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Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alert, Sunday, July 18: An Irresistible New Novel Skewering the Fashion World, Plus Karen Fenech’s Thriller GONE (Today’s Sponsor), and Links to Over a Hundred Free Promotional Kindle Store Titles

If you liked The Devil Wears Prada, you’ll love the latest addition to our Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alerts, says one prominent reviewer….

But first, a word from … Today’s Sponsor

Gone_Amazon.jpg

“Karen Fenech tells a taut tale with great characters and lots of twists. This is a writer you need to read.” — USA Today Bestselling Author Maureen Child
GONE by Karen Fenech – $2.99
“Karen Fenech’s GONE is a real page turner front to back.  You won’t be able to put this one down!”
 — New York Times Bestselling Author Kat Martin

 
FBI Special Agent Clare Marshall was separated from her sister Beth in childhood when their mother tried to kill them. Now Clare learns that Beth lives in the small town of Farley, South Carolina but when she goes there to reunite with Beth, Clare discovers her sister is missing and that someone in the town is responsible for her disappearance.
Clare receives an offer to help with the search from fellow FBI Special Agent Jake Sutton. The offer is too good to refuse, though that is exactly what Clare wants to do.  Jake is Clare’s former lover, a man she cannot forget and who has an agenda of his own.
Now while Clare tracks her sister, someone is tracking Clare, and finding her sister may cost Clare her life.
Click here to download GONE (or a free sample) to your Kindle, iPad, iPhone, iPod Touch, BlackBerry, Android-compatible, PC or Mac and start reading within 60 seconds!

Each day’s list is sponsored by one paid title, and of course, we encourage you to support our sponsors. Some of these paid titles will be from our own Kindle Nation Daily press (an imprint of Harvard Perspectives Press), while others will be paid titles from other authors and publishers.

Authors, Publishers, Kindle Accessory Manufacturers:

Interested in learning more about sponsorship? Just click on this link for more information:

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*     *     *

Free Listings!

Falling Out Of Fashion
by Karen Yampolsky

From Publishers Weekly

Magazine junkies who remember the original Jane will devour this cheeky roman à clef by Jane Pratt’s former assistant of nine years. Unlike Anna Wintour’s alter ego in The Devil Wears Prada, Yampolsky’s alter ex-boss is an off-the-rack heroine. Raised on a commune by inattentive hippie parents, Georgia girl Jill White was an outcast at her New England prep school before a predictably eye-opening stint at Bennington. After Jill descends on New York, a succession of magazine gigs leads her to editing Cheeky (i.e., ’90s grrrl glossy Sassy) and, eventually, Jill. At that eponymous publication, idealistic Jill goes up against bottom-line obsessed Nestrom Media (a thinly veiled Condé Nast). Fictionalizations of Pratt’s personal and professional moments as editor-in-chief add frisson: Sassy‘s skewering profile of actress Tiffani-Amber Thiessen becomes Cheeky‘s roasting of “Kelli Hyer-Burke”; there are plenty of other cameos. In the end, Jill comes off as a sometimes selfish but mostly likable woman who gets beat by corporate magazine land. Survivors of the era, however, may question Jill’s claim that she “coined the term grunge.”
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
 


The Wicked House of Rohan

Click here for a complete listing of our updated free promotional titles in the Kindle Store as of July 18!

Here’s a list of the categories in today’s Free Book Alert:

Crime and Suspense
Writing and Publishing
Children/Young Adult/Teen
Contemporary Fiction
Nonfiction/Leadership/Change/Reference/Essay

Christian Spirituality and Christian Fiction

Science Fiction and Fantasy

Historical Fiction and Romance 
Erotica
Gay and Lesbian 

Samples
Memoir, Biography, Personal Story

(Sponsorship can take a number of different forms and implies no endorsement either of or by Kindle Nation or a sponsoring company or individual.)

Scary Saturday, a Regular Weekly Feature of Free Kindle Nation Shorts. July 17: “Them’s Good Eats” by Jack Kilborn/J.A. Konrath

 Welcome to Scary Saturday for July 17, 2010
For the past year our Free Kindle Nation Shorts program has been connecting thousands of Kindle readers with emerging and established writers, and we’re proud to have helped many writers of distinction climb the Kindle Store bestseller lists. One of those authors has been Joe Konrath, and it has been a lot of fun to watch such a talented storyteller become one of the most successful fiction writers in the Kindlesphere. Joe has also been a very important trailblazer in the world of writing and independent publishing, so I was especially pleased when he decided recently that he wanted to give something back to the citizens of Kindle Nation by providing the stories on which we are drawing to initiate a new Free Kindle Nation Shorts feature called “Scary Saturday.”
We’ll continue to showcase many other writers here at Free Kindle Nation Shorts, but on many coming Saturdays we’ll treat you to truckloads of terror with the horror fiction of J.A. “Joe” Konrath. We’ll also provide links to his current and coming Kindle books and we hope you’ll be brave enough to turn all the lights on and keep reading.
Check out the latest bestsellers by J.A. Konrath, just $2.99 in the Kindle Store!

The Newbie’s Guide to Publishing

(Everything A Writer Needs To Know)


or scroll to the end of the story to read more about Joe Konrath
*     *     *     *    * 
 “Them’s Good Eats”
 
a short story by Jack Kilborn, J.A. Konrath
Horror Stories

Copyright © 2010 Joe Konrath and published here with his permission

Author’s note: I had this terrible little story idea stuck in my head for almost twenty years, and finally put it down on paper for the collection Gratia Placente published by Apex Digest. One of my rare jumps into science-fiction, though this is more horrific black humor than sci-fi.
-J.K.

*     *     *     *    * 


“Damn, Jimmy Bob, these are damn good cracklins.”
Earl’s face-wrinkled and sporting three days’ worth of gray whiskers-glistened with a fine sheen of lard. A hot Georgia breeze blew smells of tilled earth and manure, but the overpowering scent was pig skins, fresh from the deep fryer. Earl eagerly reached for the plate Jimmy Bob held out, a pile of pork rinds stacked onto a grease-soaked paper towel.
“Thanks, Earl,” Jimmy Bob said. “Got me a new way of preparation.”
“Tell me.” Earl scooped two more into his mouth and chewed so fast he risked a tongue severing. “I been eating cracklins since I was weened off the tit, ain’t never had any this good before.”
“It’s a secret.”
“Chicken shit. Tell me or I’ll beat it out of you.”
Jimmy Bob snorted, a sound not unlike a fat bullfrog croaking. He slapped Earl on the back, hard enough to make the old man’s dentures slup off his gums and out of his mouth. The teeth bounced onto the dirty wooden porch.
Jimmy Bob stared down at Earl, a man half his weight and forty years his senior, and smiled big.
“Well, I wouldn’t want to take a beating, Earl. The secret, my good buddy, is skinning the piggies while they still alive and kicking.”
“Doe thip?” Earl said. He’d been going for “no shit” but hadn’t stuck his teeth back in yet.
Jimmy Bob held up his hand, preacherman-style. “That’s the God’s truth, Earl. Something about them porkers struggling and squealing before they die, tenderizes their skins and imparts that extra tangy sensation. Longer they struggle, tastier they get.”
Earl wiped his falsies on his bib overalls and slurped them into his eating hole.
“You’re putting me on,” Earl said.
“You got a dead spider in your bridgework, Earl.”
Earl picked out a dry Daddy Longlegs and flicked it over his shoulder, then repeated his prior statement.
“I’m honest as the day is scorchin’, Earl. Ain’t just the cracklings, neither. Bacon comes out so juicy it melts in your mouth, and you can cut the pork chop with a spoon they’re so tender.”
“Now I know you’re funning me, Jim Bob. Ain’t no way you can carve up a hog while it’s still kicking. It would run like the dickens, and the blood would make it all slippery.”
“I built me a hog rack, out of wood. Keeps it locked in place while I do the carving. Put on the salt and vinegar while they’re still wiggling, so it soaks in. Louder then hell, but you’re tasting the results. Want another one?”
“Hell yeah.”
Earl was reaching for more when the big silver saucer flew out from behind a fluffy white cloud, situated itself over Jimmy Bob’s porch, and hit the two men with a beam of light.
There was a moment of searing hot pain, then darkness.
#
Jimmy Bob awoke on his back. His head hurt. His last memory was of Earl, who had come over with a mason jar full of his rotgut corn shine, and he figured he had himself a granddaddy hangover. But Jimmy Bob couldn’t remember drinking any of the shine. All he could recall was eating cracklins.
He stared up at the ceiling, and realized it wasn’t his ceiling. It was silver, and curvy.
Then he noticed he was naked. Even worse, Earl was on the floor next to him, similarly declothed.
“Oh sweet Jesus, how drunk did we get?”
Jimmy Bob reached for his nether regions, but nothing down there seemed to ache from use. Thank the lord for that.
He sat up, the metal floor smooth and cool under his buttocks, and looked around. The room they were in was all silver. No furniture. No carpet. No doors or windows. No lights, even though he could see just fine. It was like being inside a giant metal can.
Then Jimmy Bob jerked, remembering the spaceship in the sky, the blinding bright light.
An unidentified flying saucer. A UFO.
Lordy, him and Earl had been ubducticated.
He nudged his old buddy.
“Earl! Get your ass up. We’re in some shit.”
Earl didn’t move.
“Goddammit, Earl!”
He shoved Earl again. Earl remained still. Jimmy Bob noticed his friend wasn’t breathing, and had taken on an unhealthy bluish tint.
Jimmy Bob knew about CPR from watching TV, and much as he didn’t want to touch lips with the older man, especially since they both were nekkid, he forced Earl’s mouth open and blew hard down the old geezer’s throat.
His breath didn’t go nowhere, no matter how hard he gusted, and Jimmy Bob squinted down and saw the big bulge in Earl’s neck.
Earl has swallowed his falsies.
Jimmy Bob stuck his finger into Earl’s mouth, tried to fish the teeth out, but they were down too far and Earl’s throat was cold and slimy and disgusting and after ten or so seconds Jimmy Bob realized he didn’t like Earl that much to begin with so he took his hand back and wiped the spit off on Earl’s thick tangle of gray chest hairs.
Jimmy Bob wondered if he should say some words, but he didn’t know no prayers and then he got really scared because he was alone-all alone-in an alien spaceship, so he tried to give Earl CPR again.
It didn’t work no better the second time, and then Jimmy Bob got up and started pacing back and forth, terrible thoughts bouncing around in his bean.
He’d seen all the movies. Starship Troopers. Independence Day. War of the Worlds. Alien. Predator. Alien vs. Predator. No good ever came out of being abducticated. The aliens were always bad guys who wanted to take over the world or eat people’s guts or hunt humans for sport or get folks pregnant in their bellies or give painful probes up the brown place.
Jimmy Bob didn’t want none of that to happen to him. He wondered why those guys that made movies never made one about an alien who came to earth and gave a lucky farmer a brand new plow. He’d watch that on the cable, for sure. But instead it was always death rays and cut-off heads.
Jimmy Bob yelled for help, loud as he could, so loud his ears hurt. No one answered.
He ran to the nearest wall, pushed against it. The surface was slippery, almost like it was covered with a fine layer of grease. He grunted with effort, but the metal was solid, immobile. Jimmy Bob walked around the room, trying to find some sort of seam, some sort of crease. Everything he touched was rock solid and perfectly smooth.
Jimmy Bob sat in the center of the room and hugged his knees to his chest. He wondered if they was still flying over earth, or if they was already in another universe, about to land on some weird planet with rivers made of acid and trees that looked like rib bones. He wondered what the aliens looked like. Tall and gray with big glowin eyes? Green and scaly with sharp fangs? Or did they have fish heads, like that commander guy in Star Wars? And what did they want from him?
Was it the butt probes?
He looked at Earl. Earl got off easy, the lucky bastard. Maybe Jimmy Bob could fish out those false teeth and choke on them himself. Not a bad idea, considering. He began to crawl towards his dead friend when he heard a buzzing sound.
It sounded like a pissed off hornet, and seemed to come from everywhere at once. Jimmy Bob looked around, tried to find the source, and noticed a pinpoint of white light on the wall. First it was a real tiny, and then it grew into a larger and larger circle until it was the size of a manhole cover.
Death ray.
Jimmy Bob crabbed backwards, trying to get away from the death ray, but there was no place to go. He retreated until he was up against the opposite wall, fists and teeth clenched, waiting for the final ZAP that would make his skeleton light up then turn him into cigarette ashes.
The ZAP didn’t come. In fact, the more he looked at the light, the more Jimmy Bob began to think it looked more like a door than a death ray.
Was this some kind of alien trick? If he went through the door, would he be hunted down like a deer, aliens in big orange coats chasing him through the woods? Would he have to fight in some alien gladiator battle? Would he be forced to squat on a probe the size of a fire plug?
Maybe none of those things. Maybe this was a chance to escape.
Jimmy Bob took a quick look at lumpy-throat Earl, then sprang to his feet and ran for the circle of light. He was almost upon it when something flew out the doorway at him.
It was large, and red, and hit him in the chest with the force of a football tackle. Jimmy Bob tumbled backwards, the weight of the thing pinning him down, blanketing him in a warm, wet goo.
Jimmy Bob screamed.
The thing on top of him also screamed, and Jimmy Bob bucked and pushed and got it off and scurried away, his eyes focusing on a creepy crimson alien, completely hairless, dripping head to toe with some kind of blood-like fluid.
No, it wasn’t blood-like. It was actual blood.
And the creature wasn’t an alien.
“No more,” it whimpered. Its voice was thick and wet.
Like Jimmy Bob, it was naked. A man. A human man. Or what was left of one. Every square inch of his body was bleeding, thick and viscous like he’d been dunked in raspberry preserves. The man lay on his back, trembling, red smudges coating the floor where he had rolled.
“Hey buddy, you okay?” Jimmy Bob asked, knowing how ridiculous it must have sounded.
“No more…please…no more…”
Jimmy Bob chewed his lower lip and looked the man over. There didn’t seem to be any main wound. Instead, his whole body was a wound. He hadn’t been skinned-Jimmy Bob didn’t see any exposed muscle or fat on the man. No, this man looked more like he’d been worked over with a cheese grater. Every square inch was raw and bloody. Even his eyelids looked scraped.
“What happened to you?” Jimmy Bob asked.
The man’s chest rose and fell. “Kill me,” he said.
“Who are you?”
“Please…kill me. I tried to…kill myself…by breaking open my head…but I always knock myself out first.”
The bleeding man lifted his head then rammed it viciously into the floor, making a hollow pinging sound.
“Are we on an alien ship?” Jimmy Bob asked.
The man’s eyes opened, startlingly white compared to the redness of his body. His eyes locked on Jimmy Bob.
“I’m begging you…kill me…”
Jimmy Bob crawled over to the man.
“Answer my questions.”
“I want to die.”
Jimmy Bob slapped him. The man howled like a dog with a toothache.
“Keep it together. I need to know what’s going on.”
Rather than reply, the man began to sob. Jimmy Bob slapped him once more. And a few times after that. It was like hitting a wet fish.
“Damn it, tell me what’s going on! Answer me!”
“I’ll…I’ll tell you…if you promise to kill me after.”
Jimmy Bob considered it. He’d never killed a man before, but if anyone needed killing, this poor bastard did. He figured he could snap his neck, if’n he got a good hold of it. Couldn’t be any harder than breaking hog necks, which he did with tasty regularity.
“Deal. Now tell me what’s happening.”
“Appealing. It’s appealing.”
The man began to sob again, and Jimmy Bob smacked him on the chest to get his attention.
“What’s appealing?”
“They…pulled them all off.”
“You’re not making sense. Start at the beginning.”
“They…caught me when I was in the woods…hunting coon. Ship. A big white light. At first I didn’t know where I was…didn’t know what had happened. They left me in this room. I don’t know…for how long. But then…they came.”
“Who?”
“Aliens. Short…like midgets. Big heads and tiny mouths. Scales instead of skin. They took me…took me to the room and…”
The man began to cry again. Jimmy Bob dug his fingernails into the man’s shoulder to help him focus.
“And what?”
“And they put me…in the machine. It…it scraped my skin off.”
“But why? Why torture you? Did they ask you questions?”
“No.”
“Were you,” Jimmy Bob winced, “probed?”
“They…they kept me in there…just long enough.”
“Long enough for what?”
“For me to bleed. Then they took me here. I thought it was over. But they came back. They always come back.”
“For what? What do they want?”
The buzzing sound began again, and the pinpoint light on the wall began to grow.
“Kill me! You promised!”
Jimmy Bob backed up to the other side of the room, fear oozing out of every pore. Two figures stepped through the light. They were short, green, with heads like watermelons and tiny little black eyes. True to form, they wore little silver suits, and held little silver ray guns.
“Get away from me, you stinking space iguanas!” yelled Jimmy Bob.
They shot their little guns, and Jimmy Bob was paralyzed where he stood, his muscles locked by an unpleasant tingle of electricity. Space tasers. He strained to move but couldn’t.
The aliens approached, walking in a strange, waddling gait, as if their oversized heads were threatening to tip them over. Jimmy Bob noticed childlike, almost delicate, noses and mouths on their broad faces, and their black rat eyes had a glint of red to them. He watched as they went to Earl, poked him with their clawed fingers, and then spoke rapidly to each other in some foreign space language that sounded a lot like that singing chipmunk cartoon. They didn’t look happy.
Jimmy Bob tried to speak, but his jaw felt like it had been wired shut and he could only manage a few grunts. If only he could talk, maybe he could get out of this. Reason with them. Or bribe them. Maybe they’d like Jimmy Bob’s complete collection of state quarters, each coin in mint condition and sealed in a protective plastic case. Or maybe they’d want his grandma’s antique sterling silver serving set, complete except for a single salad fork that he broke adjusting the carb on his Chevy.
Jimmy Bob tried to say, “Silverware,” but only a grunt came out. They didn’t seem impressed. Their little iguana claws latched onto his wrists and pulled him forward with amazing ease. Jimmy Bob noticed for the first time that he was floating a few inches about the floor, and they tugged him along as if he were a balloon. The aliens maneuvered him through the opening, and he caught a last glimpse of his bleeding cellmate, who had resumed bashing his own head into the floor.
Jimmy Bob was pulled through a large metal tube, first right, then left, then down a gradual incline sort of like those tube slides at Chuck E. Cheese. The aliens kept chittering to each other, and one of them patted Jimmy Bob on the thigh and smiled.
Maybe this will be okay, Jimmy Bob thought. Maybe they won’t hurt me.
A few seconds later, Jimmy Bob was placed into a large upright box, which closed around him like a coffin and dipped him into complete darkness.
Then, agony.
At first, it felt like being burned alive. But there wasn’t any heat. The pain was the same, though, every nerve in his body firing at once. It was as if someone was using a power sander on his body, scraping every inch from head to toe. There was even a probe, but it felt more like a giant drill bit, coring out his unhappy place. Jimmy Bob screamed in his throat, screamed until he was sure it bled like the rest of him.
After an unknown amount of time, Jimmy Bob passed out.
He came to while being pulled back through the hallway, and then shot, like a rocket, back through the doorway and back into the original room. He hit the floor with a wet splat, and rolled onto his belly, the pain driving him mad, eating him alive. He was no longer frozen by the ray gun taser, but he dared not twitch because even the slightest movement was torture.
“Kill me,” someone said.
He glanced right, his eyes already crusting with dried blood, and saw his cellmate.
Jimmy Bob asked, “Why are they doing this?” but it came out garbled-even his tongue had been scraped raw.
“Been here…weeks…maybe months. They use…an IV…so we don’t die…”
“Why?” Jimmy Bob asked again.
“Snacks.”
Jimmy Bob wasn’t sure he heard right.
“What?”
Categories Books

A Red-Hot Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alert, Just for Today, July 17: All Tied Up: Pleasure Inn, Book 1,” plus we even have an erotic “Today’s Sponsor”, and links to many more

WARNING: Graphic Sexual Content, just for today. Mature Readers Only.

No need for a brown paper bag with today’s Free Book Alert, because just for today we’re giving fair warning right up front that we’re sharing some especially adult content that’s free for you to read in the privacy of your own Kindle….

But first, a word from … Today’s Steamy Sponsor


by Kendall Swan
Included in this anthology are 5 erotic short stories that, according to the publisher, “will get you hot and bothered and make you wish for real life to be as hot and sexy as it is Kendall’s stories.”


First up is NAKED Slumber Party–only available here:
Serena is having Ashley over to spend the night at her house. Ashley is supposed to sneak out to meet her boyfriend, but things don’t go as planned.


Also included are :

  • Introduction
  • Validation Sex
  • NAKED Hairdresser
  • NAKED Massage

Each day’s list is sponsored by one paid title, and of course, we encourage you to support our sponsors. Some of these paid titles will be from our own Kindle Nation Daily press (an imprint of Harvard Perspectives Press), while others will be paid titles from other authors and publishers.We do not censor our sponsors.

Click here for a complete listing of our updated free promotional titles in the Kindle Store as of July 17!

Here’s a list of the categories in today’s Free Book Alert:

Crime and Suspense
Writing and Publishing
Children/Young Adult/Teen
Contemporary Fiction
Nonfiction/Leadership/Change/Reference/Essay

Christian Spirituality and Christian Fiction

Science Fiction and Fantasy

Historical Fiction and Romance 
Erotica
Gay and Lesbian 

Samples
Memoir, Biography, Personal Story

(Sponsorship can take a number of different forms and implies no endorsement either of or by Kindle Nation or a sponsoring company or individual.)

Scary Saturday, a Regular Weekly Feature of Free Kindle Nation Shorts. July 17: “Them’s Good Eats” by Jack Kilborn/J.A. Konrath

 Welcome to Scary Saturday for July 17, 2010
For the past year our Free Kindle Nation Shorts program has been connecting thousands of Kindle readers with emerging and established writers, and we’re proud to have helped many writers of distinction climb the Kindle Store bestseller lists. One of those authors has been Joe Konrath, and it has been a lot of fun to watch such a talented storyteller become one of the most successful fiction writers in the Kindlesphere. Joe has also been a very important trailblazer in the world of writing and independent publishing, so I was especially pleased when he decided recently that he wanted to give something back to the citizens of Kindle Nation by providing the stories on which we are drawing to initiate a new Free Kindle Nation Shorts feature called “Scary Saturday.”
We’ll continue to showcase many other writers here at Free Kindle Nation Shorts, but on many coming Saturdays we’ll treat you to truckloads of terror with the horror fiction of J.A. “Joe” Konrath. We’ll also provide links to his current and coming Kindle books and we hope you’ll be brave enough to turn all the lights on and keep reading.
Check out the latest bestsellers by J.A. Konrath, just $2.99 in the Kindle Store!

The Newbie’s Guide to Publishing

(Everything A Writer Needs To Know)


or scroll to the end of the story to read more about Joe Konrath
*     *     *     *    * 
 “Them’s Good Eats”
 
a short story by Jack Kilborn, J.A. Konrath
Horror Stories

Copyright © 2010 Joe Konrath and published here with his permission

Author’s note: I had this terrible little story idea stuck in my head for almost twenty years, and finally put it down on paper for the collection Gratia Placente published by Apex Digest. One of my rare jumps into science-fiction, though this is more horrific black humor than sci-fi.
-J.K.

*     *     *     *    * 


“Damn, Jimmy Bob, these are damn good cracklins.”
Earl’s face-wrinkled and sporting three days’ worth of gray whiskers-glistened with a fine sheen of lard. A hot Georgia breeze blew smells of tilled earth and manure, but the overpowering scent was pig skins, fresh from the deep fryer. Earl eagerly reached for the plate Jimmy Bob held out, a pile of pork rinds stacked onto a grease-soaked paper towel.
“Thanks, Earl,” Jimmy Bob said. “Got me a new way of preparation.”
“Tell me.” Earl scooped two more into his mouth and chewed so fast he risked a tongue severing. “I been eating cracklins since I was weened off the tit, ain’t never had any this good before.”
“It’s a secret.”
“Chicken shit. Tell me or I’ll beat it out of you.”
Jimmy Bob snorted, a sound not unlike a fat bullfrog croaking. He slapped Earl on the back, hard enough to make the old man’s dentures slup off his gums and out of his mouth. The teeth bounced onto the dirty wooden porch.
Jimmy Bob stared down at Earl, a man half his weight and forty years his senior, and smiled big.
“Well, I wouldn’t want to take a beating, Earl. The secret, my good buddy, is skinning the piggies while they still alive and kicking.”
“Doe thip?” Earl said. He’d been going for “no shit” but hadn’t stuck his teeth back in yet.
Jimmy Bob held up his hand, preacherman-style. “That’s the God’s truth, Earl. Something about them porkers struggling and squealing before they die, tenderizes their skins and imparts that extra tangy sensation. Longer they struggle, tastier they get.”
Earl wiped his falsies on his bib overalls and slurped them into his eating hole.
“You’re putting me on,” Earl said.
“You got a dead spider in your bridgework, Earl.”
Earl picked out a dry Daddy Longlegs and flicked it over his shoulder, then repeated his prior statement.
“I’m honest as the day is scorchin’, Earl. Ain’t just the cracklings, neither. Bacon comes out so juicy it melts in your mouth, and you can cut the pork chop with a spoon they’re so tender.”
“Now I know you’re funning me, Jim Bob. Ain’t no way you can carve up a hog while it’s still kicking. It would run like the dickens, and the blood would make it all slippery.”
“I built me a hog rack, out of wood. Keeps it locked in place while I do the carving. Put on the salt and vinegar while they’re still wiggling, so it soaks in. Louder then hell, but you’re tasting the results. Want another one?”
“Hell yeah.”
Earl was reaching for more when the big silver saucer flew out from behind a fluffy white cloud, situated itself over Jimmy Bob’s porch, and hit the two men with a beam of light.
There was a moment of searing hot pain, then darkness.
#
Jimmy Bob awoke on his back. His head hurt. His last memory was of Earl, who had come over with a mason jar full of his rotgut corn shine, and he figured he had himself a granddaddy hangover. But Jimmy Bob couldn’t remember drinking any of the shine. All he could recall was eating cracklins.
He stared up at the ceiling, and realized it wasn’t his ceiling. It was silver, and curvy.
Then he noticed he was naked. Even worse, Earl was on the floor next to him, similarly declothed.
“Oh sweet Jesus, how drunk did we get?”
Jimmy Bob reached for his nether regions, but nothing down there seemed to ache from use. Thank the lord for that.
He sat up, the metal floor smooth and cool under his buttocks, and looked around. The room they were in was all silver. No furniture. No carpet. No doors or windows. No lights, even though he could see just fine. It was like being inside a giant metal can.
Then Jimmy Bob jerked, remembering the spaceship in the sky, the blinding bright light.
An unidentified flying saucer. A UFO.
Lordy, him and Earl had been ubducticated.
He nudged his old buddy.
“Earl! Get your ass up. We’re in some shit.”
Earl didn’t move.
“Goddammit, Earl!”
He shoved Earl again. Earl remained still. Jimmy Bob noticed his friend wasn’t breathing, and had taken on an unhealthy bluish tint.
Jimmy Bob knew about CPR from watching TV, and much as he didn’t want to touch lips with the older man, especially since they both were nekkid, he forced Earl’s mouth open and blew hard down the old geezer’s throat.
His breath didn’t go nowhere, no matter how hard he gusted, and Jimmy Bob squinted down and saw the big bulge in Earl’s neck.
Earl has swallowed his falsies.
Jimmy Bob stuck his finger into Earl’s mouth, tried to fish the teeth out, but they were down too far and Earl’s throat was cold and slimy and disgusting and after ten or so seconds Jimmy Bob realized he didn’t like Earl that much to begin with so he took his hand back and wiped the spit off on Earl’s thick tangle of gray chest hairs.
Jimmy Bob wondered if he should say some words, but he didn’t know no prayers and then he got really scared because he was alone-all alone-in an alien spaceship, so he tried to give Earl CPR again.
It didn’t work no better the second time, and then Jimmy Bob got up and started pacing back and forth, terrible thoughts bouncing around in his bean.
He’d seen all the movies. Starship Troopers. Independence Day. War of the Worlds. Alien. Predator. Alien vs. Predator. No good ever came out of being abducticated. The aliens were always bad guys who wanted to take over the world or eat people’s guts or hunt humans for sport or get folks pregnant in their bellies or give painful probes up the brown place.
Jimmy Bob didn’t want none of that to happen to him. He wondered why those guys that made movies never made one about an alien who came to earth and gave a lucky farmer a brand new plow. He’d watch that on the cable, for sure. But instead it was always death rays and cut-off heads.
Jimmy Bob yelled for help, loud as he could, so loud his ears hurt. No one answered.
He ran to the nearest wall, pushed against it. The surface was slippery, almost like it was covered with a fine layer of grease. He grunted with effort, but the metal was solid, immobile. Jimmy Bob walked around the room, trying to find some sort of seam, some sort of crease. Everything he touched was rock solid and perfectly smooth.
Jimmy Bob sat in the center of the room and hugged his knees to his chest. He wondered if they was still flying over earth, or if they was already in another universe, about to land on some weird planet with rivers made of acid and trees that looked like rib bones. He wondered what the aliens looked like. Tall and gray with big glowin eyes? Green and scaly with sharp fangs? Or did they have fish heads, like that commander guy in Star Wars? And what did they want from him?
Was it the butt probes?
He looked at Earl. Earl got off easy, the lucky bastard. Maybe Jimmy Bob could fish out those false teeth and choke on them himself. Not a bad idea, considering. He began to crawl towards his dead friend when he heard a buzzing sound.
It sounded like a pissed off hornet, and seemed to come from everywhere at once. Jimmy Bob looked around, tried to find the source, and noticed a pinpoint of white light on the wall. First it was a real tiny, and then it grew into a larger and larger circle until it was the size of a manhole cover.
Death ray.
Jimmy Bob crabbed backwards, trying to get away from the death ray, but there was no place to go. He retreated until he was up against the opposite wall, fists and teeth clenched, waiting for the final ZAP that would make his skeleton light up then turn him into cigarette ashes.
The ZAP didn’t come. In fact, the more he looked at the light, the more Jimmy Bob began to think it looked more like a door than a death ray.
Was this some kind of alien trick? If he went through the door, would he be hunted down like a deer, aliens in big orange coats chasing him through the woods? Would he have to fight in some alien gladiator battle? Would he be forced to squat on a probe the size of a fire plug?
Maybe none of those things. Maybe this was a chance to escape.
Jimmy Bob took a quick look at lumpy-throat Earl, then sprang to his feet and ran for the circle of light. He was almost upon it when something flew out the doorway at him.
It was large, and red, and hit him in the chest with the force of a football tackle. Jimmy Bob tumbled backwards, the weight of the thing pinning him down, blanketing him in a warm, wet goo.
Jimmy Bob screamed.
The thing on top of him also screamed, and Jimmy Bob bucked and pushed and got it off and scurried away, his eyes focusing on a creepy crimson alien, completely hairless, dripping head to toe with some kind of blood-like fluid.
No, it wasn’t blood-like. It was actual blood.
And the creature wasn’t an alien.
“No more,” it whimpered. Its voice was thick and wet.
Like Jimmy Bob, it was naked. A man. A human man. Or what was left of one. Every square inch of his body was bleeding, thick and viscous like he’d been dunked in raspberry preserves. The man lay on his back, trembling, red smudges coating the floor where he had rolled.
“Hey buddy, you okay?” Jimmy Bob asked, knowing how ridiculous it must have sounded.
“No more…please…no more…”
Jimmy Bob chewed his lower lip and looked the man over. There didn’t seem to be any main wound. Instead, his whole body was a wound. He hadn’t been skinned-Jimmy Bob didn’t see any exposed muscle or fat on the man. No, this man looked more like he’d been worked over with a cheese grater. Every square inch was raw and bloody. Even his eyelids looked scraped.
“What happened to you?” Jimmy Bob asked.
The man’s chest rose and fell. “Kill me,” he said.
“Who are you?”
“Please…kill me. I tried to…kill myself…by breaking open my head…but I always knock myself out first.”
The bleeding man lifted his head then rammed it viciously into the floor, making a hollow pinging sound.
“Are we on an alien ship?” Jimmy Bob asked.
The man’s eyes opened, startlingly white compared to the redness of his body. His eyes locked on Jimmy Bob.
“I’m begging you…kill me…”
Jimmy Bob crawled over to the man.
“Answer my questions.”
“I want to die.”
Jimmy Bob slapped him. The man howled like a dog with a toothache.
“Keep it together. I need to know what’s going on.”
Rather than reply, the man began to sob. Jimmy Bob slapped him once more. And a few times after that. It was like hitting a wet fish.
“Damn it, tell me what’s going on! Answer me!”
“I’ll…I’ll tell you…if you promise to kill me after.”
Jimmy Bob considered it. He’d never killed a man before, but if anyone needed killing, this poor bastard did. He figured he could snap his neck, if’n he got a good hold of it. Couldn’t be any harder than breaking hog necks, which he did with tasty regularity.
“Deal. Now tell me what’s happening.”
“Appealing. It’s appealing.”
The man began to sob again, and Jimmy Bob smacked him on the chest to get his attention.
“What’s appealing?”
“They…pulled them all off.”
“You’re not making sense. Start at the beginning.”
“They…caught me when I was in the woods…hunting coon. Ship. A big white light. At first I didn’t know where I was…didn’t know what had happened. They left me in this room. I don’t know…for how long. But then…they came.”
“Who?”
“Aliens. Short…like midgets. Big heads and tiny mouths. Scales instead of skin. They took me…took me to the room and…”
The man began to cry again. Jimmy Bob dug his fingernails into the man’s shoulder to help him focus.
“And what?”
“And they put me…in the machine. It…it scraped my skin off.”
“But why? Why torture you? Did they ask you questions?”
“No.”
“Were you,” Jimmy Bob winced, “probed?”
“They…they kept me in there…just long enough.”
“Long enough for what?”
“For me to bleed. Then they took me here. I thought it was over. But they came back. They always come back.”
“For what? What do they want?”
The buzzing sound began again, and the pinpoint light on the wall began to grow.
“Kill me! You promised!”
Jimmy Bob backed up to the other side of the room, fear oozing out of every pore. Two figures stepped through the light. They were short, green, with heads like watermelons and tiny little black eyes. True to form, they wore little silver suits, and held little silver ray guns.
“Get away from me, you stinking space iguanas!” yelled Jimmy Bob.
They shot their little guns, and Jimmy Bob was paralyzed where he stood, his muscles locked by an unpleasant tingle of electricity. Space tasers. He strained to move but couldn’t.
The aliens approached, walking in a strange, waddling gait, as if their oversized heads were threatening to tip them over. Jimmy Bob noticed childlike, almost delicate, noses and mouths on their broad faces, and their black rat eyes had a glint of red to them. He watched as they went to Earl, poked him with their clawed fingers, and then spoke rapidly to each other in some foreign space language that sounded a lot like that singing chipmunk cartoon. They didn’t look happy.
Jimmy Bob tried to speak, but his jaw felt like it had been wired shut and he could only manage a few grunts. If only he could talk, maybe he could get out of this. Reason with them. Or bribe them. Maybe they’d like Jimmy Bob’s complete collection of state quarters, each coin in mint condition and sealed in a protective plastic case. Or maybe they’d want his grandma’s antique sterling silver serving set, complete except for a single salad fork that he broke adjusting the carb on his Chevy.
Jimmy Bob tried to say, “Silverware,” but only a grunt came out. They didn’t seem impressed. Their little iguana claws latched onto his wrists and pulled him forward with amazing ease. Jimmy Bob noticed for the first time that he was floating a few inches about the floor, and they tugged him along as if he were a balloon. The aliens maneuvered him through the opening, and he caught a last glimpse of his bleeding cellmate, who had resumed bashing his own head into the floor.
Jimmy Bob was pulled through a large metal tube, first right, then left, then down a gradual incline sort of like those tube slides at Chuck E. Cheese. The aliens kept chittering to each other, and one of them patted Jimmy Bob on the thigh and smiled.
Maybe this will be okay, Jimmy Bob thought. Maybe they won’t hurt me.
A few seconds later, Jimmy Bob was placed into a large upright box, which closed around him like a coffin and dipped him into complete darkness.
Then, agony.
At first, it felt like being burned alive. But there wasn’t any heat. The pain was the same, though, every nerve in his body firing at once. It was as if someone was using a power sander on his body, scraping every inch from head to toe. There was even a probe, but it felt more like a giant drill bit, coring out his unhappy place. Jimmy Bob screamed in his throat, screamed until he was sure it bled like the rest of him.
After an unknown amount of time, Jimmy Bob passed out.
He came to while being pulled back through the hallway, and then shot, like a rocket, back through the doorway and back into the original room. He hit the floor with a wet splat, and rolled onto his belly, the pain driving him mad, eating him alive. He was no longer frozen by the ray gun taser, but he dared not twitch because even the slightest movement was torture.
“Kill me,” someone said.
He glanced right, his eyes already crusting with dried blood, and saw his cellmate.
Jimmy Bob asked, “Why are they doing this?” but it came out garbled-even his tongue had been scraped raw.
“Been here…weeks…maybe months. They use…an IV…so we don’t die…”
“Why?” Jimmy Bob asked again.
“Snacks.”
Jimmy Bob wasn’t sure he heard right.
“What?”

Move Over, James Patterson … actually, Stieg Larsson Was the First Author to Sell a Million eBooks

Update: I just returned (7/18) from a road trip and received, while I was gone, information calling some of my calculations here into question. So I am reviewing for accuracy and will be revising and reposting soon. My apologies for any fuzzy math.

Related post:

Around the Kindlesphere: Tracking the Kindle Tsunami is Challenging for Some Publishing Insiders, And Sometimes for Me



Perhaps you noticed, a few days ago, when the Hachette Book Group shouted out to the world that “bestselling author James Patterson has broken yet another record — this time with tremendous ebook sales.”


“To date, Patterson has sold 1,141,273 ebook units, making him the first novelist ever to surpass the 1,000,000 mark,” Hachette said in a July 6 press release. It’s great news for Patterson, for Hachette, and for ebook enthusiasts, to be sure. The story got picked up everywhere from the Huffington Post to the Los Angeles Times to Joe Konrath’s blog for writers

It’s great news, even if it is not precisely correct.

What am I getting at?

Well, “there’s no third-party monitor of e-book sales, so Hachette used its own figures and checked other prominent authors,” ran the disclaimer that ran in both HuffPo and the LAT. “The publisher didn’t find any others who had cracked the million mark.”
  
Okay, fair enough, but I’m here to tell you that the Hachette would have been better served if it had said that Patterson is “the first American novelist” or the first living novelist” or “the first English-language novelist” to surpass 1 million ebooks sold.

I suspect you get it by now, and would get it even if you hadn’t read the headline for this post.

According to estimated but educated calculations that I’ll share below, the late Stieg Larsson’s Millennium Trilogy has sold more ebooks in the Kindle Store alone since last December 21 than Patterson had sold in total at the time of the Hachette press release July 6.

Hachette could have asked Amazon, but Amazon does not share that kind of information. They could have asked Random House, but Random House might not have wanted to share that kind of information. And they could have asked Stieg Larsson…. Well, no, I guess they couldn’t have asked the late Mr. Larsson.

So, we’re left with the information that we can extrapolate from data that has already been reported by publishers, and data that is in the public domain through features such Amazon’s relatively new “Bestseller Archive” for the Kindle Store, and some conservative models that I have been able to develop based on my experience with the sales and sales ranking of over a dozen of my own Kindle editions dating back to November 2007, the month that the Kindle was released. While those models include information that is confidential and proprietary, I am nonetheless able to use the models conservatively to inform a reliable picture of any Kindle book’s likely minimum sales over a specific period of time, but I’ll just use them internally here, and instead rely on these data points:
  • As we mentioned back on June 3, the popular subscription-based book industry website Publisher’s Marketplace reported that day “Knopf Doubleday spokesman Paul Bogaards says their internal figures show an approximate first week sell-through of 425,000 units–which includes 125,000 ebook editions” for the third Larsson book, The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest.
  • The most conservative estimate of the Kindle Store’s share of those ebook sales for the week beginning May 24 would be at least 60 percent, or 75,000 units, given that Larsson’s books have never been carried in the iBooks Store.
  • If we trend out Kindle Store sales for The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest for the subsequent six weeks, based on the fact that its Kindle sales ranking was 1-1-2-1-1-1-1 for the first seven weeks of its sales life, the most conservative cumulative figure for this ebook’s sales over the seven weeks is 350,000 (or a total of 4.67 times its first week sales).
  • However, as shown in the screenshot (above right) of the cumulative 2010 year-to-date Bestseller Archive for the Kindle Store, The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest ranks only at #4 in the Kindle Store so far this year, trailing The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo at #1, The Girl Who Played with Fire at #2, and The Help at #3. Based on this array, year-to-date ebook sales for The Girl Who Played with Fire can’t have been lower than 350,000 (and, probably, easily exceeded 400,000) and year-to-date ebook sales for The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo can’t have been lower than 400,000 (and, probably, easily exceeded 500,000).
  • Using all of this information as well as further modeling based on seasonality, growth of the installed based of Kindles, iPads and other Kindle-compatible devices, and implications of actual sales numbers for other titles at various rankings above and below the Stieg titles, I have arrived at the numbers shown here as an absolute conservative baseline for Kindle Store ebook sales of the three Stieg novels since December 21, 2009.

Although these are estimates, the overall effect of the calculations and the power of some of the triangulating influences are such that I can guarantee that Stieg’s ebook sales since December 21, 2009 in the Kindle Store have been at least 1.2 million, and that the actual figures are very close to, if a bit higher than, the following:
Total – 1,288,892

And I’m confident that James Patterson will be okay, even if he is the second author to scale the million-ebook mountain.

The Bloom is Off the Rose for Apple’s Free iBooks App, But It’s Still #1 in Our Cumulative Top Charts Rankings, While Kindle May Lead in Actual iPad eBook Sales

By Stephen Windwalker
Editor of Kindle Nation Daily ©Kindle Nation Daily 2010

Apple’s free iBooks app — seen so recently by agency model publishers as the White Knight that would save them from Amazon and the Kindle — has slipped dramatically in popularity with iPad owners, and the proof is right here for all to see in the radiant color of an iPad screen shot taken at 10:30 AM Eastern July 16, 2010.

After leading the iPad apps’ Top Charts rankings for most of the past 3 1/2 months since the iPad’s April 3 release date, and only occasionally slipping as low as #3, the free iBooks app fell to #5 yesterday and #8 this morning.

Of course the news is not quite as bleak, for Apple’s new incarnation as a bookseller, as this might seem at first blush. Due to the vagaries of Apple’s Top Charts listings, position is based on a chronologically brief sample of recent app downloads, so that it is extremely sensitive at any given time to what we’ll call “the flavor of the week,” or even “of the day.” In other words, apps that are brand new or newly buzzworthy sometimes dominate the charts for a day or two before falling back. And then there’s the additional fact, of course, that anyone who downloads does not have to download it again, which would mean that the iBooks app rankings could suffer if the iPad’s sales momentum were to flag a bit.

With these list-shaping issues in mind, we’ve kept a close watch on the iPad apps’ Top Charts rankings on a daily basis since the first week of April, and as a result we are able to present — with a high but not absolute level of confidence — what a cumulative Top Charts ranking would look like for the iPad free apps listing if it were adjusted to exclude the “flavor of the week” bounces described above:

  1. iBooks 
  2. Netflix
  3. Weather Channel
  4. Kindle  
  5. USA Today 
  6. ABC Player
  7. WebMD  
  8. Pandora 
  9. NPR 
  10. Barnes & Noble eReader

These rankings, of course, will differ dramatically from rankings — rankings that we’re unlikely to see, I might add — based on the actual level of commerce transacted. Based on what we know about relative size and quality of catalog, prices, methods of payment, and customer behavior, here’s my educated guess as to the likely revenue ranking among free iPad apps:

  1. Kindle 
  2. Netflix 
  3. iBooks 
  4. B&N;

Although there is early excitement to try out iBooks’ spiffy functionality when a customer first receives an iPad, the fact that the iBooks catalog is dwarfed by the Kindle catalog (reportedly on the order of 15:1 or 20:1 after public domain titles are excluded) ultimately leads regular readers to more Kindle transactions.

Pricing to Fail: Case Studies in Dumb Pricing – “One Man’s Paradise,” and How Traditional Book Publishers Are Absolutely Killing Off Their Own Emerging Authors

I was friended overnight by a debut novelist named Douglas Corleone, and as I often do I looked over the Amazon pages for both the Kindle edition and the print edition of his new book, One Man’s Paradise.

This breaks my heart.

As Booklist reviewer David Pitt wrote, “This novel won the Minotaur Books/Mystery Writers of America First Crime Novel Award, and it’s no wonder.” And readers apparently agree, based on the 13 5-star reviews that Amazon customers have already given it.

No doubt Corleone was thrilled to win the award, sign a three-book contract, see his first book in print, and do whatever he could to help market the book. I don’t know Douglas Corleone from Charlie Sheen, so I’m just speculating here, but it’s all a pretty heady experience for most writers.

But his publisher Minotaur Books, an imprint of agency model participant MacMillan, may be killing off his career before it really starts by mandating a non-discountable ebook price of $11.99 for a debut novelist without a following.

It’s all well and good for agency model publishers to insist that their offerings that are priced at $10 and above are doing just fine. After all, 8 of the top 20 books on the Kindle Store paid bestseller list are priced above $10.

There’s just one problem. The authors of those eight books are James Patterson, Nora Roberts, Kathryn Stockett, Janet Evanovich, Brad Thor, Laure Ingraham, Elizabeth Gilbert, and Nelson DeMille.

For an unknown debut author trying to connect with the world’s most prolific and committed readers — Kindle owners — the price of $11.99 is the kiss of death. The current Kindle Store sales ranking of One Man’s Paradise is #52,920, which means that it is selling a handful of copies each week, and that it is so far out the long tail that it does not show up on any of the Kindle search architecture’s highly defined category bestseller lists. The hardcover sales ranking, as I write this, is 126,940, which pretty uch means ditto what I just said about the ebook edition.

At $9.99, the Kindle edition of One Man’s Paradise would have a chance. At $7.99, there’s an excellent chance I and others would be raving about it and it would be in, at least, the top 1,000 in the Kindle Store sales rankings. I have nothing against the book’s hardcover pricing, with a list of $24.99 discounted to $16.49 in the main Amazon bookstore, except that I hope that there will be a trade and/or mass market paperback edition soon. Unfortunately, lackluster hardcover and Kindle sales could give Corleone’s publisher all the excuse it needs to under-support, or even pull, a paperback edition.

But wait, you say? By signing with a MacMillan imprint, Corleone has availed himself of serious marketing muscle, right? Won’t he sell a ton of books through brick-and-mortar bookstores, both indies and chains?

Er, not likely. How hard is Corleone’s publisher working for him? Of course I don’t really know, but I can’t help but notice that a Google news search did not come up with a single news media hit on “Douglas Corleone,” and the top hits that came up from a Google web search on the same phrase were for the author’s website, his Facebook page, and a few blogs. The author’s website is playing some wonderful ocean audio for me in the background right now, but it has an Alexa traffic ranking of a little over 18 million, and lower numbers are what we are after here. At this point, it would be optimistic even to expect to find copies in most independent bookstores. Shelf space doesn’t come cheap.

Yesterday I watched a video of publishing executive Colin Robinson’s outrageous ravings (they’re still ravings, even if said with a Brit accent or printed in the next issue of The Nation) that Amazon is killing off publishers and midlist authors (like Corleone, I guess) and must be stopped. Robinson’s commentary is an insult to the intelligence of viewers and readers and will be taken as an embarrassment even by the publishing industry insiders who see it. Myself, I’m just glad that the industry has the benefit of more intelligent analysts and spokespersons like Mike Shatzkin, Random House’s Gina Centrello, and others, so that perhaps I can insist that idiots like Robinson spare me the self-serving b.s. The fact is that it is dinosaur book publishers who have been killing off their own industry and the brick-and-mortar bookstores for years by failing to understand and adapt to changing technologies and readers’ appetites until it is, as now, too late, by failing to support books by mid-list or emerging authors, by investing heavily in dreck, and by forsaking backlist to gamble their houses again and again on mega-bestsellers.

I haven’t read Corleone’s book, but I would bet it’s pretty good. I’m probably not going to spring for it at $11.99, but I will probably download the free sample today and give it a listen on my Kindle. And frankly I am even hopeful that a few Kindle Nation readers who are less price-sensitive than I am will notice this post and give One Man’s Paradise a real chance by buying it and driving it up the sales ranking ladder some.

But what I really hope, both for Douglas Corleone and for countless other authors who are hoping against hope that the book publishing industry as now constituted will give them the career for which their wonderful writing makes them, in my view, truly deserving is that they connect the dots and figure out what is really going on, for authors, in the publishing industry today. I’m not going to the connect the dots for them beyond saying to many authors that you need the services of a traditional publisher about as much as a fish needs a bicycle, but I am happy to provide links to the dots:

The Newbie’s Guide to Publishing (Everything A Writer Needs To Know)

Publish on Amazon Kindle with the Digital Text Platform

A Newbie’s Guide To Publishing Blog

How To Make Money on Ebooks

Beyond the Literary-Industrial Complex: How Authors and Publishers Are Using the Amazon Kindle and Other New Technologies (… to Unleash a 21-Century Indie Movement of Readers and Writers)

Right on Schedule, Amazon Changes the Arithmetic of Publishing By Launching 70 Percent Royalty Option for Kindle Digital Text Platform

J.A. Konrath, King of the Kindlesphere, Gives Big Publishers a Rejection Slip with “Endurance” and “Trapped”

The Ebook Revolution and the Indie Publishing Revolution: Readers and Writers Locking Arms with Comrade Bezos

With Kindle royalties about to be set at 70%, is it time to revisit bestselling novelist Anne Rice’s post: “Should major authors think about making Kindle (if possible) their primary publisher?”

How Should Independent Authors and Publishers Price eBooks?

About eBook Prices and Author Royalties: Price Elasticity and the Demand for Books