Historical Romance #eBook Sales Trending at #BooksOnBoard #FED_ebooks #Author #Romance RT

Historical Romance eBook Sales Trending at BooksOnBoard

 WEBWIRE – Tuesday, April 24, 2012

 

“At BooksOnBoard, 2012 is shaping up to be the Year of the Historical Romance,” stated Nathan Johnson, BooksOnBoard’s Director of Operations. “Sophisticated romance readers appreciate the specialized knowledge that authors must develop to write period content with accuracy, and 2012 has had, and will continue to have, a lot in that line to offer.”

Historical romance has seen significant growth and variation since the early days of Georgette Heyer, who is arguably the founder of the genre, and, more specifically, of the Regency subgenre. “The most noticeable of the genre’s recent developments is the historical/paranormal and historical/fantasy crossover,” Johnson added. There is some debate as to whether crossovers qualify as true historical romance, but the popularity of both is undisputed. “Even if traditional historical romance fans do not consider crossover titles to be true members of the genre, plenty of readers are stating with the Buy Now button that historical romance crossovers are worth the attention,” Johnson said.

Historical romance crossovers are doing better than ever. “2010 saw a flurry of activity as more and more historical romance authors began to weave elements of paranormal or fantasy into their Victorian and Regency settings,” said Bob LiVolsi, founder and CEO of BooksOnBoard. “Now, the many crossover series that debuted in 2010 have matured in plot, character, and—more significantly for the crossover subgenre itself—style.”

Lydia Dare—the nom de plume of writing duo Tammy Falkner and Ava Stone—started turning heads in 2010 with the arrival of the Westfield Wolves series, which adds a powerful family of werewolves to the social landscape of Regency England. Two years later, Dare has returned to release The Wolf Who Loved Me, a title that has been making its presence known on BooksOnBoard’s Bestsellers List since its release earlier this month.

Dare isn’t the only name in historical romance commanding attention right now, however. Jennifer Ashley (The Duke’s Perfect Wife), Tessa Dare (A Week to Be Wicked), and Miranda Neville (Confessions from an Arranged Marriage) have become some of BooksOnBoard’s most successful authors in recent weeks. Still others are enjoying success even days before their new romance titles hit the shelves: Mary Jo Putney (No Longer a Gentleman) and Amanda Quick (Crystal Gardens, a paranormal crossover) are already approaching BooksOnBoard’s top ten.

“Readers seem to be demanding more from historical romance authors,” LiVolsi noted. “Authenticity, complexity, and originality are the hallmarks of success at BooksOnBoard.” Readers of traditional historical romance or historical romance crossovers may choose to agree or disagree over the labels applied to their favorite genres, but according to LiVolsi, one thing seems clear: “This year, authors are delivering on such a scale as has never been seen before.”

BooksOnBoard is the largest independent online retailer of eBooks, with an inventory of approximately 500,000 unique titles.

First Edition Design Publishing, the industry’s largest distributor of eBooks, submits titles to BooksOnBoard and to over 100,000 other distribution points and booksellers in more than 100 countries.

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Half of all pupils will use #eBooks in two years #FED_ebooks #Author #Android #Apple

First Edition Design Publishing

HALF of all pupils starting secondary school in two years’ time will be using eBooks as the classroom goes digital, writes Breda Heffernan.

Book publishers Folens yesterday unveiled its first range of eBooks which will

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Apple's iPad

be available to download by students on all digital platforms, including AndroidApple and Windows.

The Folens App, which is free to download, will have 26 Junior Cert and 16 Leaving Cert titles which will be available to buy in June. More books will be added on an on-going basis and trial chapters are now available for downloading.

The eBooks will be on average 15 to 20pc cheaper to purchase than traditional textbooks.

However, Folens said this reduction could be more if the Government closed a loophole whereby textbooks were exempt from VAT but digital education material was not.

The publisher said the new app was developed following demand from parents, teachers and students and after a pilot study carried out last year in a selection of schools received a great response.

Irish Independent ~ April 24. 2012

www.firsteditiondesignpublishing.co.uk

#Nook in the Dark #BN #Nook #ebooks #Author #BarnesandNoble

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BN Nook Simple Touch with GlowLight

 

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NOOK Glowlight

If you read your ebook reader a lot at night or in the dark, then throw away those additional lights or lighted cases.  Barnes and Noble have up for pre-order their Nook Simple Touch with Glowlight.  With a click of a switch you can turn on the GlowLight to illuminate the e-ink display.  Brightness is adjustable via a slider switch, and the unit also comes with a pre-installed anti-glare screen protector. With the now standard 6″ e-ink screen, the unit weighs in at 7 ounces.

Pre-orders are expected to ship on May 1 2012. Retail price is $139 USD.

 Source: the-gadgeteer.com  by IAN LIM  

 

Mr. Woolly and Friends #FED_ebooks #ebook #author #childrensbook

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Mr. Woolly and Friends in How the Barn Was Painted Purple

Mr. Woolly and Friends in How the Barn Was Painted Purple is a charming, whimsical children’s book by Lisa A. Dabrowski.

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Author Lisa A. Dabrowski

Mr. Woolly is a curious little sheep who loves to learn! Sometimes his curiosity gets the better of him and he finds himself in another adventure with his barnyard friends as they discover life on the farm. Author Lisa A. Dabrowski’s First Edition Design Publishinghand-crafted characters and photographs bring this wonderful children’s book to life. Suggested for ages 6 – 8., you can visit “Mr. Woolly and Friends” online at www.mrwoollyandfriends.com

Lisa A. Dabrowski, a grassroots, multi-talented artist, with a passion for nature, music, and storytelling, has raised animals throughout her life. In 1992, the real-life “Easter” and “Friday” were born. Along with Lisa’s other menagerie members, they have been the inspiration for characters in this book. For a number of years, Lisa, as “Bo Peep”, accompanied by “Easter”, would make appearances at the local country fair and other community events and entertained children. More recently, Lisa, in honoring her own family’s duck farming heritage, along with her pet duck, “Roxy”, have delighted crowds by bringing to life a part of Long Island, New York’s agricultural history. For “Mr. Woolly and Friends”, Lisa hand-crafted all the characters and set pieces, then photographed them in a way that would show their unique personalities.

Mr. Woolly and Friends in How the Barn Was Painted Purple by Lisa A. Dabrowski, ISBN 9781937520854, was published April 11, 2012 in eBook format by First Edition Design Publishing in Sarasota, Florida USA. It is available at Amazon’s Kindle store,  Barnes & Noble Book Nook  and other on-line retailers. In addition to those outlets,  Mr. Woolly and Friends in How the Barn Was Painted Purple was distributed in eBook format worldwide by First Edition Design Publishing to over 100,000 locations including libraries, schools colleges, universities.

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No Pulitzer Prize for Novelists #FED_ebooks #Author #Writer

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Publishers - Aggregators - Master Distributors

Pulitzers 2012: prize for fiction withheld for first time in 35 years

None of the entries for the best American novel of the last year could command a majority

Sources: http://www.guardian.co.uk By: Alison Flood and LA Times

The best American novel of the last year? There wasn’t one, according to the judges of this year’s Pulitzer prize for fiction, who announced yesterday that for the first time in 35 years the fiction award would be withheld.

Three novels were in the running to take the Pulitzer prize, the most prestigious in American fiction: Karen Russell’s debut Swamplandia, about a family trying and failing to run an alligator wrestling theme park; David Foster Wallace’s posthumously completed novel The Pale King, set in an Internal Revenue Service centre; and Denis Johnson’s old American west novella Train Dreams.

The books were selected from 341 novels by the novelist Michael Cunningham and the critics Maureen Corrigan and Susan Larson, and presented to the Pulitzer board, which took the decision not to give out the $10,000 prize this year. This was the 11th time the fiction award has been withheld, and the first time since 1977. Previous winners of the Pulitzer range from Ernest Hemingway, Harper Lee and William Faulkner to John Updike, Philip Roth and Toni Morrison.

“The main reason [for the fiction decision] is that no one of the three entries received a majority and thus, after lengthy consideration, no prize was awarded,” Sig Gissler, administrator of the Pulitzers, told the Associated Press. “There were multiple factors involved in these decisions, and we don’t discuss in detail why a prize is given or not given.” Larson, chair of the award’s jury, added: “The decision not to award the prize this year rests solely with the Pulitzer board.”

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Founded in 1917, the Pulitzer Prize is awarded for excellence in newspaper journalism, literary achievements, and musical composition

John Mullan, professor of English at University College London and a former judge of the Booker prize, said that withholding the UK’s top literary honour was “absolutely never an option”.

“Quite frequently the Booker shortlist comes out and various critics pronounce upon it and say, ‘None of these are any good,’ but when you’re a judge, that’s absolutely, certainly, not an option,” he said. “You go into it with the knowledge that some years are better than others. Some are very good, some are duff, and you just pray you get a good year.”

The Pulitzer, though, is “different”, according to Mullan. “Americans take it much more seriously. The Pulitzer is like an award saying, ‘You will go down in posterity’ – that’s what they take it as being, therefore the panel sees it as its lofty mission to decide if there is anything worthy of that,” he said. “The Booker, though – the people judging that see it much more pragmatically, and know there is a history of Booker prize winners and Booker shortlisted novels, some of which turn out to be really shrewd choices vindicated by time, and some which look like duff choices. There’s a long history of books that were not even on the shortlist which 30 years later look like they deserved to win, which gives you a rueful realism about the process. It seems to me, the Pulitzer has come to stand for something different, and perhaps Americans are a bit more solemn about what these judgments mean.”

The Pulitzer board did manage to find winners for other literary categories this year: Life on Mars by Tracy K Smith took the poetry prize, Malcolm X: A Life of Reinvention by the late Manning Marable won the history award, The Swerve: How the World Became Modern by Stephen Greenblatt won the non-fiction gong, and John Lewis Gaddis’s George F Kennan: An American Life won the biography award.

Here’s the full list of the winners:

JOURNALISM

Public Service – The Philadelphia Inquirer

Breaking News Reporting – The Tuscaloosa (Alabama) News Staff

Investigative Reporting – Matt Apuzzo, Adam Goldman, Eileen Sullivan and Chris Hawley of the Associated Press

and

Michael J. Berens and Ken Armstrong of The Seattle Times

Explanatory Reporting – David Kocieniewski of The New York Times

Local Reporting – Sara Ganim and members of The Patriot-News Staff, Harrisburg, Penn

National Reporting – David Wood of The Huffington Post

International Reporting – Jeffrey Gettleman of The New York Times

Feature Writing – Eli Sanders of The Stranger, a Seattle weekly

Commentary – Mary Schmich of the Chicago Tribune

Criticism -Wesley Morris of The Boston Globe

Editorial Writing – No award

Editorial Cartooning – Matt Wuerker of POLITICO

Breaking News Photography – Massoud Hossaini of Agence France-Presse

Feature Photography – Craig F. Walker of The Denver Post

LETTERS, DRAMA and MUSIC

Fiction – No award

Drama – “Water by the Spoonful” by Quiara Alegria Hudes

History – “Malcolm X: A Life of Reinvention,” by the late Manning Marable (Viking)

Biography – “George F Kennan: An American Life,” by John Lewis Gaddis (The Penguin Press)

Poetry – “Life on Mars” by Tracy K Smith (Graywolf Press)

General Nonfiction – “The Swerve: How the World Became Modern,” by Stephen Greenblatt (WW Norton and Company)

Music – “Silent Night: Opera in Two Acts” by Kevin Puts (Aperto Press)

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New #Sony #eBook Store #FED_ebooks #author

Source: http://www.computeractive.co.uk

Sony launches ebook reader store

Sony’s Reader Store UK ebook website has been launched offering a range of books in the epub format.

First Edition Design eBook PublishingThe company said that ebooks on the Sony Reader Store site range from new authors to best sellers and classics and can be read on a wide range of devices, including Mac, PC and Android tablets as well as the Sony Reader.

People can download an app at the Reader Store or from Android’s Google Play or access the site directly using Sony’s Reader with Wifi. As well as books, some of which are free, customers can download newspapers.

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eBooks: Men Lie, Numbers Don’t #FED_ebooks #ebooks #author #writer

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How the eBook Revived Our Love for Literature

Source: http://www.literacynews.com

By: Tahar Rajab

It seems as if a very silent revolution is transpiring before our very eyes. To witness it unfold, one needs to simply look up the next time they’re seated on a train. That is if their attention isn’t already occupied by a piece of wonderful literature of course. You see, Great Britain is being transformed into a book reading nation and – if stats are anything to go by – it’s all thanks to the eBook.

Men lie, numbers don’t. Therefore, the statistics behind eBook and First Edition Design eBook Publishinghardcover books, along with reading preferences amongst the younger generation, is telling. EBook sales grew by a whopping 177% last year, with 53% of those who bought eBook readers proclaiming that they now read more books than they ever did before.

Perhaps the most crucial statistic however, lies within 50% of kids saying they want to read an eBook, with one third claiming they would read more with eBooks. Now as previously mentioned, ‘men lie, numbers don’t’, and so on that understanding (and after replacing ‘men’ with ‘kids’ of course), it may very be that these children wouldn’t read more with eBooks and are generally simply fibbing about their desire to read an electronic book. However, as such stats are all we have to go by, one would be correct in assuming that the upcoming generation is one with a rekindled (no pun intended) literature love affair.

Why?

The eBook has transformed lives and the way we approach literature. How it has done so, is really quite simple. Having the capability to do something spurs desire for it to be done. This is the case with the eBook, which by providing users with potentially hundreds of different titles to choose from in one device, stimulates the will to read.

Another reason can be found in the enormous gulf that once existed between books and technology. This can be better explained as a gap between the young and the old; between a generation that grew up with literature as a leading form of entertainment, to one that found leisure in technological advances, such as CD or mp3 players and handheld game consoles. With literature now being available on the latest technological handheld devices, this chasm is no longer, and both sides are now merged together.

Is All Rosy?

First Edition Design eBook Publishing

eBooks are outpacing print books

However, perhaps there is a detrimental side effect to the rise in eBook popularity. For every 100 hardcover books sold by Amazon, the website flogs 143 eBooks. EBooks are thus seemingly replacing hardcover works and Open PDFs replacing paper pages. This could result in a weaker emotional bond between readers and pieces of literature. It happened with music. The ability to contain mass amounts of music on mp3 devices, hindered the attachment listeners once felt to the music through a physical representation, like a CD. Literature lovers of my generation will surely agree with the logic that a hardcover book, with its fresh smell and untouched pages, brought with it an inexplicably affectionate sensation. That feeling cannot be reciprocated with eBooks.

After Considerable Thought

The renewed love for literature is most certainly a good thing and an unsung positive association with the upcoming generation. However, whether an eBook is a better source for written material is a completely different debate. Perhaps the whole idea of requiring an emotional bond with a book is rather illogical and ignorant of the fact that such bonds are made while reading the actual text, not by holding the work in one’s hand. However, whether reading off a screen is healthier for the eyes and brain is also a matter that needs conclusive research (much has been analysed though, at the moment; the results of different studies are contradictory). Thus for the moment, the conclusion is that due to things still being fresh and findings being inconclusive, further results are awaited in order to form a sound conclusion. You might need to re-read that last sentence several times, and maybe even print it off into paper form to understand it!

About the author: Tahar Rajab is a British freelance writer with a philosophical outlook

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eBooks Help the Environment #FED_ebooks #ebooks #Author #environment Pls RT

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eBooks Help the Environment One Download at a Time

Posted by Brian Clark Howard of National Geographic News

newswatch.nationalgeographic.com

By Allen Tellis

Sales of eBooks went up 164 percent from 2009 to 2010. eBooks, which include digital newspapers, books, blogs, or journal articles, can be readily downloaded right to a computer or mobile device.

eBooks had an 8 percent share of the book market in 2010, which rose to 15 percent by 2011. It is expected that in 2012, the market share of digital books will be around 20 percent. By 2025, eBooks are forecasted to comprise around 75 percent of the market.

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It's all about Mother Earth

The steady rise of eBooks should benefit the environment by reducing use of paper and ink, and by slashing transportation, warehouse, and shelf-space impacts.

The printed book not only uses paper, but also requires a lot of water and energy. There are also other environmental impacts when storing and shipping physical books. eReaders use resources, of course, but by displaying many books and newspapers, their overall footprint is lower.

The amount of paper used for books in one year was estimated at 1.5 million metric tons, and each book produced gave off an estimated 8.85 pounds of carbon dioxide. Study groups have found that the carbon released from eBooks is offset after people read more than 14 eBooks. For the life cycle of a device for reading books, the carbon emitted is offset after the first year. The savings in carbon emitted into the air is around 168 kilograms for the following years after the first year of use.

An avid reader, who will read more than 10 books a year, should consider buying a device and download ebooks to benefit our environment. Some eReaders will allow you to search the Web and answer e-mails, as well as read all the books you desire. Using a reading device could bring down a person’s overall carbon footprint.

The prediction is that eBooks will eventually take over the printed word completely. Going paperless has been a long-time goal, though we still have a ways to go.

We also need to make more progress in recycling spent tablets and eReaders.

It’s also true that one potential downside of the eBook revolution is the decline of local bookstores. But a number of other factors are also at play, including rising rents, competition from big box stores and major online retailers, and changing consumer habits.

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How to Be Happy #FED_ebooks #Author #ebook #book

Live A Happier A.N.T Free Life, or Your Money Back by John Lindsay O’Brien, Ph.D. 

First Edition Design Publishing

Live A Happier A.N.T Free Life, or Your Monday Back

John Lindsay O’Brien, Ph.D.  presents  Live A Happier A.N.T Free Life, or Your Money Back in eBook and print as a coaching guide to explain how the author’s more than fifty-year personal struggle to find the Holy Grail of personal development, emotional health, and a happier life has come true, as it will for you!

Live A Happier A.N.T Free Life, or Your Money Back, ISBN 9781937520816 (eBook),  was published on April 9, 2012  by First Edition Design Publishing in Sarasota, Florida USA. It is currently available in eBook  at Amazon’s Kindle store and numerous other on-line retailers. In addition to those outlets, Live A Happier A.N.T Free Life, or Your Money Back was distributed in eBook format worldwide to over 100,000 locations including libraries, schools colleges, universities making it available in over 100 countries. The print version, ISBN 9781937520809 (print), will be available shortly through those channels that handle print books in addition to eBooks.

http://www.firsteditiondesignpublishing.com

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Atlanta area libraries embracing ebooks #FED_ebooks #ebooks #Author #Library

Source: www.examiner.com

By: Rick Limpert, Atlanta Gadgets Examiner

From Fulton to Cobb, libraries in and around Metro Atlanta are now offering ebooks, and library patrons couldn’t be more excited.

The number of ebooks being checked out of public libraries is doubling every six months, one recent survey stated.

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Apple's iPad

Ebook reader sales took off late in 2011 with the help of Amazon’s Kindle line, the Nook which is offered by Barnes & Noble, and the fact that more and more people are now iPad owners.

Cobb’s number of “unique library card users” checking out e-books jumped by almost 31 percent from November to December. Public demand was so great that Dekalb’s Public Library system paid $10,000 out of its budget to begin offering e-books in December. This was tough to do, but it had to be done to stay current.

While ebooks account for a fraction of the total books checked out of libraries each month, the number is growing and public library systems are adding more titles by the day.

And current best sellers are in most demand. The most checked out e-book in Cobb County last year was “2nd Chance” by James Patterson. His releases are so popular that there is often a waiting ist for his thrillers.

Book publishers are also aware of the trends and are not releasing some titles to libraries as they feel it is cutting into book sales and their profits. “If you look at the list of the Top 100 [ranked] books on Amazon, libraries may only have access to about 20 of them to buy,” says Scott Smith of the DeKalb public library system.

In the long run, ebooks should help libraries with their bottom line. Library website visits are up and that means less time waiting in line to check out books, and less tasks for librarians to do on a daily basis.

Residents of Gwinnett have really taken to ebooks. The Gwinnett Library website is so easy to navigate and they’ve also improved the “search” feature when it comes to ebooks to make life easier for customers.

Yes, there are issues with lending out ebooks from libraries, but like anything else, once the technology is embraced by all involved and the kinks can be worked out, this is how most of us will be getting out books in the future.

We all need to read more and whether you desire ebooks or still like turning pages of paper books, you should visit your local library and get reading.

Rick Limpert, Atlanta Gadgets Examiner

Rick C. Limpert is a freelance writer and columnist in Atlanta. He’s a writer and photographer who has covered technology, sports, and events all over the world. His works have been featured in numerous print and online publications.