kinzel: (Yard Iggle)
kinzel ([personal profile] kinzel) wrote2008-09-29 12:57 pm
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Theo is in process. Sorry the chapter is late, was going over important paperwork ... sigh.

Meanwhile, not paperwork, is some commentary about ebooks on the SFnovelists blog ...
http://www.sfnovelists.com/2008/09/28/my-own-epublishing-rant/
which seems of the opinion that ebooks are not where it is. Please feel free to read and comment...

[identity profile] paw3pals.livejournal.com 2008-09-29 10:06 pm (UTC)(link)
By using a PDA as a reader, I can read many proprietary and all open formats. eBooks are now my first choice as I don't have to come up with storage room for all the keeper books. I have over 2000 ebooks on my hard drive and a tiny SD card (a really good catalog program that accepts all formats and drag and drop would be appreciated).

I am waiting for an eInk device that will accept eReader, Mobipocket, MS Reader and open formats. The Cybook is approaching acceptance with it's open format and Mobipocket usability.

Pricing policies and DRM are the other major areas that need work.


[identity profile] jryson.livejournal.com 2008-09-29 11:49 pm (UTC)(link)
Pricing policies and DRM are the other major areas that need work.

In the near future, finding a decent eBook is going to be a challenge. You write a book, and put it up on a pay website. I want to read an eBook like yours, but have not heard of you. How do you arrange for me to end up buying your book?

If you're in a bookstore and pick up a book by an author you've never heard of, all you've got is the cover art and the publisher. What the publisher does for you the reader is recommend the book with the publishing company's good name. I think future editors/publishers will end up editing as now, but then functioning to recommend a book this way. More or less like a reviewer, but representing the book, as with publishers today. When I buy an eBook, most of what I will pay will hopefully go to the author. But Part of what i pay will go to the publisher, not for making the book available, that's cheap in computerland; but for reading all the slush and selecting what I can expect to be a good book from it.

Which is what the editor/publisher does now, right?

there are also epublishers

[identity profile] mtz322.livejournal.com 2008-10-01 05:05 am (UTC)(link)
While I'm a fan of Baen Webscriptions and looking forward to seeing some other print publishers get the message and start offering e-versions I also buy quite a few ebooks that were written, edited, formatted, designed, and produced as ebooks from the start.

Yes, Edited, and all that other stuff. It makes a difference! And it doesn't come free.

And Distribution? At least 50% of the cost of an ebook goes to distributors now. Granted a few epublishers avoid that by selling only from their own websites (lessee, monthly server fees, merchant accout fees, etc.) but for most of us it is go with Fictionwise, maybe Amazon, and share the profit and hope that our share is enough to pay royalties and cover artists and layout specialists, and so forth. Oh, yeah, it is nice to be able to pay the editors too.

Re: there are also epublishers

[identity profile] jryson.livejournal.com 2008-10-01 04:33 pm (UTC)(link)
But how do I find your book among all the shush?

Re: there are also epublishers

[identity profile] mtz322.livejournal.com 2008-10-01 06:15 pm (UTC)(link)
Solve that problem and you'll either get rich or revered as the genius who saved publishing!

It's nothing new. Ever heard the term mid-list? A few books/authors make it big-hit best seller lists, sell millions. Many more sell reasonably well but not necessarily well enough to survive without a day job. Used to be publishers would keep them in print long enough for them to find more readers.

But, despite generations of effort, nobody has really solved the problem.

For readers it is how to find the books they will enjoy and want more of out of the hundreds of thousands published.

To be more specific there is my own discovery of the Liad books. Somehow I missed them in bookstores. Maybe the stores I had access to didn't carry them or they might have had them when finances limited my buying. So, I didn't discover them until repeated recommendations on another fan list caught my attention and I went looking. Found one. Wanted more. Frustration ensued. Word of Mouth worked but availability wasn't there.

Eventually someone mentioned that Embiid was bringing them out in e-format. Hated the Embiid format. Had to read them on desktop screen. But I did and got all that were available of the novels. Never did find a device I could afford that would work with the Embiid format.

Found/got the eBookwise. Not perfect but good enough. And, oh joy, Fledgling! And then Baen Webscriptions with not just the novels but collections of the Chapbooks. Double, triple joy. Hooked a friend or two by sending them to Fledgling and then to Baen.

And now the older books are being reissued and there are new ones here/coming soon.

So, if you look instead of just waiting for some authority to tell you where; if you find groups with similar interests; if you scan the new offerings and the category listings at places like Fictionwise; then you have a fair chance of finding something you'll like. When you do, tell a friend or two.

(Note that if you were asking about my own books I haven't written any. I'm an e-publisher. Not sure if anything we've published would interest you although I do have dreams of discovering an author or authors that will.
http://www.fictionwise.com/eBooks/epress-onlineeBooks.htm?cache