Not exact matches
For what it's worth, Under Cover Design's Facebook page features a
number of photos of Ching's cover art, and they are strikingly similar to every single
romance or fantasy cover on the market today, largely because that's what attracts
readers» attention and sells books.
Overdrive does have a
number of major companies still supporting ebook lending such as; Random House, HarperCollins, John Wiley, Harlequin
Romance, Kensington, Perseus, Sourcebooks, Scholastic, Chronicle, among others, and hundreds of their best - selling authors strongly support and are partnering with OverDrive to build stronger connections to library eBook
readers.
My other writings include book reviews (published in Fantasy magazine Black Gate, and SF Site), a handful of short stories (I'm a contributor to the Cast of Characters anthology edited by Lou Aronica), and a
number of articles on writing and publishing that have appeared in venues such as Writer's Digest and
Romance Readers Report.
A huge
number of
romance readers report visiting
romance authors» websites — by far outstripping other related activities they do like following authors on Facebook.
Scribd has had to reduce the
number of
romance titles available (due to the voracious
reader demographic of that genre), as well as limit the
number of audiobooks a subscriber can borrow under their basic plan.
Romance readers follow author blogs, engage in Facebook in large
numbers, and also enjoy YouTube (so come up with a fun book trailer for your book and post it there!).
For
romance readers, the story is the
number one reason why they'll buy a book.
It is something we've wanted to develop for a
number of years, so we're thrilled that we can now bring First For
Romance to the market for readers, independent authors and publishers of romance fiction.
Romance to the market for
readers, independent authors and publishers of
romance fiction.
romance fiction.»
I would imagine that means in practice that
Romance readers, who are renowned for being fast flippers, won't be able to get access to that genre after a certain
number of reads a month.
Earlier this year, when
romance readers began reading more books than Scribd's business model could sustain, Scribd reduced the
number of
romance titles available.