Quote:
Originally Posted by barryem
I began buying paperback books in the mid 1950s and I just went to an inflation calculator to see how things have been going. In 1955 most new paperback books were 15 cents in Houston where I was living. Quite a few were a dime. A very thick book might have cost a quarter.
According to the inflation calculator 15 cents in 1955 would be $1.41 in today's money. However, paperbacks cost a lot more than that today.
So I think the bigger disparity is in the price of books in general. They've gotten way more expensive than inflation can account for. Compared to that the difference in ebooks and print books is small.
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For sure, but the difference is not always small by comparison, and just so many other factors to do with quality etc that need to be looked at really.
But a good point never-the-less. Though it should have no bearing on the current situation as regards fairness between the two formats.