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From the Kindle Nation Mailbag: “Looking to buy a previously loved Kindle”

Thanks to Facebook friend and author Imogen Rose for sharing this question:

Looking to buy a previously loved Kindle (to be able to check my formatting) , so if you know anyone who is selling, let me know!

Imogen, by the way, is the bestselling author of the Portal Chronicles, a time travel fantasy which, her website says, will appeal to fans of Twilight, Evermore and Sookie Stackhouse.

Just happens that it is a great time to save over 15% on refurbished Kindles sold directly by Amazon, Imogen, including:

These refurbished units are covered by Amazon’s free 30-day return policy and have generally been described by buyers as “just like new,” but it is worth noting that, rather strangely, they are shipped without the Kindle AC adaptor plug, which will mean you’d have to spend another $9-$10 on something like this.

While I personally believe that a Kindle is a must-own for any author for all kinds of reasons, it is also worth mentioning that, while you’re waiting for your Kindle, there’s another work-around available to you to check your formatting, which is to check it out on a PC or Mac by downloading one or more of the free Kindle apps that are available for just about everything but a pre-21st century toaster over these days.

Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alert, Step-by-Step Tip: Amazon & Open Library Collaborate So You Can Send Tens of Thousands of Free eBooks Directly to Your Kindle via Whispernet

By Stephen Windwalker, Kindle Nation Daily

The process of sending any of tens of thousands of free classic books directly to your Kindle just got easier and more seamless than ever thanks to a terrific new collaboration between Amazon and the Internet Archive’s “Open Library” project. As Kindle Nation readers know from this post last year, we were already able to download about two million Internet Archives titles to our computers for transfer via USB connection.

Now you can find any of tens of thousands of free ebooks on the “Open Library” website and send them directly and wirelessly to your Kindle. (Thanks to Len Edgerly for tweeting a heads up.) There are nearly half a million ebooks in the Open Library archive, but not all are available free).

The process is simple:

  • Search for a title at Open Library. You can search by author or subject, click on the “More search options” link near the upper right corner of the page, or use the very cool Publishing History tool to see all the accessible ebooks published in any year in the past two millennia.
  • Click on any title that is accompanied by a “Read” icon like the one shown at the right, and on the next page click on the “Send to Kindle” link for any edition of the title, as seen at the right of the screen shot below for F. Scott Fitzgerald’s early novel This Side of Paradise:

That click will take you directly to Amazon where, after you sign into your account (if necessary), Amazon will show you a screen like the one below to inform you about its Whispernet personal document policies and fees and prompt you to select the Kindle to which you want to send the title. Once you click “continue,” the free book should be visible on your Kindle home screen within 60 seconds.

If you’d like to peruse the kind of great selections that are available in this free archive, here are a couple of hundred titles that came up first when I typed “Scribners” into the search field. Click on a title or cover image to get to the “Send to Kindle” link, on an author’s name to see other works by the author, or on the “Read” link to begin reading the text right on your computer. Scroll down to the bottom or click on this link to make a donation to Open Library.

Congratulations to The Kindle Chronicles for 100 Great Podcasts!

Congratulations and big-time kudos are due Len Edgerly for a major milestone in putting up the 100th show of The Kindle Chronicles’ regular Friday podcast.

Check out this week’s centennial podcast here, and while you are at it you might even want to join me in signing up to become an honorary The Kindle Chronicles subscriber. Len’s energy and great reporting in serving the Kindle community are equaled only by his discipline in getting the podcast out on deadline every week for nearly two years now, and I was happy to have the chance to commit myself to supporting his efforts with a dollar a week.

After all, that’s all it took to get me VIP status with The Kindle Chronicles. There may have been times in the past when I would never have joined any club that would have me as a member, but VIP status at TKC? That’s a different kindle of fish, and Len’s gain is Starbucks’ loss.

Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alert for Friday, June 18: A Brand New Harlequin Teen Title, and Dozens More

We’ve got a brand new Harlequin Teen story leading today’s list of dozens of free promotional titles in the Kindle Store!
Winter

Winter’s Passage by Julie Kagawa

Meghan Chase used to be an ordinary girl…until she discovered that she is really a faery princess. After escaping from the clutches of the deadly Iron fey, Meghan must follow through on her promise to return to the equally dangerous Winter Court with her forbidden love, Prince Ash. But first, Meghan has one request: that they visit Puck–Meghan’s best friend and servant of her father, King Oberon–who was gravely injured defending Meghan from the Iron Fey.
Yet Meghan and Ash’s detour does not go unnoticed. They have caught the attention of an ancient, powerful hunter–a foe that even Ash may not be able to defeat….
An eBook exclusive story from Julie Kagawa’s Iron Fey series.

Here’s another L. Ron Hubbard story, free in the Kindle store, to add to yesterday’s listing of The Last Drop:

 L. Ron Hubbard

Tuesday: The free promotional titles just keep on coming in the Kindle Store. Today we have L. Ron Hubbard’s The Last Drop and Moira Rogers’ Cry Sanctuary, the leadoff novel in her Red Rock Pass series.

Cry Sanctuary: Book 1 of Red Rock Pass series

Two mid-day additions to our updated list of dozens of free Kindle promotional titles:

Violet Dawn
A new daybook from inspirational author Zig Ziglar and a popular religious novel start the week’s free Kindle Store promotional listings:

by Dwight “Ike” Reighard 5.0 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
(Love Comes Softly Series, Book 1) by Janette Oke 4.8 out of 5 stars (104 customer reviews) 

Also, if you are a fan of Kindle Store bargains, don’t miss this weekend post:

Kindle Nation Daily Bargain Book Alert: 15 Great Reads from 79 Cents to $1.99!

Here’s the rest of our updated list of free promotional titles in the Kindle Store as of June 16:

It’s Here: The Authentic Moleskine® Kindle 2 Cover!

Moleskine® Kindle Cover with Reporter-Style Notebook (Fits 6″ Display, Latest Generation Kindle) Black – $39.99

From the product page:

From Moleskine, the legendary manufacturer of books-yet-to-be written, comes the newest analog-digital hybrid tool: the Moleskine Kindle cover. The features and style of this cover are classic Moleskine: sleek rounded corners, strong elastic band, and the iconic smooth black cover. The cover protects and cushions the Kindle device, in a silhouette that’s instantly classic and contemporary. It’s a simple design beloved by writers, artists, and readers for over a century.

Inside, contrasting microsuede lining adds an extra layer of protection, while it echoes the familiar cream-colored pages of a Moleskine notebook. Four double-stitched corner elastic bands hold the device in place and allow access to all buttons and inputs.

Included in every cover is a package of two reporter-style Volant notebooks, created exclusively for the Kindle and designed for the reader who enjoys jotting notes and insights (and who is constantly reaching for a Moleskine notebook). These slim notebooks feature a smooth black cover, rounded corners, and blank ivory pages inside. The notebook slides into a pocket on the inside cover of the case. Additional refills may be purchased separately.

Technical Details

  • Signature simplicity and style, made exclusively for Kindle by Moleskine® (fits 6″ Latest Generation Kindle)
  • Slim profile cover with elegant black hardcover jacket, rounded corners, iconic black elastic closure, and subtle embossed logo on back
  • Interior features plush suede lining and double-stitched corner elastic straps to keep Kindle in place
  • Includes a Moleskine® reporter-style plain notebook opposite the Kindle
  • Allows complete access to all ports and buttons

Despite Agency Model, Indications That Average Price per eBook Transaction Appears to Be Going Down

By Stephen Windwalker, Editor of kindle Nation Daily

Publishing consultant Mike Shatzkin made an interesting observation yesterday in an exchange that he and I had on his IdeaLog blog:

We should long remember that in the Spring and early Summer of 2010, prices of ebooks actually went *up*. I don’t think we’ll look back five years from now and see that as a frequent occurrence.

He and I agree that rising ebook prices probably won’t be “a frequent occurrence” over the next five years. But even though he was basing the comment in part on my data showing that the number of Kindle store bestsellers priced above $10 had grown by over 50 percent in the last few weeks, I have to admit that I am still wondering if it is really true that ebook prices are going up.

The latest head-scratching moment came with today’s release of April book sales numbers by the Association of American Publishers (AAP): 

E-book sales jumped up 127.4 percent for the month ($27.4 million), reflecting an increase of 217.3 percent for the year-to-date.

That sounds impressive, but here at Kindle Nation we try to make a point of looking inside and behind the numbers, and pardon me for a little sarcasm in the first of these, but two tweets I posted earlier this afternoon kind of sum up why I’m scratching my head:

You would think that it’s a sign that ebook prices are going up when the number of Kindle Store bestsellers climbs over $10 climbs from 17 on May 22 to 26 on June 14, but there are other signs here that the average price paid for ebooks may even be headed in the other, i.e., downward, direction.


Let’s try to line up the data points here:

  • The agency price-fixing model and its concomitant higher ebook prices took effect April 1. 
  • The iPad was released on April 3 and sold a million units in April and another million in May.
  • Steve Jobs announced that there were 5 million ebooks downloaded from the iBooks Store by early June, or about 2.5 ebooks per iPad.
  • Jobs said in early June that iBooks had Apple’s five largest iBooks vendor publishers showed iBooks to have a 22% share of their total ebook sales, which we extrapolated might mean that Apple had approximately 10 to 12 percent of the total ebook market.
  • Given the popularity of the iPad and its iBooks and Kindle apps, I am surprised that total ebook sales actually declined from $28.5 million in March to $27.4 million in April.
  • If iBooks had 12% of the total ebook market in April, that would translate into about $3 million of the ebook sales tracked by AAP. 
  • If, to make a very rough guesstimate, 1.5 million of those first 5 million iBooks downloads (for April and May) came in April, then the average retail price paid for an iBooks download in April would have been about $2. To come at the same equation from a different direction, if iBooks received the aforementioned $3 million in revenue from 300,000 paid books that had an average price of $10, that would mean (for the purposes of this illustrative model) that 1.2 million of the ebooks downloaded in April from the iBooks store, or about 80 percent, were free.

All of this, of course, is highly speculative, and it is unlikely that the principals will give us hard numbers with which to fine-tune the analysis. But if any of this interests you, and you try to work your way with me through the numbers that we do have, I’ll be surprised if you are not also left wondering whether ebook prices, at the most meaningful level of the average price paid for actual transactions, are going up or down.

So, with all of this, what do I make of the data I presented yesterday showing that the number of high-priced books in the Kindle Store bestseller list is increasing significantly? I’m still scratching my head, to tell you the truth, but I’ll make three observations:

  • We do know that the overall number of titles in the Kindle Store is growing dramatically month over month, and that the Kindle Store is long-tail heaven for its search and browse infrastructure and, well, it’s highly efficient use of shelf space. Consequently I would not be surprised to find that the overall sales footprint of the top 100 paid bestsellers in the Kindle Store is in a steady state of decline relative to the sales footprint of the total Kindle catalog of over 600,000 titles, due in part to the higher prices of many bestsellers.
  • Ebook buyers and readers are certainly driven by content and quality and continue to show willingness to buy some books at higher price points, but if the more general patterns involve greater customer price-consciousness, it’s an ominous sign for the agency model publishers. Given the huge availability of free books for the Kindle, the iPad, the Nook, and all the other Kindle-compatible devices, as well as hundreds of thousands of titles priced below $9.99, it seems likely that customers are also feeling more and more empowered to assert their own views of reasonable pricing on the marketplace.
  • The bottom line, I think, is that authors, publishers, and retailers will find ways to increase ebook sales, and price competition is likely to be restored to the ebook marketplace well within the five-year time frame mentioned by Mike Shatzkin.

Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alert for Wednesday, June 16: L. Ron Hubbard Again, and Dozens More

Here’s another L. Ron Hubbard story, free in the Kindle store, to add to yesterday’s listing of The Last Drop:

 L. Ron Hubbard

Tuesday: The free promotional titles just keep on coming in the Kindle Store. Today we have L. Ron Hubbard’s The Last Drop and Moira Rogers’ Cry Sanctuary, the leadoff novel in her Red Rock Pass series.

Cry Sanctuary: Book 1 of Red Rock Pass series

Two mid-day additions to our updated list of dozens of free Kindle promotional titles:

Violet Dawn
A new daybook from inspirational author Zig Ziglar and a popular religious novel start the week’s free Kindle Store promotional listings:

by Dwight “Ike” Reighard 5.0 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
(Love Comes Softly Series, Book 1) by Janette Oke 4.8 out of 5 stars (104 customer reviews) 

Also, if you are a fan of Kindle Store bargains, don’t miss this weekend post:

Kindle Nation Daily Bargain Book Alert: 15 Great Reads from 79 Cents to $1.99!

Here’s the rest of our updated list of free promotional titles in the Kindle Store as of June 16: