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Showing posts with label THE HUNGER GAMES. Show all posts
Showing posts with label THE HUNGER GAMES. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

IS YOUR eBOOK READING YOU?



{WE INTERRUPT THIS POST FOR A BIRTHDAY GREETING:

HAPPY BIRTHDAY, ALICE MUNROE! She turns 81 today}

She wrote:

A story is not like a road to follow …

it's more like a house.

You go inside and stay there for a while, wandering back and forth and settling where you like and discovering how the room and corridors relate to each other,

how the world outside is altered by being viewed from these windows.

And you, the visitor, the reader, are altered as well by being in this enclosed space,

whether it is ample and easy or full of crooked turns, or sparsely or opulently furnished.

You can go back again and again, and the house, the story, always contains more than you saw the last time.

It also has a sturdy sense of itself of being built out of its own necessity, not just to shelter or beguile you.

NOW BACK TO OUR REGULARLY SCHEDULED POST:

Reading is solitary and private no longer.

According to THE WALL STREET JOURNAL, the major new players in e-book publishing,

Amazon, Apple and Google, can easily track how far readers are getting in books,

how long they spend reading them and which search terms they use to find books.

Book apps for tablets like the iPad, Kindle Fire and Nook record how many times readers open the app and how much time they spend reading.

Retailers and some publishers are beginning to sift through the data, gaining unprecedented insight into how people engage with books.

Did you know it takes the average reader just seven hours to read the final book in Suzanne Collins's "Hunger Games" trilogy on the Kobo e-reader?

About 57 pages an hour.

Nearly 18,000 Kindle readers have highlighted the same line from the second book in the series:

"Because sometimes things happen to people and they're not equipped to deal with them."

And on Barnes & Noble's Nook, the first thing that most readers do upon finishing the first "Hunger Games" book is to download the next one.

Data collected from Nooks reveals, for example, how far readers get in particular books, how quickly they read and how readers of particular genres engage with books.

Barnes & Noble has determined, through analyzing Nook data, that nonfiction books tend to be read in fits and starts,

while novels are generally read straight through,

and that nonfiction books, particularly long ones, tend to get dropped earlier.

Science-fiction, romance and crime-fiction fans often read more books more quickly than readers of literary fiction do, and finish most of the books they start.

Readers of literary fiction quit books more often and tend skip around between books.

Amazon, in particular, has an advantage in this field—

it's both a retailer and a publisher, which puts the company in a unique position to use the data it gathers on its customers' reading habits.

It's no secret that Amazon and other digital book retailers track and store consumer information detailing what books are purchased and read.

Kindle users sign an agreement granting the company permission to store information from the device—

including the last page you've read, plus your bookmarks, highlights, notes and annotations—in its data servers.

Amazon can identify which passages of digital books are popular with readers, and shares some of this data publicly on its website through features such as its "most highlighted passages" list.

Readers digitally "highlight" selections using a button on the Kindle;

they can also opt to see the lines commonly highlighted by other readers as they read a book.

Amazon aggregates these selections to see what gets underlined the most.

Topping the list is the line from the "Hunger Games" trilogy. It is followed by the opening sentence of "Pride and Prejudice."

Forget Big Brother. Big Business is watching you!

Friday, November 18, 2011

I QUIT!

Actually, I have already quit.

Quit what?

I have quit what so many other authors have ...

Seeking traditional publication.

See Nathan Bransford excellent post :
http://blog.nathanbransford.com/2011/10/do-you-plan-to-bypass-traditional.html


Let's face it : a lot of us are questioning the wisdom of querying agents and trying for traditional publication at all,

whether because of the length of time it takes,

the fear of losing control,

e-book royalties, and many other factors.

1.) Length of time it takes :

A year? Two? John Locke has a point : when the product you have is hot, two years to get a second book into the reader's hands is too long for the interest not to have cooled down to an Ice Age.

A salesman with a hot idea and no merchandise to sell is in agony. With ePublishing, you can have a backlist of seven to eleven books for readers to gobble up in the time it takes a SECOND PRINT BOOK TO COME OUT!

2.) Control :

Let's be real. What prompts you to pick up a book? Usually the title at first. The Publisher can stomp on your beloved, carefully chosen title to shove in theirs.

Case in point :

F. Paul Wilson wrote a book that sold well, THE KEEP. He wrote another with the title of the creature who was the adversary in it. The Publisher shelved that title and named it THE TOMB.

Problem? There's no tomb in THE TOMB! Wilson pointed that out and was told that by the time the reader realized that, he would have bought the book! Aaaaargh!

The cover art :
Again control. You're a newbie. You get the bottom of the barrel in artwork. But with ePublishing, you choose the artist and the artwork. The cover to the first CONAN THE BARBARIAN by Frank Frazetta was the first paperback to sell a million copies in weeks.

Why? That stunning cover.

3.) eBook royalties and shelf life.

You sell your eBook for 99 cents, you get back 35 cents ... 60 days later WITH NO AGENT CUTTING OUT HER 15%.

You sell your eBook for 2.99, you get back 75%.

Yes, you pay for the artwork, the formatting, and the marketing. But do you believe in yourself or don't you?

Shelf Life :

The shelf life of a print book is like unto that of a gnat these days. Your eBook? It's there for as long as you want it.

Distribution :

I've sold books to readers in Germany, France, England, Australia, New Zealand, and of course, the USA. You won't get that kind of worldwide distribution for a newbie print book.

4.) Your book is yours :

Neil Gaiman wrote BOOKS OF MAGIC for DC COMICS before HARRY POTTER -- the two main characters are so similar at the start that it is striking. Why no lawsuits? WARNER BROTHERS owned DC COMICS and THE MOVIE RIGHTS TO HARRY POTTER.

Also DC comics owned the characters of BOOKS OF MAGIC.

YOU WILL OWN THE CHARACTERS OF YOUR BOOK.

You may never sell the movie rights to them, but if you do, the money will come to you alone and not the publisher, agent, etc.

Like most print authors, you will probably never get to make a living off of your novels. But you will have the control and freedom to chart the seas as you choose.

Yes, you will have to hustle to get your book out there. But being an author is a grand, epic adventure, testing your wit, resolve, and passion. Remember ...

Impossible just give birth to legends!