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Amazon Launches Kindle Bestseller Archive

For those who like to keep their finger on the pulse of Kindle book sales, Amazon has just announced the launch of several bestseller archives including a comprehensive archive of Kindle Store bestsellers on a year-by-year, month-by-month, and week-by-week basis going back to the very first day of the Kindle era, November 19, 2007. Here are links to the three full-year bestseller lists, where you will also find pull-down menus that make it easy to focus on any week or month during the 25 months since we have had Kindle books to download.





I found it to be great fun to peruse these lists, and as is usually the case when I check out end-of-the-year lists for just about any year, I found a few titles that I really wanted to read, but somehow missed the first time around.


No doubt there will be far more interesting analyses of these archives by others, but there are a few things that jump right out at me about the 2009 Kindle Store bestseller list:

  • Over 20 of the 100 bestselling books for the entire year are public domain classics. Others can grouse about the devaluing of the book, but I frankly do not see it that way. What I do see is that the Kindle is playing a serious role in keeping significant numbers of readers in touch with great literature. 
  • Other data that is available to me strongly suggests that, although Amazon did not make a dime on the Kindle editions of the 23 public domain titles that I count among the top 100 Kindle Store “sellers” for 2009, these titles accounted for well over a million downloads to Kindle owners. 
  • Another 21 of the top 100 bestselling Kindle books for 2009 are “promotional” titles that are currently free in the Kindle Store, which among other things suggests that timing can be everything for books that have just become free. What I’m getting at there is that there has been an absolute tsunami of Kindle activity beginning at dawn on Christmas Day, such that the number of fresh downloads for a new freebie like Noel Hynd’s Midnight in Madrid could help to push it into the top 10 for the year, something that might not have been true if it had been free for a week in July.
  • I also noted that at least another 20 of the 100 bestselling titles in the Kindle Store for 2009 are books that, while not free any more, were free at some earlier point in the year and owe their precedence at least in part to that circumstance. As a result, that leaves about one-third of the top 100 Kindle titles whose 2009 sales chiefly involved actual payment transactions between Kindle owners and Amazon.

No doubt some wag will look at these numbers and conclude that the Kindle is cheapening the book, but that wag will be dead wrong, just as he would be dead wrong if he concluded from other data that libraries are cheapening the book.


Instead, here’s how it works:

  • Kindle books that are free or otherwise less expensive than the $14 to $35 that mainstream publishers try to get for trade hardcovers and paperbacks encourage people to buy Kindles, as about three million readers have done so far.
  • When someone buys a Kindle they buy, in the vast majority of cases, more books than they used to buy, at prices ranging from free to $9.99 and above.
  • There is ample room in the Kindle pricing market for significant margin and royalties for all concerned including Amazon, the author, and — where necessary — the publisher.

It really isn’t rocket science.

Under a Buck Today in the Kindle Store: Kathy Bell’s Edgy 5-Star Novel, "Regression"

You can buy the paperback for $12 or $13 or click through to the Kindle edition for just 99 cents, but Kathy Bell’s recently published novel Regression is getting great reviews from early readers in the Kindle and main Amazon stores.

by Kathy Bell

Digital List Price: $0.99 
Print List Price: $13.49
Kindle Price: $0.99 & includes wireless delivery via Amazon Whispernet
You Save: $12.50 (93%)

Editorial Reviews

Review

Adya Jordan, a forty-year-old mother of six, injured in a terrible car accident, awakens to find herself in her fourteen-year-old body once again. Consumed with grief over being separated from her family, she tries to live like a normal teenager. That’s when she begins to notice that things are slightly different than they were the first time around; all minor things that when put together add up to major differences. Adya is offered an opportunity to join the ranks of the most powerful people in the world, an opportunity of a lifetime, making her the envy of most. She seizes it without hesitation, as anyone else would. However soon, she discovers that something will go terribly wrong in the future. With time running out on the human race, it’s up to her to make the most powerful people in the world see the truth and change course before its too late. Kathy Bell has done a fair share of research for this book and it shows. As science comes to life inside the dialogue and plot in her novel, it became easy to suspend disbelief in the possibility of humans traveling Interdimensionally. All told, Regression was an enjoyable read with fully developed characters and enough plot twists to keep me turning the pages long after dark-thirty in the morning. –Amazon.com Review

The past, present and future meet in Kathy Bell’s debut novel, Regression. Bell, who was born in a small Ontario town on the shores of Lake Huron, is an Owen Sound teacher, and, when she is not in the classroom, a novelist.
I puzzled over this one, testing my disbelief as I always do when approaching speculative fiction. At first, I found Adya Jordan’s time regression a bit hard to take but then I sank into the story, a time shaping novel about a mysterious corporation, Three Eleven, out to change the world. Laced with dialogue that races the story on, Regression shows a clever use of plot, time changes and an inventive mind that all add up to a surprise – a wellcrafted work of futuristic fiction. –Andrew Armitage, Book Editor, Owen Sound Sun Times

Product Description

Fourteen-year-old Adya Jordan swears that before her head injury she was a forty-year-old mother of six. Is she going crazy, or did she really live through an entirely different life? 1985 is nothing like she remembers, although her first day of high school certainly is!
A typical girl with atypical genes, Adya tries to recapture her old life, hiding her growing conviction that she has done this before. The man she loves doesn’t even know she exists yet, but she is haunted by memories of their life together.
Accidentally discovering the secretive Three Eleven Corporation might know more about her situation than she does, she is certain the twenty-eight men heading up the company are responsible for the changes in her world. Adya finds her way into their ranks, journeying to the tropical island headquarters to begin her twenty-week orientation.
Every third chapter, diary entries of scientist Nicholas Weaver are written from the future, the last survivor of the human race. He never quite tells readers all the details but the journal entries allude to a global disaster where one of Adya’s children offers the last hope of survival. A maudlin but affable type, he is responsible for sending Adya back in time, doing it for the love of a woman. Over and over again for more than ten lifetimes – now that’s love.
The Three Eleven Company controls the development and distribution of Twenty-first Century technology brought with them from the future. Charged with the task of preparing the world for the impending disaster, each member of the team uses his scientific background to create a solution for a problem the planet does not know it is facing. But Adya begins to question their program.
Banished to the frozen Canadian Shield for challenging the status quo, she finds the men in the underground city of Sanctum are interested in more than just her genes as they search for the answer to her presence in the timeline.
In the end, Adya encounters a choice no mother should ever face: save her children…or everyone else.


Product Details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 409 KB
  • Print Length: 352 pages
  • Simultaneous Device Usage: Unlimited
  • Publisher: Northern Sanctum Press; 1st edition (October 24, 2009)
  • Sold by: Amazon Digital Services
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B002U829RW
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)

  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #539 in Kindle Store (See Bestsellers in Kindle Store)

Find Thousands of Free and Bargain Kindle Books! Here’s an eBook Search & Browse Tool That Will Make You Glad You Have a Kindle … as if You Need Another Reason

If you’re a Kindle Nation reader, you are probably already aware that the Kindle outshines all the other so-called Kindle Killers when it comes to the selection and prices that are available in the Kindle Store catalog.

But now, thanks to some great folks at Inkmesh, we are able to offer you a free tool that will help you find the absolute best ebook price for any book you wish to read. Organized with elegant simplicity, Inkmesh allows you to search for free Kindle books and compare ebook prices for the Kindle, iPhone, Nook, Sony Reader and other ereaders.

Just click here to initiate any search and see a full set of results in a fraction of a second.

But that’s not all! Once you see a result page you’ll find an extremely useful set of fine-tuning aids in the left sidebar column that will allow you to drill down on results by price point (Free, Below $1, Below $5, and Below $10), content category, or device, and even to exclude public domain titles from your listings.

These same drill-down options are available to you when you click here (or click “Explore” from within Inkmesh) to browse ebooks by subject area, and the list of browsing subject areas is, in a word, magnificent. I never

thought I would say this about a third-party App, but Inkmesh has outdone Amazon itself when it comes to providing a useful tool for searching and browsing Amazon’s website, or at least the Kindle Store, and beyond. Click on any letter of the alphabet across the top row and you’ll be amazed at the array of browse categories.

Because Inkmesh hits the sweet spot when it comes to simplicity, it will actually work well directly from your Kindle, although Amazon still needs to improve its website and Kindle platform engineering so that we can use the Kindle’s browser to move directly from a Kindle book’s page on the Amazon website to the buy button on the Kindle’s version of the Kindle Store.

It only makes sense.

So this next point is only slightly off topic, but back in June 2008 I had a conversation on the air with Jeff Bezos when he appeared on a national NPR call-in program based here in the Boston area, and I asked him why it was not yet possible for Kindle owners to use their Kindles to synch up with the rest of the Amazon store to 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.

It’s kind of hard for me to imagine any such task being too challenging for the wizards at Amazon, but if that’s the case, then I feel it is my duty to humbly suggest here that Amazon should offer whatever it takes as a purchase price to bring Inkmesh under its tent. If Amazon decides that it is time to provide Kindle users with a transparent, user-friendly way to search, browse and buy anywhere on the web including all the departments in Amazon’s main online store as well as the various departments of the Kindle Store, I feel confident that the Inkmesh team could nail it.

Meanwhile, while we wait for that development, here are tha main links you’ll need to get the most out of Inkmesh:


US Kindle Catalog to Surpass 400,000 Books – Today? Here’s the Entire Catalog Sorted by Price

Copyright © Kindle Nation Daily 2009. To read the original post on the web please visit bit.ly/KNDBlog.



Sometime this week Amazon’s Kindle Store catalog will surpass the 400,000-title milestone, with the title count in many countries beyond US borders lagging about 20 percent behind, but the rate at which downloaded copies are flying off of Amazon’s virtual shelves all over the world is an even bigger deal.

On Saturday Amazon issued a press release announcing that “[o]n Christmas Day, for the first time ever, customers purchased more Kindle books than physical books.” That’s exciting and seemingly newsworthy, although it is natural that this would have happened with hundreds of thousands of new Kindle owners opening their Kindles and finding nothing to read on them but a snappy welcome letter from Jeff Bezos.

But that’s not to say it is not a big deal. It is the latest in a steady flow of data points suggesting not only that Amazon is dominating both the hardware and content markets of the ebook sector but also that the ebook revolution itself is moving with stunning alacrity from its inflection point this past September to a tipping point that should occur, at the latest, in 2014.

While all of this is great for Kindle owners and for Amazon, the folks for whom it is most compelling are authors and publishers. The sheer size of the installed base of Kindles — probably over 3 million now — is creating ebook sales numbers that will raise eyebrows in publishing offices around the world over the next few weeks. My own Kindle guide was already the #1 consumer guide in the Kindle Store before Christmas morning, but the three days since most gifts were unwrapped have already accounted for over two-thirds of its total copies sold for the month of December.

The current catalog of 399,563 titles, as I type this around dawn on December 28, can be a little daunting, so below for your shopping convenience is a breakdown of 19,822 Free Kindle Edition Books & Over 379,500 Other Kindle Books Sorted By Price. If you are reading this post on your Kindle and you would prefer to view it on the web just type bit.ly/KNDBlog into your browser.

Free Books in the Kindle Store

“Big Deals” on Kindle web page – Seldom Updated

Kindle Books Priced at $0.00

Kindle Books Price from $0.01 to $0.98

Kindle Books Priced at $0.99

Kindle Titles Priced from $1.00 to $2.99

Kindle Titles Priced from $3.00 to $4.99

Kindle Titles Priced from $5.00 to $7.49

Kindle Titles Priced from $7.50 to $9.98

Kindle Titles Priced at $9.99

Kindle Titles Priced from $10.00 to $14.99

Kindle Titles Priced from $15.00 to $19.99

Kindle Titles Priced from $20.00 to $29.99

Kindle Titles Priced from $30.00 to $39.99

Kindle Titles Priced from $40.00 to $49.99

Kindle Titles Priced from $50.00 to $99.99

Kindle Titles Priced from $100.00 to $199.99

Kindle Titles Priced from $200.00 to $999.99

Kindle Titles Priced from $1000.00 to $6431.20

Under a Buck Today in the Kindle Store: Over Two Dozen Philip K. Dick Stories and Collections

Fans of one of the most interesting fiction writers of the 20th century, whose stories were adapted into the films Blade Runner, Total Recall, A Scanner Darkly and Minority Report can now click here to find over two dozen Philip K. Dick stories and collections for less than a dollar per download in the Kindle Store.

Dick authored 36 novels and over 120 short stories during his life (1928-1982), and in 2007 he became the first science fiction writer to be included in The Library of America series.

Just a Penny Today in the Kindle Store: Here’s a Fun Little Kindle Game That People Who Read Might Actually Enjoy

If you’ve been among the Kindle owners who agree with me that playing Minesweeper or Gomuku on the Kindle is just a waste of time that has nothing to do with reading or any other purpose for which we might have bought a Kindle, well, here’s another game that, at the very least, has two significant virtues:

1. It has everything to do with words.

2. It only costs a penny.

Word Morph is a new, Kindle-formatted version of an old game in which the players uses one’s familiarity with words and dexterity with letters to transform a starting word, one letter at a time, into a predetermined ending word of the same length. That would be child’s play but for the requirement that each interim word in the process must be an actual word.

Click here to download this to your Kindle for a penny.

You may find it a waste of time, but there’s a good chance it will make you a better Scrabble player.

Today’s Kindle Bargains: Under a Buck for the Twelve Days of Christmas – The Complete User’s Guide To the Amazing Amazon Kindle 2: Tips, Tricks, & Links To Unlock Cool Features & Save You Hundreds on Kindle Content (#1 Guide to the Kindle US & Global) (Kindle Edition) … and a Kindle Nation Daily Subscription

My sweetie and I are off for a little holiday — and birthday! — break for a few days beginning this afternoon, but I first wanted to say a very warm Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to all of the citizens of Kindle Nation. I believe very strongly in the values of community, and this community has been a special one throughout the past year.

As a small measure of gratitude and a welcoming gesture to the many who will be opening the gift of a Kindle for the first time in the next 24 hours or so, I am reducing the price of the Kindle edition of my bestselling Kindle guide to 99 cents — the lowest price that Amazon will allow — from now through January 6.

If you are one of the tens of thousands of Kindle Nation citizens who has already downloaded the book for a slightly higher price, I hope you will forgive me for making this price available to others, and I hope you have found the guide to be worth the price you paid for it. In fact, I hope you will join me in sharing the news about this new lower price with someone who is just opening a Kindle for the first time, via email, Twitter, Facebook, or Pony Express. Here’s a link to the 99-cent price for  you to share with new recruits to the greatest nation in the Kindlesphere: Kindle Nation, and another link to a 99-cent-a-month subscription to Kindle Nation Daily.


A very Merry Christmas and all best wishes for the New Year,
Steve


PS: And not to worry, I’ve loaded up the queue with daily posts for Kindle Nation Daily during my brief time away!