In terms of their reading on a typical day, while among readers device owners are slightly less likely than all readers 16 and older to have read a print book «yesterday,» they are much more likely to have read an e-book in the previous day — and are more likely to have read
a book on a typical day overall.
Among e-book readers, 50 % who read
books on a typical day are reading an e-book and 58 % are reading a printed book.
Not all e-reading device owners read e-books, but in general they do so at a much higher rate than the general population; they are also more likely to read in general, and to read
a book on a typical day.
Not exact matches
On a
typical day Mastromonaco would wake up at 5:30 a.m., read national security
books or press clips, attend senior staffing meetings, and sit down with the President and his advisers — all before lunchtime.
I am a
typical nerd who doesn't mind reading a new
book on a rainy
day, watching movies, or playing video games with...
Traditional publishers build their business around the
typical sales curve of a print
book: put a lot of copies
on bookstore shelves, see what sells in the first 90
days, and deal with returns and marginal ongoing demand
on most titles.
A
typical audiobook made from a
book that doesn't sell very well
on Kindle (less than one copy per
day), will probably make $ 50 - 100 per month if you list it through ACX (Audible Creation Exchange, an Amazon company).