Shiny New E-Book Gizmo: The Amazon Kindle


View Full Version : Amazon Adding Kindle Content in Leaps and Bounds


Gideon
03-06-2008, 07:00 PM
Wow.. I am absolutely astounded at the rate Amazon is adding content. I search for Martin Buber a few weeks ago when I first got my Kindle and there was one book about him, by another author.

Now there is something like 6 books! Now, that doesn't sound a lot until you think about what an obscure set of books you're looking at here. Most people don't even know who Buber is, so this is really saying something.

"Jewish Bible" which previously produced one very bad text, now has multiple pages of content (unfortunately, none of which a good edition of the Hebrew Bible).

So Amazon is adding a lot of their more obscure content as well as best sellers. As I don't read much in the way of fiction I'm finding this to be just fantastic (and most the prices are great... though there is the occasional academic publisher that needs to pull its head out of its... er.. yes.)

NatCh
03-06-2008, 07:37 PM
We'd heard some rumors some time ago that publishers were scrambling to digitize their back catalogs, it's good to see that playing out! :nice:

dmturner
03-15-2008, 06:25 PM
I'm fairly consistently NOT finding what I search for on Amazon, however. My taste seems not to match what's being provided.

Ervserver
03-15-2008, 10:41 PM
Be nice if they could sell in a couple different formats

dugbug
03-24-2008, 08:54 AM
anyone know if TOR publishing plans on anything? I want to read that book "I am Legend" but don't want the paper version :)
-d

dugbug
03-24-2008, 08:55 AM
I'm fairly consistently NOT finding what I search for on Amazon, however. My taste seems not to match what's being provided.

What are you looking for?

-d

JSWolf
03-24-2008, 09:02 AM
anyone know if TOR publishing plans on anything? I want to read that book "I am Legend" but don't want the paper version :)
-d
What is really odd is that some of his books are eBook, but the books that contains I Am Legend is not in eBook format. This is why publishers have no clue how to get it right 1.2 the time at least.

Nate the great
03-24-2008, 09:31 AM
What is really odd is that some of his books are eBook, but the books that contains I Am Legend is not in eBook format. This is why publishers have no clue how to get it right 1.2 the time at least.

The stupidity of that decision is amazing. Here is a blockbuster movie with a superstar in the lead, and the publisher doesn't bother to release the novel as an ebook.

dugbug
03-24-2008, 11:57 AM
I've always been confused with how publishers and book stores fail to take advantage of a movie release. Take the "Planet of the Apes" remake a few years back. The publisher and book stores could have timed with the release an in-store kiosk near the front door for the 1963 book.

Most folks I think would prefer the book over the movie (at least those entering a bookstore). Put it out there and ride the hype. Certainly "I Am Legend" would have done wonders.

-d

dmturner
04-10-2008, 09:59 PM
What are you looking for?

-d
Things reviewed in the New York Times Book Review. Books I see in the bookstore out in displays. Most poetry--I'd love to have Kay Ryan's, Robert Pinsky's, Ted Kooser's, or Charles Simic's poetry on the Kindle, not just Mark Doty's. Bonk, by Mary Roach. Here Comes Everybody, by Clay Shirky.

It seems most of the time when I type in a title it's not there. I admit I have eclectic tastes, and am not much interested in most best-sellers nor in classics I've already read, but after my initial enthusiasm for the Kindle I'm feeling a little frustrated.

Gideon
04-11-2008, 02:18 AM
I think the more esoteric your tastes (and I'm right there with you) the more this will happen. That's pretty obvious, but at the same time - the Amazon store is the only place I'm finding even a sizable percentage of what I'm looking for.

The other online retailers often sell the exact same things and even then you have to contend with it being in a proper format.

I've bought something like 6 books this last month that were paper, mainly because they were either books I wanted in actual print or, more often, things I could not find on the Kindle. But I'm still impressed what I do find on the Kindle. The ebook world, for so long, was so incredibly limited in it's selection of non-classics and non-best sellers that I'm still thrilled by what I find on Amazon. It's really the first time that I've felt an ebook reader actually has a chance.

Poetry is something I'd like to see more of as well, as well as solid reference material, but the Kindle needs to have more sophisticated text control before we see it.

dmturner
04-12-2008, 09:39 AM
Yes, I understand why they don't have most of the books I'm looking for. It isn't the first time I've been an early adopter, either, so I'm used to having a Wonderful Tool I can't use for much. I want this great idea to succeed, and I'd like to be able to use it for most of my reading. In order for it to succeed with book buyers like myself, they need a better mechanism for making content available.

Mark Doty's poems came across fine, and so do the poems in that John Lithgow-edited anthology; I don't think it's text control that's the problem. I suspect it's more that poetry is published by small publishing houses in university utility rooms by people who do seven other things full-time.

Alisa
04-12-2008, 09:06 PM
I really wish non-Kindle editions had a link on the page you could click to indicate your interest in having one made. They could take that data to send to publishers to give them a better idea what they could sell and they could also email you if it became available. There may be more Kindle owners out there looking for "esoteric" books than they think.

wetterau
04-13-2008, 07:28 AM
Things reviewed in the New York Times Book Review. Books I see in the bookstore out in displays. Most poetry--I'd love to have Kay Ryan's, Robert Pinsky's, Ted Kooser's, or Charles Simic's poetry on the Kindle, not just Mark Doty's. Bonk, by Mary Roach. Here Comes Everybody, by Clay Shirky.

It seems most of the time when I type in a title it's not there. I admit I have eclectic tastes, and am not much interested in most best-sellers nor in classics I've already read, but after my initial enthusiasm for the Kindle I'm feeling a little frustrated.
Hi, You might like On The Road To Dharamsala by John Moncure Wetterau (me) at the Kindle store. Please let me know if you do. It's on the level of the work you mentioned, and the price is right.

random50
07-01-2008, 02:07 PM
Any chance of an update here? Is the content continuing to improve?

I'm considering buying a Kindle principally for academic textbooks. The availability of content at the moment is OK, but not great (I'd say it's roughly 40% of what I'm interested in). Since this is the first time I've ever looked into this, I have no point of comparison!

daffy4u
07-01-2008, 02:24 PM
Any chance of an update here? Is the content continuing to improve?

I'm considering buying a Kindle principally for academic textbooks. The availability of content at the moment is OK, but not great (I'd say it's roughly 40% of what I'm interested in). Since this is the first time I've ever looked into this, I have no point of comparison!

Here's a thread (http://www.mobileread.com/forums/showthread.php?p=206386#post206386) tracking the growth of Kindle formatted books. At the moment the total is 135,583.

As far as the number of academic books, you'll have to search the Kindle Book Store (http://www.amazon.com/Books-Kindle/b/ref=sv_kinc_1?ie=UTF8&node=154606011) to see if what you need is available.

Some publishers (http://www.mobileread.com/forums/showthread.php?t=25415) are beginning to Kindle-ize textbooks, so maybe a book you need may be available in the future.

random50
07-04-2008, 07:24 AM
Very useful, thanks.

It looks like they're rapidly adding back catalogue (I'm assuming books aren't released at the rate of several thousand per month!) so every reason to be hopeful. The slightly weird thing is that many of the titles I'm interest in come from a single publisher (Springer), and yet some are available whilst others are not. I've emailed them to ask about their policy, but no reply so far.