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Bunny suicides

By insidebooks | March 10, 2010

The success of ebooks on the iPhone is revealed with some new figures here from the Apple app store.

At the O’Reilly Tools of Change conference, Peter Collingridge of Enhanced Editions gave an interesting presentation about ebooks and reading habits. For example the average reading time is 24 minutes, and whilst Nick Cave’s The Death of Bunny Munro is a popular read in the small hours, Barack Obama is mostly read at lunchtime.

You can view Peter Collingridge’s presentation here.

 

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Writer’s block

By insidebooks | March 2, 2010

Some advice from Ian Rankin - his 10 rules for writing fiction:

  1. Read lots
  2. Write lots
  3. Learn to be self-critical
  4. Learn what criticism to accept
  5. Be persistent
  6. Have a story worth telling
  7. Don’t give up
  8. Know the market
  9. Get lucky
  10. Stay lucky

You can read the full set of advice in the Guardian here

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Bacardi and World Book Day

By insidebooks | March 1, 2010

This week sees the annual World Book Day in the UK and Ireland - Thursday 4 March. (Curiously the rest of the world celebrates the day on 23 April.) There will be a range of events, from fancy dress to readings by famous authors, to encourage kids to read books, as well as the gift of a £1 book token to all schoolchildren. Visit the WBD website for full details of events.

Writing in the Guardian, Lucy Mangan reflected on the day and that it has a slightly worthy, top-down feel. She says: ‘[reading] is and always has been terminally uncool (even in Victorian times, the boy with the hoop and stick got more kudos than the one who got the third volume of Jane Eyre before anyone else). What it ­really needs to get kids reading en masse is a few initiatives to rupture that link. A free Bacardi Breezer with every book next year, perhaps. Or black T-shirts for everyone that say, “Fuck off, I’m reading.” Or ­borrow a trick from cigarette ­advertising and warn that this ­volume might give you cancer.’ See the full article here.

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Second-hand news

By insidebooks | February 12, 2010

Worthy of note is the burgeoning second-hand or used book market.  In 2006 22 per cent of adults bought books from a charity shop or other second-hand outlet (Mintel, 2007). Oxfam has 130 specialist bookshops, alongside its sale of books in its other retail outlets, and is the largest retailer of second-hand books in Europe. The internet has revolutionized the search and sale of second-hand books: Amazon sells second-hand copies through its Marketplace scheme; and AbeBooks lists over 100 m new, used, rare, and out-of-print books from more than 13,500 booksellers.

The novelist Susan Hill has spoken out against the expansion of Oxfam’s book operation and its impact on small bookshops and other charity shops. She writes on her Spectator blog …

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iPadulation

By insidebooks | February 2, 2010

The launch of the tablet computer from Apple last week was a masterful demonstration of how to launch a product, with little advance information and great anticipation in the media.

The iPad has not changed the industry overnight but it does look like the cool object we have been waiting for in terms of ebook readers. The colour screen will move ebooks to the next level, and whilst there are undoubtedly flaws in the first version, Apple is used to fine tuning products once they have reached the early adopter market.

For publishers the iPad offers more choice – a new player with which to do deals alongside Sony, Google and Amazon. There are predictions circulating in the industry about 50 per cent of books being sold as ebooks within the next five years, and the interest from Apple certainly confirms the impetus behind such a trend.

The irony is that Steve Jobs had proclaimed the book as dead …

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