Sure you can get your books on shelves, no issue, but many decide it's not worth the extra effort because it is so easy to get books
into electronic bookstores.
Not exact matches
This got shoved
into the front of my brain yesterday when one of my favorite local
bookstores linked off to an opinion article written by a twenty - something who was stridently against
electronic readers — to the point that they'd confessed to having irrational hatred for seeing other people reading them.
Without doing a POD paper version, you get your
electronic book
into brick - and - mortar
bookstores.
I will, as I have said before, talk about some ideas on selling
electronic books to independent
bookstores, and maybe even
into other stores.
-- You will want to sell your book
into bookstores at the same price or less as your
electronic book.
Other examples of authors doing well in tight times is Stephenie Meyer, whose Twilight series at one point accounted for 15 % of all books sold in the US; and J.K. Rowling, who is about to jump
into the
electronic book market by launching Pottermore, her new virtual online
bookstore.