Kindle British Mystery Book Club discussion
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Should eBooks Only Cost a Penny?
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Arielle
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Sep 02, 2014 08:47AM

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I am happy to pay up to AUS$10-$13 for a good recently released e-book and $7-$10 for older quality ones and of course enjoy the specials.
E-books should be cheaper than printed ones. For a printed book there is the cost of printing, logistics, freight and the booksellers' costs etc. I am sure these costs are quite substantial compared to the cost of selling an ebook online.
The difference between the online cost and cost of printed version should be passed on to the purchaser and do not think an e-book be sold for the same amount as a printed one. The author should received the same amount for either version. Maybe an author can sell more books online at a cheaper price and thus increase their sales.

What I don't agree with is paying a higher price "for a good recently released e-book". I am also not happy to pay a reduced price for older quality e-books either. No matter the age the intellectual content remains consistent, so why the need for higher pricing on newly released?
Print books are priced to take into account the costs in manufacture - intellectual content, paper quality, ink, hard vs soft cover etc. None of this, other than intellectual content, is involved in the manufacture of e-books. A point to consider - most books begin life as an electronic file in today's publishing world.
When the price of print books drops it is normally the bookseller rather than the publisher who drops the price with the purpose of clearing stock, and occurs once the book has 'aged' and isn't moving as it did when new.
David makes another very valid point in regard to e-books, and that is the question of ownership. You can do nothing else with it than read it on your device. You may purchase an e-book, but you will never totally own it. If the publisher/author decides sometime in the future that they no longer want that content circulating, they can pull the files and your copy of that book is no longer able to be read. And, this has happened.
Therefore, I guess I agree with Germaine Greer in this instance. E-books should cost greatly less than their print equivalents.

Also agree with David about the ability to pass the printed copy of book onto someone else.
I purchase second hand books from the Canberra Lifeline Bookfair, which are much cheaper than e-books and at the same time supporting a good charity. Recently released large fiction paperbacks in excellent condition sell for around $5. The next bookfair is in a couple of weeks time. This is a very popular weekend event held in March and September in Canberra, Australia.







Now look at it Vinyl is ...
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A similar uproar occurred at the time Penguin introduced paperbacks to the market. The publishing world and authors were totally against them because they would de-value the literary works. For quite a time only B grade 'populus' fiction was published in paperback, and paperback editions were only released a year after the hardback edition was published. Buyer resistance contributed to that gap being reduced, and in most countries today the paperback is released at the same time as the hardback. More books are published in paperback today, including textbooks.
Despite all the fears book sales not only continued, but readers created a demand for more affordable access to non-fiction and classics. This created a huge re-print market.
The next thing was to get publishers to release books in large print and audio format. Words like discriminating against potential readers with disabilities prompted them to come to that party.
Bookshops have already been reducing in number, and I believe those that can diversify to accommodate the electronic book will be the ones who survive. We have a small, privately owned bookshop here that has done just that and they are booming. They still have print books in all formats, but they have also created listening/reading booths in their store where people can preview e and audio books before purchasing through the shop's download facilities.
I still think, however, that the price of ebooks should reflect their true cost. Audio does - it is more expensive to account for the reader's time etc.


Traffic here is awful and books on cassette have saved my sanity. Right now listening to "Hearts in Atlantis" by Stephen King, read by William Hurt and
Stephen King....cost $1.50 used. Agree, the radio makes me nuts.
