10% of their sales from eBooks‘.

Briefly Noted

Briefly Noted | Amazon’s Kindle to Make Library E-Books Available – NYTimes.com

The introduction of the Kindle, the biggest-selling e-reader, opens up library e-books to a wider audience, heightening the fears of publishers that many customers will turn to libraries for reading material. If that happens, e-book buyers could become e-book borrowers, leading to a potentially damaging loss of revenue for an industry grappling with a profound shift in consumer reading habits.

Library e-books are already available on Barnes & Noble’s Nook, the Sony Reader, smartphones, laptops and other devices, but never on the Kindle, whose users had long complained that they were left out.

via Amazon’s Kindle to Make Library E-Books Available – NYTimes.com.

Briefly Noted

Briefly Noted | Amazon’s ‘Big Deals’ Puts 900 Kindle Books On Sale – Including Big 6 Titles | paidContent

Following the success of its “Sunshine Deals” promotion, Amazon (NSDQ: AMZN) is running an even bigger sale on Kindle books: The Big Deal, with over 900 titles on sale for $0.99, $1.99, $2.99 and $3.99 through July 27. And here’s the kicker: For the first time ever, Big 6 publishers like Random House are participating in the sale.

via Amazon’s ‘Big Deals’ Puts 900 Kindle Books On Sale – Including Big 6 Titles | paidContent.

Irish Top Ten News

Irish Top Ten Week Ending 16/07/2011

It’s a week for Ice & Fire. The fifth book in George RR Martin’s epic series has had an amazing success across the globe and Ireland is no different. It pulled in a remarkable (for a science fiction & Fantasy title) 2,200 sales last week. What’s more, the first book of the series, although it’s sales dropped from last week, still delivered a  creditable result selling 763 units and just clinging on to its top ten place from last week.

I’d be fascinated to know what the ebook leakage figure was for Ireland for A Dance With Dragons, by that I mean, how many fans ordered the book as a digital edition either from a US or UK based services like Amazon. Considering that both the US and UK reported huge sales for ebooks editions of the title, I get the sense that there were many (I myself pre-ordered the book on my kindle and it cost me only $9.99. It is currently $19.89 for Irish readers). It is a mark of the relative protected/backward/challenged (take your pick) the Irish market is with regard to ebooks that no-one seems to be selling an ebook version at ANY Irish ebook site (of which few actually exist in any case) that I can find.

As this weekly look through has highlighted for some weeks, Fiction titles are in complete control of the top ten in Ireland and Irish authors made a valiant stab at it too. It was a good week too, with the figure for top ten sales up some 10% on the previous week. With summer reading offers still rolling you’d expect fiction to remain dominant for some time to come.

1:A Dance with Dragons:Book Five of a Song of Ice and Fire, George RR Martin, 2,200
2: All for You, Sheila O’Flanagan, 1,794
3: Minding Frankie, Maeve Binchy, 963
4: The Leopard, Jo Nesbo, 949
5: Fallen, Karin Slaughter, 912
6: One Day, David Nicholls, 911
7: Belle, Lesley Pearse, 896
8: Something from Tiffany’s, Melissa Hill, 853
9: The Reversal, Michael Connelly, 811
10: A Game of Thrones Book 1 of a Song of Ice and Fire, George R.R. Martin, 763

buy the book from The Book Depository, free delivery

Top Ten Dynamics
IPN is running a top ten dynamics section looking at the top ten with some data drawn out. Nothing too dramatic, but useful nonetheless.

Volume: 11,052 Units
Increase since last week: 1074 units
% Increase since last week: -10.76%
Average Units Per Title: 1,105

~~
Fiction: 10 titles, 9,978 units or 100%, RRP £11.39
Non-Fiction: 0 titles, 0 units or 0%, RRP £0

~~
Authors: 10
Irish Authors: 3, 30%
Irish Published Books: 0, 0%

~~
Average RRP: £11.39
Increase in RRP since last week: £2.29
% Increase in RRP since last week: 10.10%*
*It is important to note that RRP does not reflect actually selling price. Much of this RRP Increase is driven by one title which had a £25.00 RRP.

Data Supplied by Nielsen BookScan taken from the Irish Consumer Market week ending 9th July 2011
Image Credit:

AttributionNoncommercialSome rights reserved by icantcu

Briefly Noted

Briefly Noted | IDC: Tablet sales slow, Nook Color ousts Kindle as lead ereader | VentureBeat

Ereader shipments fell from the holiday rush to 3.3 million units, but still saw a 105 percent increase compared to last year. As for the Nook Color’s success, IDC points to Amazon’s lack of a color ereader as a reason for losing the lead sales spot. Rumors remain strong that Amazon will announce its own tablet devices in a few months, and I would imagine at least one will be an inexpensive Kindle-branded tablet/ereader device like the Nook Color.

via IDC: Tablet sales slow, Nook Color ousts Kindle as lead ereader | VentureBeat.

News

Amazon Agrees To Acquire The Book Depository

Yahoo Finance today reported that Amazon had agreed to acquire The Book Depository, the online book retailer that offers free delivery worldwide to customers.

The UK based company had £60 million in sales in 2010 and is targeting £120 million in 2011 according to Retail Gazette earlier this year and was founded by Andrew Crawford in 2004.

It would seem to be a case of, ‘How do you know you are doing something right? Amazon acquires you!’ In that regard the team at Book Depository should be congratulated for building such an impressive company relatively quickly.

Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN – News) today announced that it has reached an agreement to acquire The Book Depository International. The Book Depository is an online bookseller offering over six million books for delivery worldwide.

“Customers in more than 100 countries enjoy The Book Depository’s vast selection, convenient delivery and free shipping,” said Greg Greeley, Amazon’s Vice President of European Retail. “The Book Depository is very focused on serving its customers around the world, and we look forward to welcoming them to the Amazon family.”

From Amazon’s perspective It’s hard to know what the play is here. It could be any of:

1) Increasing UK and European exposure
2) Building a better position in Australia
3) Defensive market-share building

Or any number of other things. There must be some worries about competition approval, at least in the UK, with this.

Finally, from Irish readers and book buyers view, the key will be whether Amazon changes the free postage model The Book Depository operates. If so, this could be a bad deal for those who purchase books online, though perhaps a boost to bookshops.

 

Briefly Noted

Briefly Noted | Cherish the Book Publishers—You'll Miss Them When They're Gone | Postmodern Times by Eric Felten – WSJ.com

It’s only natural for those locked out to despise the gatekeepers, but what about those of us in the reading public? Shouldn’t we be grateful that it’s someone else’s job to weed out the inane, the insipid, the incompetent? Not that they always do such a great job of it, given some of the books that do get published by actual publishers. But at least they provide some buffer between us and the many aspiring authors who are like the wannabe pop stars in the opening weeks of each “American Idol” season: How many instant novelists are as deluded as the singers who make with the strangled-cat noises believing they have Arethaen pipes?

via Cherish the Book Publishers—You’ll Miss Them When They’re Gone | Postmodern Times by Eric Felten – WSJ.com.

Briefly Noted

Briefly Noted | E-books flying off e-shelves at metro libraries | StarTribune.com

The hottest items at the public library cant be seen on bookshelves.

Just a year after the first e-books appeared in the collections of metro-area libraries, demand is surging and librarians are scrambling to keep up with publishers and patrons. Kindles, iPads and Nooks are being joined by more e-readers and tablets. And the changing shape of books has the library community pondering the role of the traditional brick-and-mortar buildings where paper and ink have long reigned.

“Everybody got these e-book readers and came to the public libraries and said, I want the e-books,” said Christine Lind Hage, a Michigan librarian who serves on an e-book task force for the American Library Association. “A good library is going to have to adapt. You cant stick your head in the sand and say were just going to go with print.”

via E-books flying off e-shelves at metro libraries | StarTribune.com.

Briefly Noted

Briefly Noted | Digital Book Publishing Models to the Rescue | Epicenter | Wired.com

Following the announcement that J.K. Rowling is to self-publish the e-books to her successful Harry Potter series, Wired UK has gathered some of the new techniques that authors and publishers are using to bring their tomes to market.

via Digital Book Publishing Models to the Rescue | Epicenter | Wired.com.

Briefly Noted

Briefly Noted | E-books growth slow as Germans stick to ink and paper | Culture & Lifestyle | Deutsche Welle | 08.06.2011

In 2010, according to a study by the GfK market research company, e-books made up only 0.5 percent of overall book sales in 2010. E-books make up just five percent of the 417 million euros in sales in the growing German download market, which is made up of digital purchases of music, audio and e-books, software, games and videos.

E-books have featured prominently at the Frankfurt’s Book Fair

But experts and industry insiders think the German e-book market will grow, despite lagging far behind the US market, as people’s awareness of e-books grows, the selection of titles available in digital format expands, and e-book readers such as Amazon’s Kindle or Apple’s iPad tablet computer gain traction and more widespread use.

via E-books growth slow as Germans stick to ink and paper | Culture & Lifestyle | Deutsche Welle | 08.06.2011.