Thursday, January 5, 2012

Grub Street Printing Newsletter #33, January, 2012

2012 Resolution: Fewer Commas
Twenty five authors and editors submit their New Years resolutions, including Marisa Silver's, “Use fewer commas.”
Ebook Pricing
Experiments to find the right balance between low eBook pricing while maintaining a level of profitability continues, with the latest iteration trending upward.
Free eTextbooks for California?
Citing the high cost of college level textbooks, a California legislator has proposed converting classes to open source eTextbooks, lowering the overall expense of a college degree.
Amazon Takes on Brick and Mortar...
In its ongoing attempt to commoditize everything and eliminate physical stores, Amazon has introduced a Price Check app that encourages brick and mortar shopping, but allows you to check pricing and order from Amazon online. An author examined the plan in a NY Times article and there are numerous petitions opposing the app, citing Amazon's ability to forgo sales taxes, among other things.
...Causing Some Geeks to Love Amazon...
Unable to find comfort in a cozy bookstore, scanning a wide variety of genres, formats, designs, and stories, Slate's Geek-in-Residence proclaims bookstores irrelevant and out of date, while another of the digerati protests his assessment.
...But Not the Kindle Fire
Amazon's recently introduced Kindle Fire seems to have some off-putting design flaws. Amazon answered with an update automatically delivered and installed, but software was only half the problem. Of interest in the story is that Amazon needs eReader dominance so badly that it loses around $20 on every Kindle sold at Best Buy, Walmart, etc.
Perhaps in response to the negative reviews, Amazon has retreated on one touchy issue so now the Fire can access the Android apps marketplace.
eReader/Tablet/Smart Phone Sales
Google reports 3.7 million devices running their Android O/S were activated this past Christmas. Amazon reports selling a million Kindle readers a week in December, its top-selling items. Too bad it doesn't make a profit on them.
eReaders have gone from exotic to commodity in just over four years as shown by this assessment of eBooks and eReaders from 2007. With color eReaders selling for less than $60, the B&N concerns about affordability have been addressed. (Confession: I don't have an eReader, tablet or smart phone. And yes, I know exactly what that makes me.)
Is a Magazine Just an iPad That Doesn't Work?
So the parent who shot this video would have you believe. When this very short video is over, scroll down and check out the comments.
Still fighting the Google Book Settlement
The Author's Guild has petitioned the courts for certification of class status to pursue a lawsuit against Google and the Google Book Settlement. Google has asked the court to deny certification claiming each copyright holder needed to file a separate lawsuit.
From Twitter to Best Seller?
Apparently, #whitegirlproblems is a twitter feed that parodies the concerns of a fictional, spoiled twenty-something. The book launches this month.
2011 Literary Year in Review
A revival of interest in Papa Hemingway and the Kennedys, the loss of Steve Jobs and Andy Rooney, and the rise of self-published authors are remembered in this 2011 recap.
Comic Book Brings $2 Million...
A copy of Action Comics #1 with a bizarre provenance sold for $2.16 million at auction last month.
...While Das Kapital only Fetches $50,000
Abebooks announced their top ten rare book sales of 2011 netted $220,000+, including the $51,739 paid for an early edition of Das Kapital. So is Marx smiling or frowning in his grave?
Final Thought
Books serve to show a man that those original thoughts of his aren't very new after all.  ~Abraham Lincoln
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