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Treat Books Well


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Analysts Claim Teens Still Prefer Print Books


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On the Books: Hachette to experiment with Twitter


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Bill Gates’ five favorite books of 2014


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Hachette will start selling books straight from Twitter


Laura Hazard Owen's avatarGigaom

Hachette Book Group will start selling books straight from tweets, though it can’t be labeled more than an experiment for now: The publisher has partnered with digital distributor Gumroad to sell three gifty print books “for a limited time and in limited quantities” via the books’ authors’ tweets.

The print titles are Amanda Palmer’s The Art of Asking (starting December 11), Chris Hadfield’s You Are Here (starting December 15) and The Onion’s The Onion Magazine: The Iconic Covers that Transformed an Undeserving World (starting December 18). Each book sold will be accompanied by “an exclusive bonus item” — in the case of The Onion’s book, for instance, it’s a set of notecards.

“With so much of our book marketing done socially now, in-stream [company]Twitter[/company] purchasing is a natural next step,” Michael Pietsch, Hachette Book Group CEO, said in a statement.

Here’s an example from another Gumroad partnership that shows what this will look…

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Marketing on Goodreads


The link below is to an article that looks at what you need to know in order to market your book/ebook on Goodreads.

For more visit:
http://blog.bookbaby.com/2014/11/marketing-your-book-on-goodreads/

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2014 Book Shimmy Awards


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Christmas Gift Ideas – Books


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Amazon’s Bezos thinks ebooks made the book industry healthier


Jeff John Roberts's avatarGigaom

“The book industry is in better shape than it ever has been and it’s due to ebooks,” Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos told an audience on Tuesday in a wide-ranging interview that addressed the company’s drone plans, its campus culture and its indifference to pain of short-term shareholders.

Speaking at a BusinessInsider event in New York, Bezos downplayed [company]Amazon’s[/company] recent high-profile spat with publisher Hachette as a run-of-the-mill fight with a supplier, adding that it’s the essential job of any retailer to fight for the best price for its customers.

As for the publishing industry and its authors, Bezos argued that $30 is too high a price for books, and that lower prices will lead to more readers, which will in turn benefit everyone. And in a remark that may have been intended to head off antitrust arguments, he urged people to consider book prices in the context of a larger entertainment market.

“Books don’t…

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Madison Loves Books