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The Last to Read a Book Series


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Books in Real Life


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How Not To Treat Books


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Travelling with Books


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Three Books Every Kid Should Own


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Caring for Books


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Book Sniffing


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50 of the Greatest Characters in Literature


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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/