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Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alert for Tuesday, February 9, 2010: Star Wars: Lost Tribe of the Sith #3: Paragon and more!

Star Wars: Lost Tribe of the Sith #3: Paragon by JOHN JACKSON MILLER  


Star Wars: Lost Tribe of the Sith #2: Skyborn by JOHN JACKSON MILLER 


Star Wars: Lost Tribe of the Sith #1: Precipice by JOHN JACKSON MILLER

Change the World: Recovering the Message and Mission of Jesus 
by Michael B Slaughter

Edge of Apocalypse Free Preview Only (Equivalent of about 35-40 pages despite metadata that indicates longer) by Tim LaHaye and Craig Parshall

Devotions for Lent

  
The Apothecary’s Daughter by Julie Klassen (Jan 1, 2009)

Talk of the Town Lisa Wingate (Mar 1, 2008)

Daisy Chain (Defiance Texas Trilogy, Book 1) Mary E. DeMuth (Mar 1, 2009)

Peculiar Treasures (The Katie Weldon Series #1) Robin Jones Gunn (Apr 1, 2008)

Velvet Elvis: Repainting the Christian Faith Rob Bell (Jul 1, 2006)

Icy Heat: A Heat series story by Leigh Wyndfield

John Newton: From Disgrace to Amazing Grace by Jonathan Aitken (Jun 7, 2007)

His Lady Mistress
Slow Hands (Harlequin Blaze)

 

Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alert for Monday, February 8, 2010: Autobiography of a Yogi by Paramhansa Yogananda, and Nine Glitchy "Titles" to Avoid for Now

Here’s one we haven’t mention for a while – a classic of Eastern mysticism:

Autobiography of a Yogi by Paramhansa Yogananda 

Meanwhile, you may notice that there are nine new “free” titles that you will want to avoid, for now, in the Kindle Store:

As we mentioned in a post yesterday, Amazon is beginning to venture into the world of book publishing with unique content that comes to it through programs such as the Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award Contest, and it appears we’ll soon be able to read excerpts from works by the contest quarterfinalists, free, right on our Kindles. Perhaps we’ll even be invited to cast out votes, ratings or recommendations!

That’s all well and good, but currently there’s a bit of a glitch in the system, as nine of these “titles” show up in the Kindle Store with listings such as this one, and they are currently just placeholders:

Quarterfinalist 9 (Kindle Edition) by ABNA entrant9 (Author) 

If you click on the “Buy” button on any of these 9 pages, it will downloaded to your Kindle and your account will be charged $0.00 (or over two buck in most countries outside the US!), but for now all you will find if you click on the title on your Home screen will be what you see in the screenshot at the right.

No harm, no foul?

Not exactly. The problem is that eventually these “placeholders” will be replaced by free content that you may want to read, but you won’t be able to download the updated content as long as the placeholder is in your Kindle account. Merely deleting it from your Kindle yourself won’t be enough of a purge.

So, two suggestions here:

  • First, if you’ve already downloaded any of these “titles,” I recommend that you contact Kindle Support (Kindle Support Phone Number 1-866-321-8851 or 1-206-266-0927 outside the US) and ask that they be removed from your Kindle so that you will be able to download it later when the content is live. We’ll have a heads up here at Kindle Nation Daily when the titles are live.
  • Second, it’s for reasons such as this that I always recommend buying content via the computer (rather than via the Kindle) whenever it is convenient, because a quick look at the file size — 3 KB in this case — usually tells me whether I am getting a full book (generally over 100KB), an excerpt (generally over 20 KB), or something less.

Obviously, from the fact that all nine of these placeholder titles made the Kindle Movers & Shakers List yesterday, one can infer that a lot of people downloaded the placeholder page. So it seems that a third suggestion is in order, to Amazon, to fix this well-intentioned glitch, because it is eating up time for Kindle owners and will no doubt lead to a lot of wasted time for Kindle Support and unnecessary bandwidth usage, even at this tiny file size, for the downloading process.

Amazon’s Recent Moves and Kindle Owners’ Survey Suggest New Responses to Publishers’ Prix Fixe Play

By Stephen Windwalker
Originally posted February 7, 2010 at Kindle Nation Daily – © Kindle Nation Daily 2010

Related posts:

When the Big Six publishers and Apple’s Steve Jobs began conspiring recently to raise ebook prices by 30 to 50 percent from the Kindle Store standard of $9.99 for bestsellers and many new releases, it may have looked at first like curtains for Amazon’s powerful hold on the fast-growing ebook market. Amazon’s first move — referenced on the blog as its “Delete You” tactic against MacMillan titles — even seemed a bit petulant to some observers, especially when the retailer turned around a few days later and said that it would have to capitulate to MacMillan’s pricing demands.

The publishers are in a powerful position, and it may indeed hurt sales of the Kindle — and of the publishers’ own bestsellers — if in a few weeks we find that few ebook bestsellers are available any longer at that $9.99 price that has become so popular in the Kindle Store.

But it turns out Amazon has some arrows left in its quiver.

First, it is clear now that, whatever its intentions, Amazon’s “Delete You” play was very effective in educating Kindle owners about the pricing controversy that was going on behind the scenes. Among the first 1,032 respondents in the current Winter 2010 Kindle Nation Citizen Survey, 71 percent agree with this statement: “By dropping MacMillan books, Amazon took stand vs. high-priced ebooks.” 11 percent disagreed with the statement, and 18 percent didn’t know or didn’t have an opinion.

The importance of this customer education, with its obvious subtext that “it is the publishers, not Amazon, who are behind the price increases in the Kindle Store” is that it helps to preserve a special relationship between Amazon and those of its customers who are Kindle owners. Most Kindle owners are extremely loyal customers, and we buy a lot of books. You don’t just have to take my word on these matters, because they are quite evident from other data provided by respondents in our current survey:

  • 88 percent have positive or very positive feelings about Amazon, but only 19 percent have positive or very positive feelings about the Big Six publishers. 
  • 70 percent agreed (and only 13 percent disagreed) with the statement that “Jeff Bezos & Amazon have my back, & I know they price things to sell.
  • 33 percent said that since acquiring a Kindle they annually buy more than 30 Kindle ebooks that are priced between 99 cents and $9.99, while another 30% said they buy 15 to 30 such books.

What will Kindle owners do if the prices of bestsellers priced previous at $9.99 increase by the 30 to 50 percent threatened by the Big Six publishers? Currently, according to our respondents, only 3 percent buy 15 or more ebooks a year in the $10-and-up price range. For some customers, that will change: 37 percent agreed with the statement that “I will probably pay $10 to $14.99 for new ebook titles if necessary,” while 54 percent disagreed.

But there are also some strong indications that this group of very active readers may be ready to make an interesting pivot in consumer behavior, one that may be reminiscent of changes in behavior in the audience for music and film in the past few decades. As these forms of entertainment became accessible in different formats and at different prices, and the costs of production and distribution declined, audience grew dramatically for music and movies with various forms of “indie” branding. In the current Kindle Nation survey, we found strong identification with the following statements:

  • With recent ebook price wars, I’ve become more price-conscious. 72 percent agreed, 22 per cent disagreed.
  • With higher bestseller prices, I’ll buy more backlist or indie titles. 60 percent agreed, 21 per cent disagreed.
  • I’ll look to buy ebooks by authors who provide Kindle exclusives. 48 percent agreed, 28 per cent disagreed.

It should come as no surprise, of course, that Amazon — and some other forward thinkers — are racing to keep up with, or in some cases help create a market for, changes in what we read and what is published. While Amazon is certainly not about to turn its back for long on bestsellers at whatever prices they are made available, there are some exciting channels opening up which will lead to expanded selection of unique content in the Kindle Store, including:

  • A high likelihood that we will soon see a significant number of bestselling or established authors eschewing agents and traditional publishers to publish their new work directly to the Kindle platform and other new technologies, as novelist Anne Rice recently hinted she might do in direct posts to an Amazon community threat that she initiated late last year.
  • Amazon’s recent announcement that its own do-it-yourself “Digital Text Platform” will soon pay 70 per cent royalties directly to any authors who choose to publish and market their work there in the $2.99-to-$9.99 price range. Even the English majors among established and successful authors may be sufficiently able to do the math that they question whether traditional publishers do enough for their authors to justify paying royalties of only 17.5 percent (the rate authors will get under the agency pricing model upon which publishers are insisting) compared with the 70 percent rate promised by Amazon.
  • Authors, meanwhile, are beginning to organize to protect and advance their independent publishing interests through initiatives like the fledgling Association of Independent Authors that may inspire more and more creative work for direct publication through the Kindle platform and other new technologies.
  • New publishing ventures such as Rosetta Stone and Jane Friedman’s Open Road Integrated Media are making a major investment in helping both established and emerging authors and their representatives to protect and assert their ownership of their digital publishing rights so that they can bring their own work to the Kindle and other platforms under more favorable terms than the 17.5% of retail list price being offered by the Big Six publishers for ebook royalties.
  • Recent deals by Amazon to publish a growing number of Kindle backlist exclusives or new short fiction by prominent authors such as Paulo Coelho, Stephen Covey, Ian McEwan and, through the auspices of the Atlantic Shorts program for the Kindle, Curtis Sittenfeld, Edna O’Brien, Paul Theroux, Jennifer Haigh, Patricia Engel and Christopher Buckley and others.  
  • The announcement this weekend by the British Library, courtesy Andrys Basten’s A Kindle World post, of a joint venture involving Amazon and Microsoft that will bring 65,000 works of 19th century literature to the Kindle, free of charge for Kindle users (although it is unclear if duties and wireless charges will be added for U.K. customers.)
  • Through initiatives such as Amazon Encore, the Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award, and its direct publication of public domain works for the Kindle, Amazon is beginning to venture beyond merely dipping its toes in the water of ebook publishing, so that within another year or two I will not be surprised to see hundreds or even thousands of new titles published directly by Amazon in the Kindle Store.
  • And last but not least, Amazon’s announcement on job boards this week that it is “seeking a uniquely-qualified individual to help drive selection of unique content for Kindle:

The position of Kindle Unique Content Specialist blends vendor management with creative and technical aspects of product development, and requires enthusiastic dedication to delivering to our customers unique, engaging, and multidimensional content designed especially for Kindle. To this end, the Kindle Unique Content Specialist will: Use customer feedback, industry news/trends, and Amazon data to identify categories and genres in which unique content will add key selection, amplify Kindle’s distinctive functionally, and further enhance/add value to the Kindle customer experience.

Where will it all lead?

We’ll see. We’ve just witnessed a strange and upside-down economic event where, in the hands of Steve Jobs and the Big Six publishers, “competition” has somehow led to higher rather than lower prices for the consumer.

What’s clear is that Amazon has no intention of biding its time while the publishers and Jobs do their dirty work. As often happens when the dinosaur sector of any industry goes head-to-head with cutting-edge, forward-thinking elements, the dinosaurs may convince themselves they are winning the battles only to discover later that the outcome of the war depended on other battles about which they never heard a word until it was too late.

Publishers and authors may be trying to convince each other that they are at war with Amazon, but they have been acting like they were at war with their own readers. Readers won’t stand for it, and Amazon is likely to do plenty to empower us by giving us more choices at better prices.

Collins Stewart Hosts Your Humble Reporter in Conference Call on The Kindle Revolution: Recent Trends in the eBooks Market

By Stephen Windwalker
Originally posted February 7, 2010 at Kindle Nation Daily – © Kindle Nation Daily 2010

Tomorrow morning, at 11:30 am EST Monday February 8, I have been invited by the independent financial advisory group Collins Stewart to be its guest speaker on a conference call to discuss Recent Trends in the eBooks Market, and interested citizens of Kindle Nation are invited to listen in along with a wide array of institutional investors, business news media, and company representatives. Here’s a link to the Collins Stewart news feed on the conference call.

Here are the topics that have been suggested to me by Collins Stewart senior analyst Sandeep Aggarwal, who will host the call:

  • 1. How big can be the eBook market in the next 2-3 years i.e. can eBook achieve 25% penetration in next 3 years?  
  • 2. What are some examples of buyers’ behavior for eBooks that are encouraging and/or unique?  
  • 3. Are publishers excited or threatened by the traction of eBooks?  
  • 4. Which eBook readers are likely to win? Is iPad a compelling threat to Kindle?  
  • 5. Which eBook publishing platforms are likely to win and why?  
  • 6. How do the economics for publishers’ vary on Kindle vs. traditional book sales at Amazon.com?  
  • 7. Where do you think the economics for publishers are heading in next couple of years?

I’ll also be sharing some fascinating early returns from the Winter 2010 Kindle Nation Citizen Survey, which has had over 1,000 respondents since it went live at 1:30 pm yesterday.

If you would like to listen in, just dial in a moment or two before the call, which is supposed to run at most from 11:30 am EST to 12:30 pm EST:

Toll-Free: 800-446-1671
International Access: 847-413-3362
Confirmation Number 26349150

There will also be a Replay available for the next two months, and I will share that number here later if I make it through the call without excessive stuttering or other embarrassment.

Make Your Voice Heard: Take the Winter 2010 Kindle Nation Citizen Survey

With the current controversies and competition involving ebook prices and devices, your experiences and views as a reader are of great interest to other readers and to authors, publishers, booksellers, journalists, investors and those who follow what is going on in the book business. In our last two surveys (April 2009 and October 2009), we’ve had extremely high levels of participation and attracted the interest of all the primary players.
With your participation in the current survey, we hope to help Amazon, authors and publishers, and others see more clearly than ever what’s important to readers as we enter a new decade. I’ve limited this survey to 10 questions, but I hope you will also feel free to use the comment areas to say whatever needs saying. Future Kindle Nation Daily posts will provide detailed reports on your responses, but your confidentiality and privacy will always remain well-guarded. (If you’d prefer to have your name included with your comments, please indicate this specifically in the body of your comment.)
Two notes about tiny glitches in the survey:
  • The “comments” area only appears on survey questions 1-5. Please feel free to email any additional comments to kindlenation@gmail.com.
  • Please ignore the “Most likely” column at the far right-hand of survey questions 8 and 10.
Thanks for your cooperation!

Security, Tax Relief, Light, and Something Sweet — All in One Post?

I generally confine my Amazon product links to items that are strictly Kindle-related in the narrowest sense, but there are a couple of things I am grabbing today while the price is right, and it struck me that they might be timely recommendations for you as well. (The last time I did this was when I found an amazing deal on pure Vermont maple syrup, and apparently, based on the feedback I got, there were dozens of Kindle Nation citizens with whom I share a sweet tooth!)

In addition I’ll mention a Kindle accessory that I absolutely love:

  • The first is an Amazon Deal of the Day for a Kaspersky Internet Security 2010 3-User disc. My laptop is currently running naked, which can’t possibly be a good thing, so I am jumping on this today while the $26.95 price lasts. H’mm. I wonder if there are any developers out there working on a Kindle Security app….
  • The second relates back to a Tax Time with the Kindle post I did two weeks ago. It’s all well and good to have the tax guides I mentioned, but I’m going to need some software too, and I’ve had good success in recent years using TurboTax Deluxe Federal + State 2009 + efile, which enables to bang out the entire onerous task in one or two sittings. (Of course, that’s after I’ve gathered and organized the data to begin with.) You can also find alternatives Amazon’s tax store.
  • I like to read myself to sleep at night, and I’ve also been known to wake early and read the morning paper on my Kindle before dawn. There’s only one way to carry on such activities without them becoming relationship deal-breakers, and that’s to accessorize one’s Kindle with a great reading light. For Christmas, my son gave me a Mighty Bright XtraFlex2 Clip-On Light, and I use it constantly. I may have to get a second one, since I even find myself detaching it from my Kindle to clip it to magazines and paperbacks when I’m reading something with a tiny font size. Of course, if it comes to that I may be an equal opportunity shopper and try a M-Edge e-Luminator2 Kindle Booklight or a Kandle LED Book Light.

By the way,  if you want a heads up on these Deal of the Day offerings, here’s a link where you can sign up directly with Amazon.

Kindle Nation Daily Bargain Book Alert for Friday, February 5, 2010: 50 for Under a Buck

There are big changes afoot in the Kindle Store, and it is likely — at least until we hear definitive news to the contrary directly from Amazon — that in a few months a much smaller portion of the store’s offerings will be as affordable as they are today. Three of the Big Six publishers (MacMillan, HarperCollins, and Hachette) have joined together under the collusive anti-reader price-gouging auspices of the BS Cabal to announce that they will soon raise ebook prices by 30 to 50 percent, and Amazon itself said recently that beginning later this year it would pay 70 percent royalties to its indie ebook authors, but only if they priced books at $2.99 and up.

So I thought it would be a good time to celebrate this moment of great 99-cent Kindle Store offerings by helping the citizens of Kindle Nation find some of the hidden offerings priced at less than a dollar, with lists here of Intriguing Recent Releases, the 99-Cent Kindle Store Bestseller List, Great Blogs for 99 Cents a Month, Literate Erotica at 99 Cents a Pop, and Five Other 99-Cent Bargains by Yours Truly:

Ten Intriguing Recent Releases for Under a Buck
 

The 99-Cent Kindle Store Bestsellers’ List

  
 
Five Other 99-Cent Titles by Yours Truly
(When Amazon initiates its new $2.99+ pricing and 70%-royalty structure, I will have decisions to make on some of these. But for now, they are all priced under a dollar)