Why should I provide my email address?

Start saving money today with our FREE daily newsletter packed with the best FREE and bargain Kindle book deals. We will never share your email address!
Sign Up Now!

Kindle Nation Daily Free and Bargain Book Alert for Friday, May 14: Thousands of Nearly Free Science Fiction, Erotica, Mystery, Romance, and Horror Titles

Not much new to report in the “free books” category this morning, so let’s take a look at some offerings in the price range from $.01 to $0.99, with the caveat that there are no implicit recommendations here!

Check out our new listing of the first 30 months of month-by-month Kindle Store bestsellers here: Kindle Store Bestsellers, Month-by-Month for the First 30 Months

Here are our updated free promotional listings in the Kindle Store as of May 14:

Milrose Munce and the Den of Professional Help
Proper Pursuit, A
Prayer
Sheet Music: Uncovering the Secrets of Sexual Intimacy inMarriage
Tender Graces
The Minister
Colters
Swashbuckling Fantasy: 10 Thrilling Tales of Magical Adventure
Forbidden: The Sacrifice (Book 1)
Star Wars: Lost Tribe of the Sith #4: Savior
Breach of Trust
Snow Melts in Spring
Unlock the Hidden Job Market: 6 Steps to a Successful Job SearchWhen Times Are Tough
The First Drop of Rain
Living and Learning with New Media: Summary of Findings from theDigital Youth Project
The Joy of Pregnancy: The Complete, Candid, and ReassuringCompanion for Parents-to-Be
The Future of Learning Institutions in a Digital Age
Confronting the Challenges of Participatory Culture: MediaEducation for the 21st Century
Young People, Ethics, and the New Digital Media: A Synthesis fromthe Good Play Project
New Digital Media and Learning as an Emerging Area and"Worked Examples" as One Way Forwar...
Economic Report of the President
Budget of the United States Government, Fiscal Year 2011
The Civic Potential of Video Games
Star Wars: Lost Tribe of the Sith #1: Precipice
Star Wars: Lost Tribe of the Sith #3: Paragon
The Wild
The Hunters
The Reincarnationist Series
The Devil
A Very Special Delivery
Baby Bonanza
Kiss Me Deadly
Homespun Bride
Speed Dating
When Night Falls
Publish on Amazon Kindle with the Digital Text Platform
Star Wars: Lost Tribe of the Sith #2: Skyborn
Hide in Plain Sight
Slow Hands
Irresistible Forces
Dancing in the Moonlight
Crime Scene at Cardwell Ranch
His Lady Mistress
My Soul to Lose
The Bride
Once a Cowboy
More Blood, More Sweat and Another Cup of Tea
Stopping Time, Part 1
Stopping Time, Part 2

From the Kindle Nation Mailbag: When I’m at My Book Group, How Do I Find the Passage That’s Being Discussed Without Page Numbers?

Thanks to Kindle Nation citizen Dorothy K. for a question that I suspect resonates with many Kindle owners, regardless of whether the problem is experienced in a book group, a classroom discussion, or some other setting:

Stephen, I bought your user’s guide to help me use the Kindle I received at Christmas.  I love the Kindle, especially when traveling.  I downloaded and read books all the way to Arizona and back.

One drawback is that when I attend my four book groups, I cannot get to the page or the quotes that they want to talk about.  For this reason, I am questioning the new higher prices.  I can buy many books at Costco now for the Kindle price.  Why did they raise the prices?  The new Laura Bush book is $14.99.
                                                 Dorothy

Well, the lack of page numbers on the Kindle, which of course results from the changeableness of font sizes, can be challenging in a variety of ways. But here’s a fix that only takes a few seconds and should work in the vast majority of situations.

Let’s say your book group is discussing Rena Walmsley’s steamy but unforgettable novel Girl on Fire, and focusing on the scene where Alicia Wentworth returns to Cabot Academy and apologizes, for her misadventure, to the head of the school. It won’t help you to know that your fellow book group members are focused on page 217 of their paperback copies, and chances are that none of them are going to be able to direct you to location 2762 in your Kindle edition. But if someone will give you a few keywords, the process of finding the focus of discussion can go very quickly.

If someone calls out “Miss Sharp, I’m so sorry,” and you just type in “sharp so sorry” and use the 5-way controller to select “find,” you’ll be delivered almost immediately to the passage under discussion, as seen in the screen shot below.

I hope that helps at least a little, Dorothy. And believe me, I feel your pain, and my own, about those prices, but the vast majority of Kindle books are still under ten bucks.

Waves of Change in the Kindlesphere: How the Kindle Store is Evolving into Three Stores to Sharpen Competition and Marginalize Outliers

The waves of change continue in the Kindlesphere.

  • In the next few weeks we expect to see the launch of the Kindle Apps Store, the rollout of new accessibility features including what Amazon calls “audible menuing,” big changes in royalties and publishing features for Kindle authors and publishers, and a completion of the rollout of version of 2.5 of the operating software for the latest generation Kindle and Kindle DX. 
  • Many of us are watching with great interest for the denouement of the negotiations/controversies/conflicts that’s currently keeping new Penguin titles out of the Kindle Store and all Random House titles out of the iBooks Store.
  • On the hardware side, it remains to be seen whether Amazon will work as hard or place as high a priority on delivering the inevitable Super Kindle with the color touch display as it is working to make what will soon be an installed base of 100 millions iPads, iPhones, and iPod Touches super selling venues for Kindle and other digital content, including wolfish Video on Demand offerings donning the sheep’s clothing of the Netflix for iPad app if Amazon pulls the trigger on a Netflix acquisition.

But let’s focus today on dramatic if evolutionary changes that are occurring in the Kindle Store catalog.

Yesterday’s report that Amazon will soon drop free Kindle books from its main Kindle Store bestseller lists is just another portent that, in some ways, the Kindle Store is in the process of being transformed into three stores:

  • the Kindle bookstore to which we have grown accustomed over the past couple of years, with a large and diverse catalog of over half a million titles priced mostly between $2.99 and $9.99, currently growing at around 25,000 titles a month, and including work of distinction by emerging authors as well as bestsellers by established author;
  • several thousand other “new release” titles from publishers who have signed onto the agency model price-fixing pact, at least temporarily, with prices set between $10 and $15;
  • a growing number of free books including Amazon’s current “private label” catalog of public domain titles, a growing number of free promotional titles, and millions of other free public domain titles from third-party sites that Amazon will make increasingly seamless to download and read on the Kindle platform, perhaps with the kind of overhauled, Kindle-compatible “Stanza @ Kindle” offering that might have been behind the departure of Stanza fountainhead Neelan Choksi from Stanza.Amazon.com the other day). .

Now, or beginning at some point between now and June 30, Amazon will be making a major effort to organize the vast majority of Kindle store prices so that they fall in the $2.99 to $9.99 range. As I noted here when Amazon announced this program, Amazon will be using honey rather than vinegar, with an offer to pay direct 70% royalties to all authors and publishers who set prices in this price range through Amazon’s Kindle-compatible Digital Text Platform and participate fully in other Kindle features like text-to-speech.

There will be other outliers, including declining percentages of the total catalog that is priced between $.01 and $2.98 or over $14.99. The contraction of offerings in these price ranges, of course, will be driven by the promise of direct 70% royalties. For titles currently earning the standard Kindle DTP royalty of 35% at sales-suppressing prices from $15 to $19.99, (or, for that matter, $10 to $14.99), bringing the suggested retail list price down to $9.99 and taking any other steps necessary to comply with the new 70% royalty program ought to be a no-brainer for any author or publisher capable of doing the math. As a cursory check of the Kindle Store’s current bestselling titles in that $15-to-$20 price range reveals, there are precious few titles that are cracking the top 2,500 at such prices, and many would experience significantly higher sales at the $9.99 price range.

In a post the other day about bargain prices for a couple of Elizabeth Peters ebooks in the Kindle Store, I made the point that readers may actually be able to influence publisher pricing behavior when we jump on bargain prices like those mentioned in the post, even while the Kindle bestseller list shows some signs that Kindle owners are accepting agency-model pricing:

When an agency model publisher fixes a low price for a backlist title like these, the publishing is putting itself in a position to learn a great deal about pricing, sales, and profitability in the ebook world. Based on my own experiences and those of other authors, I believe that the ideal Kindle Store price for many backlist titles is in the $2.99 to $4.99 range, and that most such titles, if they are quality books with a little bit of marketing effort behind them are likely to sell roughly twice as many copies if they are reduced from $9.99 to $4.99 or roughly three times as many if they are reduced from $9.99 to $2.99. If Hachette and other publishers find out that such formulas apply to their backlist titles, it could be a powerful incentive for them to lower prices wherever possible.

So, the fun continues. When there’s competition between business behemoths like Amazon and Apple, it tends to be complicated by all kinds of counterforces, not the least of which are the many ways in which the two companies are partners. But as nice a guy as Jeff Bezos may be, he is also, to his great credit, the leader of a company that is as ruthlessly committed to fostering competition within the Kindle Store as it is to competing with other businesses in the ebook sector. The result for customers in the Kindle Store as elsewhere in AmazonWorld is like to be ever greater selection and, over the long haul, ever better pricing.

Related posts:

Kindle Bestsellers by Category

Kindle Accessories

Kindle Store Bestsellers

Kindle Store Bestsellers: Newspapers Only

Kindle Store Bestsellers: Blogs Only

Kindle Store Bestsellers: Magazines & Journals Only

Kindle Store Bestsellers: Books Only

Kindle Store Bestsellers: Fiction

Kindle Store Bestsellers: Nonfiction

Kindle Store Bestsellers: Hot New Releases (This includes titles released within the past 90 days).

Kindle Store Bestsellers: Movers & Shakers (This highly volatile hour-by-hour list shows the titles from the top 400 Kindle store bestsellers that have experienced the greatest percentage jump in sales rankings during the past 24 hours. For instance, a title that has jumped from #7 to #2 will show a 250% climb).

Kindle Store Bestsellers: Publishing & Books

Kindle Store Bestsellers: Literary Fiction


Kindle Store Bestsellers: Contemporary Fiction

Kindle Advice & How-to Bestsellers

Kindle Arts & Entertainment Bestsellers

Kindle Biographies & Memoirs Bestsellers

Kindle Business & Investing Bestsellers

Kindle Children’s Book Bestsellers

Kindle Computers & Internet Bestsellers

Kindle Fantasy Bestsellers

Kindle Fiction Bestsellers

Kindle History Bestsellers

Kindle Humor Bestsellers

Kindle Literary Fiction Bestsellers

Kindle Mystery & Thrillers Bestsellers

Kindle Nonfiction Bestsellers

Kindle Parenting & Families Bestsellers

Kindle Politics & Current Events Bestsellers

Kindle Reference Bestsellers

Kindle Religion & Spirituality Bestsellers

Kindle Science Bestsellers

Kindle Science Fiction Bestsellers

Kindle Sports Bestsellers

Kindle Travel Bestsellers

Amazon to Drop Free Books from Kindle Bestseller List

To mangle a snarky old line from my not-so-recent adolescence, I took a picture of the zero-priced books at the top of the Kindle Store’s Bestseller list (at right), because it will last longer.

That’s right. Rachel Deahl of Publisher’s Weekly has reported today that an Amazon representative told her that, within “a few weeks,” Amazon “will be splitting its Kindle bestseller list, creating one list for paid books and another for free titles.”

As of today, the top 10 titles on the Kindle bestseller list, and 33 of the top 50, are either currently free or achieved their lofty ranking due to being free until the past couple of days.

The prospect of a bifurcated list will certainly create a different look and feel for the Kindle Store sales rankings, and could conceivable reduce the incentive for publishers and authors to offer free promotional downloads of some of their Kindle-formatted books. But if Deahl’s report is true the new top 10 will soon include names like Larsson, Patterson, Turow, Stocket, Quindlen, Coben, Bush, Baldacci, Junger, and Rachman.

We’ll be back soon with some analysis of how this reported change will fit in with a number of major changes that are now in the process of occurring in the Kindle catalog.

Here’s Something That You Can Do on the iPad That You Can’t Do on the Kindle: Shop at Amazon

Irony of ironies.

I had an on-air conversation with Jeff Bezos in June 2008 where he told me that it was only “an engineering issue” that kept Amazon from offering Kindle owners the ability to use their Kindles to synch up with the rest of the Amazon store so that we could order other products from music to maple syrup.

Windwalker: Are you trying not to overdo it commercially or is that an engineering issue?

Bezos: Yeah, it’s an engineering issue. Those are the kinds of things we’re working on. We want complete integration between Kindle the device and Amazon.com the website.

Well, I know those Amazon engineers have a lot on their plates, but thaty was nearly two years ago! Today the company announced that it has unleashed an iPad-optimized Amazon Shopping App that will allow iPad owners to do any of the following:

  • Purchase using Amazon’s 1-Click ordering and Amazon Prime
  • Track packages or modify orders using the Your Account feature
  • Receive personalized recommendations
  • View editorial and customer reviews
  • Browse Amazon’s Bestsellers, Gold Box Deal of the Day and Lightning Deals
  • Access Wish List and Universal Wish List
  • Watch movie trailers and listen to song samples

Very cool, of course. But what are Kindle owners? Chopped liver?

Here’s the guts of Amazon’s press release this morning:

Amazon.com Announces Shopping App for iPad
 SEATTLE, May 12, 2010 (BUSINESS WIRE) –Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ: AMZN) today announced its Amazon App for iPad is now available on the App Store. Optimized for the iPad, the app lets users search and discover products offered by Amazon and thousands of other retailers and includes popular features customers have come to know and trust including bestsellers, daily deals, robust product information, recommendations and customer reviews.

“Following the launch of the Amazon App for iPhone and iPod touch, we’ve used our customers’ feedback to help us build a fun and intuitive shopping destination on the iPad,” said Sam Hall, director of Amazon Mobile. “This application offers customers a unique, interactive experience that takes full advantage of the visual and tactile nature of the iPad.”
Key features of the Amazon App for iPad include:

  • Purchase using Amazon’s 1-Click ordering and Amazon Prime
  • Track packages or modify orders using the Your Account feature
  • Receive personalized recommendations
  • View editorial and customer reviews
  • Browse Amazon’s Bestsellers, Gold Box Deal of the Day and Lightning Deals
  • Access Wish List and Universal Wish List
  • Watch movie trailers and listen to song samples

The Amazon App for iPad is available for free on the iPad App Store or at www.itunes.com/appstore.

Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alert for Wednesday, May 12: AmazonEncore Provides a Portal to Future Reading Delights with Eric Kraft’s The Static of the Spheres, and a Pre-Order Blockbuster from Steve Martini

Today’s newest addition to the ranks of free promotional titles in the Kindle Store marks the first time, to my knowledge, when Amazon has offered a freebie on book published by AmazonEncore, their own in-house publishing imprint. And with Eric Kraft’s The Static of the Spheres, Amazon is living up to one of the most exciting and challenging promises of the Kindle platform and also of its AmazonEncore initiative by providing us with a delightful free introduction to a fiction writer who is new to many readers but will keep us coming back. I “discovered” this free promotion last night around 7 p.m. after walking up to my local indie coffee shop with my iPad. When I saw that it was only novella-length I decided to give it an immediate read, and I’ll just say that (1) I’ll be reading more by Kraft and his protagonist Peter Leroy today and tomorrow and all weekend; and (2) my initial notion that I was reading some quirky memoir about short-wave radio was quickly swept away. Bravo!

So, again, here are links to a dozen nicely priced Eric Kraft offerings, beginning with the the free Kindle edition of The Static of the Spheres:

The Static of the Spheres by Eric Kraft (Kindle Edition – July 5, 2009)Kindle Book
Buy: $0.00
 Product Details
The Fox and the Clam by Eric Kraft (Kindle Edition – Aug. 31, 2009)Kindle Book
Buy: $1.00
The Girl with the White Fur Muff by Eric Kraft (Kindle Edition – Feb. 18, 2010)Kindle Book
Buy: $1.00
Take the Long Way Home by Eric Kraft (Kindle Edition – Mar. 14, 2010)Kindle Book
Buy: $1.00
Call Me Larry by Eric Kraft (Kindle Edition – Mar. 4, 2010)Kindle Book
Buy: $1.00
My Mother Takes a Tumble by Eric Kraft (Kindle Edition – June 14, 2009)Kindle Book
Buy: $1.00
Do Clams Bite? by Eric Kraft (Kindle Edition – June 17, 2009)Kindle Book
Buy: $1.00
Life on the Bolotomy by Eric Kraft (Kindle Edition – June 27, 2009)Kindle Book
Buy: $1.00
The Young Tars by Eric Kraft (Kindle Edition – Mar. 4, 2010)Kindle Book
Buy: $1.00
At Home with the Glynns by Eric Kraft (Kindle Edition – Mar. 15, 2010)Kindle Book
Buy: $2.99
Where Do You Stop? by Eric Kraft (Kindle Edition – Mar. 23, 2010)Kindle Book
Buy: $3.69
What a Piece of Work I Am by Eric Kraft (Kindle Edition – Apr. 29, 2010)Kindle Book
Buy: $5.59

Meanwhile….

Check out our new listing of the first 30 months of month-by-month Kindle Store bestsellers here: Kindle Store Bestsellers, Month-by-Month for the First 30 Months

Here are our other updated free promotional listings in the Kindle Store as of May 12:

Tuesday: Steve Martini’s Shadow of Power Free Pre-Order with Bonus Material

by Steve Martini – Pre-order for May 25, 2010 Release

Kindle Price: $0.00 & includes wireless delivery via Amazon Whispernet
Sold by: HarperCollins Publishers
This price was set by the publisher

Text-to-Speech: Enabled

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 655 KB
  • Simultaneous Device Usage: Up to 5 simultaneous devices, per publisher limits
  • Publisher: HarperCollins e-books (May 25, 2010)
  • Sold by: HarperCollins Publishers

Monday: Four new Christian titles hit that sweet zero-price promotional spot in the Kindle Store to begin the new week, and a couple of them look pretty interesting. All are text-to-speech enabled, which means that you have your Kindle read them aloud to you, or try out yesterday’s Kindle Nation Daily Tip to set up hands-free reading with automatic page turning.

 
Prayer by Philip Yancey

A Proper Pursuit by Lynn Austin

  Colters’ Wife, an erotic western romance novella by Maya Banks. Banks is a good example of a prolific author who has hit the sweet spot and found her own connections with readers with her nicely priced Kindle offerings, including Amber EyesStay With Me, Seducing Simon, Reckless: A Red Hot Summer Story, Sweet Seduction, Sweet Persuasion, Sweet Surrender, Love Me, Still, Brazen, Be With Me, The Tycoon’s Pregnant Mistress, and her Unbroken series (Understood (Unbroken Book 1), Overheard (Unbroken, Book 2), and Undenied (Unbroken, Book 3)).
 
Breach of Trust by DiAnn Mills

Snow Melts in Spring by Deborah Vogts

 Tender Graces by Kathryn Magendie

by Martha I. Finney and Duncan Mathison

Swashbuckling Fantasy: 10 Thrilling Tales of Magical Adventure, a Sampler from Simon & Schuster

Nothing’s been ordinary in the world of ebooks lately, but ordinarily, lately, when you see the line “This price was set by the publisher” on a Kindle ebook’s product page it is Amazon’s way of letting us know  that there’s bad news adjacent to it in the form of one of those special “agency price-fixing model” prices. $12? $15? One never knows.

But here’s a breath of fresh air! Big Six publisher Simon & Schuster has done some creative thinking about how to leverage the power of “free” in the Kindle Store and used the agency price-fixing model to try something new, with a substantial volume of freebies under the lusty title Swashbuckling Fantasy: 10 Thrilling Tales of Magical Adventure.

Just what do I mean by substantial? 

  • First, these are 10 tales by 10 authors each with her own substantial oeuvre of fantasy titles already, so of course the authors and the publisher are hoping that this process will work for them and lead readers to their other work in the same way that we have seen work so effectively with our own Free Kindle Nation Shorts program. The authors represented are Jane Johnson, Linda BuckleyArcher, Scott Westerfeld, Kai Meyer, Alan Snow, Anne Ursu, Obert Skye, Margaret Peterson Haddix, D.J. MacHale and Holly Black.
  • Second, for those of you who, like me, take a look at file size and “number of locations” in an ebooks metadata and free sample before committing to a book, you’ll recognize that the offering’s file size of 1320 KB and its 3,936 “locations” spell a book of significant size and virtual weight.
  • Third, my quick perusal of the full text indicates that, unlike many “sampler” offerings, these 10 tales appear to be just that — tales, self-contained short stories or novellas — rather than frustrating tastes of an excerpted chapter or two.

So, bravo, Simon & Schuster! This is just the kind of thing that the big publishers should be doing to experiment with and begin to figure out the retail marketing power of distinctive pricing and free-to-paid linkages, so we’ve got your back if some of the other agency price-fixing model publishers whine that you are engaging in competitive and adversarial behavior.

And, of course, we still have dozens of other freebies in the Kindle Store, in case you’ve missed any of them.