Again, you want your digital page to look as much like a printed page as possible and
most printed books don't have additional white space between paragraphs.
Most print books use full - justified text, so that the right side of the text is lined up along the right margin.
For most print books, you'll need an ISBN from somewhere in order to get into libraries or bookstores.
While most print books are available to libraries at a bit less than the discounted consumer cost at Amazon, these ebooks average five times the Amazon consumer price.
Most printed books last for years in library collections and that didn't affect book sales when the economy was a bit more flush; those loanable titles just whetted the public's appetite to borrow and buy more.
While Alexandria, Va. bought the most books overall, Cambridge, Mass. bought
the most print books, and Knoxville, Tenn. purchased the most Kindle books.
I pay less than $ 8.00 per Audible title, less than half what it used to cost me to rent from Books on Tape, also less than
most print books.
Most ebooks are significantly cheaper than
most print books, meaning readers can get more bang for their buck.
However, after reading this blog post I looked up a handful of fiction authors on Amazon and see that
most print books are indeed in double digits, except for the mass printed authors.
My other issue is that this also ignores the fact that the publishers have already been paid for the books when they are placed on such deep discounts, discounts that for,
most print books aren't common unless the books aren't selling.
(So would I) But, nobody is sitting back and considering things like the current models already have crisper text than
most PRINTED books, especially paperbacks.