Kindle Lending Library and Amazon prime membership

The big bubbling news of Amazon is the launch of the Netflix-style pool of ebooks rolled into the membership. Not trying to be a know-it-all since I am the world's dumbest genius, but this was an inevitable move that I predicted last year. I just didn't expect it to happen so soon. The initial pool of books is around 5,400 titles as of today. Expect that to blow up very soon, because of the other big development in the rumor stage: Amazon is looking to let self-published authors opt in to the library. I don't know anything of substance but The Passive Voice works off of an "informed tip" to explore the issue.

For readers, it is an amazing deal. Most Amazon customers would have Prime anyway, just to get the movies and the free shipping and the other benefits. Now you basically get 12 free books a year--and good ones, not just stuff an indie author made free (not that there is anything wrong with indies, but you will not see The Hunger Games free elsewhere.) More reading is always A Good Thing.

The biggie for writers will be: (1) compensation and (2) exclusivity. Amazon may well be worth the exclusivity. Obviously, I feel that way, having signed two books with them and happy to do more. A big library moves Amazon even further ahead of the other ebook markets, by orders of magnitude. It's the compensation question that's more of a concern, particularly long term.

One rumor is a payment fund by which writers will be compensated for checkouts. This is a good idea, but the size of the pie and the total number of slices are still uncertain. Even $100,000 a month is not very much if 100,000 authors are splitting it (I'd guess there are at least half a million indie authors at this point).

But writers ultimately write to be read. Back in the Stone Ages of pre-2009, we spent a lot of energy trying to get our books onto library shelves and getting noticed by readers. While discoverability will still remain a challenge, I like my odds a lot better when it's on a free digital shelf. Maybe those readers will connect and go on to try (and maybe buy) other books.

I write each book for one reader--the reader whose ideology may be changed, whose inspiration might blossom, or who might need those few hours of entertainment and escape. I don't know who that is. So I have to work as hard to reach as many readers as possible. The Prime lending library helps accomplish that mission.

***
If you have Prime, you can check out my Fear books (Liquid Fear and Chronic Fear are both releasing Dec. 20). I don't see a function to be able to "pre-checkout" but it's on the list of those available for loan. Maybe I'll have more there soon. Keep watching the skies.
 •  3 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on November 20, 2011 08:14
Comments Showing 1-3 of 3 (3 new)    post a comment »
dateUp arrow    newest »

Sharon/ LFrog1386 I think it's a wonderful idea. Exposure is key, since if you make a new fan with one or two books on Amazon, they will almost always seek out your other books and you will make your profit from the outside. It could be a win-win for everyone involved.


Commit Purple Prose As a reader, I find the idea of exclusivity annoying. I rarely buy from Amazon. Also I have a Nook, this means anything exclusive to Amazon, I probably won't read because of DRMs. I'm not buying something to see if I can convert it to Nook format, but end up having to read it on my laptop.

Yes, the library thing sounds good but is it when you cut your potential audience?


message 3: by Scott (new)

Scott Nicholson That's definitely a big concern, Deb. But for most authors not with the Big Six publishers, there really isn't a significant audience outside Amazon, so it is worth the loss of some audiences to get part of the bigger audience. I have my books available to libraries through Overdrive, so anyone can find my books at any time if they want to bypass Amazon. I am pretty sure the two books I have signed with Amazon will be available in public libraries, too.

Not every author or publisher-maybe not even MOST of them--will give exclusivity as part of any deal. So readers should still have millions and millions of choices either way. Overll, more people will have access to more books, so that part is on the "good" side. Thanks for sharing.


back to top