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50 of the Greatest Characters in Literature


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Amazon’s new high-end e-reader, the Kindle Voyage, starts at $199 but has fancy page turns


Laura Hazard Owen's avatarGigaom

Remember all that speculation that Amazon would one day start giving away Kindle e-readers for free? In fact, the company is going in the opposite direction: Amazon introduced on Wednesday a new, high-end e-reader, the Kindle Voyage, that starts at $199 for the version with ads and goes all the way up to $289 for an ad-free, 3G version. Not only is it expensive for an e-reader, it is twice as expensive as the most basic tablet that Amazon also launched Wednesday.

So what will you get for your money? The Kindle Voyage is thinner and lighter than previous devices. It has a totally flat glass screen, without the raised plastic bezel that is present on cheaper models, and the screen is high-resolution, with 300 pixels per inch. Like the Kindle Paperwhite, the Voyage is front-lit, but its light is better — it can go “39 percent brighter” and…

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Authors United may not want to admit it, but most books are consumer goods like any other


Mathew Ingram's avatarGigaom

As my colleague Laura Owen has reported, Authors United — a group of writers who are upset at the tactics Amazon is using to negotiate with the French publisher Hachette — has posted a letter to the company’s board of directors, arguing that the online retailer is being unfair to authors. Among other things, the group says Amazon is making a mistake by treating books like any other consumer product.

In fact, in a somewhat bizarre turn of events for a group that is supposedly protesting Amazon’s methods — the refusal to allow advance orders of Hachette books, the removal of some books from the search index, and so on — Authors United makes an odd admission: it agrees Amazon “has every right to refuse to sell consumer goods in response to a pricing disagreement with a wholesaler.”

But wait — isn’t that exactly what Amazon is doing with…

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Ebooks and Traditional Books


The link below is to an article that takes a look at the benefits of both ebooks and traditional books for the publisher/writer.

For more visit:
http://bookarma.net/blog/ebook-vs-print-book/

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Proofreading Software


The link below is to an article that takes a look at proofreading software and web applications.

For more visit:
http://blog.bookbaby.com/2014/08/proofreading-software-to-save-your-time/

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Ebook Pricing Strategies


The link below is to an article that looks at ebook pricing strategies.

For more visit:
http://www.smithpublicity.com/2014/07/ebook-pricing-strategies-self-published-authors/

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Amazon launches KDP Kids, a tool to help authors self-publish illustrated books


Laura Hazard Owen's avatarGigaom

A whole lot of people think they have a book in them. And even more think they could write a children’s book. Amazon made that a little easier Wednesday with a new tool, KDP Kids, that aids in the creation of illustrated ebooks.

“No one should have to be a computer programmer to create a beautiful, illustrated Kindle book for kids,” Russ Grandinetti, SVP of Kindle, said in a statement. (Of course, you will still need to have the illustrations at hand and in digital format. Amazon’s not doing your artwork for you, at least not yet.)

KDP Kids largely consists of a free software program, Kindle Kids’ Book Creator, that is downloadable to Mac or PC and lets authors “import artwork from popular formats, including jpg, pdf, tiff, and png,” add text to the pages and preview how it will look across Kindle devices (clearly, illustrated books…

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Young Adult Books


The link below is to an article that looks at young adult books.

For more visit:
http://www.theguardian.com/books/booksblog/2014/jul/31/ya-books-reads-young-adult-teen-new-adult-books

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Too Many Books?


The links below are to articles concerning an over-abundance of books – or maybe not?

For more visit:
http://the-toast.net/2014/07/23/on-book-hoarding/
http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/dirty-secret/201103/no-you-are-not-book-hoarder

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How To Save Books