Amazon Kindle discussion
Book Related Banter
>
How do you decide when you don't absolutely love or hate the sample??
date
newest »

message 1:
by
Hannah
(new)
Jun 08, 2011 06:14PM

reply
|
flag
I don't read samples of books. I read the description and some reviews then decide if I want to buy the book or not. For some reason, I've just never used the Sample feature.



Hannah wrote: "I've read a TON of samples...it's one of my favorite things about owning a Kindle. Some of them I love and immediately buy, some I never finish and others are just sort of ok and I'm basically ind..."
If the sample doesn't grab me, I don't buy it. Just okay is not good enough.
If the sample doesn't grab me, I don't buy it. Just okay is not good enough.


I did read the samples of a couple of Haruki Murakami's books, wasn't impressed and haven't gone any further.
I did read the sample of The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo and if I'd relied on my opinion of the sample, I wouldn't have gone past it. I read the whole book and loved it, but the sample started extremely slowly.


On Amazon the sample is the first 5% (approximate) of the book not counting the front matter. The author/publisher does not have the ability to select what goes in the sample.
While it might be nice to skip the prolog, I think reading a sample that appears later in the book would be a bit discontinuous. Kind of like those time when you catch the ending of a move, then days later watch the whole thing. It works, but it doesn’t have the same effect as watching it from the beginning the first time through.
Sometimes you can find samples on an authors website. Just goggle the author and see if there are other samples available.






Anthony wrote: "I think the sample tells you more than the Amazon reviews. The sample is what it is; the reviewers can be a posse of friends and family."
Yes, although the reviews are helpful, there is nothing like a good sample. Everyone has different opinions. What I love someone else might hate. I always read the samples before buying.
Yes, although the reviews are helpful, there is nothing like a good sample. Everyone has different opinions. What I love someone else might hate. I always read the samples before buying.





I take into consideration spelling and grammar, book layout, writing style, pace (did ANYthing happen in the first three chapters?)and character development.
Price isn't a factor for me. If I don't like a book, I won't buy it just because it sells for 99 cents. And, as a rule, I do not purchase books based on reviews.

Betsy, have you tried doing it by connecting your kindle to your computer? I'm not sure if it would work. But it seems like you should be able to drop and drag your files to the new kindle. Just a thought...Good luck:)

No. I'm pretty sure it would work, but I think connecting to my computer is a hassle. Besides, I'm holding off transferring everything. I'm not absolutely sure I'm going to keep the K3. I don't like the reading screen as well as the K1.

1. copy files from K1 to PC
2. open folder on PC, then hand select titles that you know are samples
3. drag those files to K3.
That's as straightforward as I can envision it.
For your purchased Kindle content, your easiest option is probably to go to your amazon account, head off to manage my Kindle, and select the "send to" on each of your files.
Then just wait until they download via 3G or Wifi (I'd suggest wifi, it tends to be faster).
********
I am also a K1 to K3 user. I love the battery life on the K3 and think the display is a lot crisper and has better contrast. give it a couple of days.
AND I love how small and light the K3 is, even if I do have a REAL fondness for the "squashed oragami" shape of the K1.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo (other topics)The Hunger Games (other topics)
The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo (other topics)