Quote:
Originally Posted by neilmarr
I've been campaigning for and hoping for ebooks that make sense in terms of their price for the past decade. My own small publishing house offers them at 10% of the price of our paperbacks and they make money ... even though authors are on a 40% royalty rather than hard copy 10% with us.
We are now seeing ebook reading as a possibility with all the new ereaders on the market, thanks to folks like us.
But retailers are putting a spoke in ... their prices are potty!!!
I've already (against the grain) bought ebooks that cost more than their harback equivalents. But enough is enough ... when over the past week I can find nobody selling Margaret Atwood's *Year of the Flood* in ebook at anything less than double the available hardback price, I refuse to go there. I refuse to encourage such greed by becoming a customer. I refuse to embrace the counter-revolution.
We should boycot retailers who play this game. We should NOT buy their ebooks. We should say: "Sod off -- this is not what the ebook ideal is about!"
Neil
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Y'know... I just don't *GET* you people! Haven't you figured it out yet?
It's *NOT* about giving you enjoyment or learning through the process of reading. Nosirree-Bob! It's about creating a long-term, stable employment program for those who work in the Publishing industry! (And authors of course, although there *are* those who insist that we really don't need authors as everything that can be written already *has* been written - publishers simply need to write a series of programs to change the names and locations to "create" 'new' stories.

)
Get with the program!
Derek