E-Readers in the Wild at the Mall

On Saturday, I was with my Dad at the Roland Center, a fairly big mall here in Bremen.

And since I was at the mall already, I of course hit the book stores. The foreign language section at the Thalia bookstore was rather disappointing, not to mention that all foreign language books were shelved under “Fernweh”, one of those untranslatable German words that means “yearning to travel the world”. Sometimes, it is translated into English with another German term, “Wanderlust”, which is odd since “Wanderlust” and “Fernweh” are two different things. Besides, when I see a shelf labeled “Book about yearning to travel the world”, I expect travel books not foreign language books.

While I was browsing, my Dad was somewhere else. I expected that he’d be hanging out in front of the store or maybe that he’d be sitting on one of the sofas scattered about in the store. However, once I finished browsing and went to look for him, I found him perusing the e-reader display.

“This thing is stupid”, he said, playing with what appeared to be a basic Oyo e-reader, “The type is much too small. You need a magnifying glass to read this.”

I smiled. “The great thing about e-readers is that you can adjust the font size”, I said.

“There’s nothing here to adjust the font size”, my Dad said.

“Well, I don’t know how it works with this model, but trust me, it can be done.”

Still, it’s kind of sweet that he was looking at e-readers, especially since he only reads magazines and image heavy non-fiction books as well as work-related stuff, so a regular e-ink reader won’t actually be very helpful for him anyway.

In my quest for buying an e-reader, I had ruled out Thalia‘s e-reader family pretty quickly. Not because they’re bad, but simply because Thalia is mainly geared for the German language market. But looking at their display, I noticed that they have expanded their e-reader family with a frontlight e-ink reader to compete with the Kindle Paperwhite, Kobo Glo and whatever the frontlight Nook is called as well as with a mini tablet to compete with the Kindle Fire, Kobo Vox and whatever the Nook tablet is called. Prices were comparable, too. In fact, I think Thalia‘s tablet was even cheaper than the Kindle Fire.

Roland Center is quite unique, since it is a mall with two bookstores. Alas, bookstore number 2 is a small Weltbild shop focussing mainly on bestsellers and non-book products (because if you have limited floorspace, you’ve got to waste it on candleholders). I didn’t spend a lot of time browsing there, because the target audience for that shop is totally different and they’re not likely to carry anything I’m interested in.

Now Weltbild also offers its own e-book reader, which is actually the cheapest e-reader available on the German market, twenty Euros cheaper than the cheapest Kindle. They market it pretty heavy via TV ads, too. Though up to now, I’d never seen a Weltbild reader in a Weltbild store. Weltbild still is mainly a mail-order retailer – the stores are only a sideline. Still, I always found it strange that they wouldn’t push their e-reader in their own stores.

Still, at least the Weltbild store in Roland Center now had Weltbild readers in stock, though they still didn’t have a display stand like Thalia.

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Pegasus Pulp e-books now available at Amazon Canada, a bestseller and November sales figures

Amazon really seems to be on a roll and just opened yet another new Kindle store in Canada. This really would appear to be a no-brainer, but apparently not. At any rate, Canadian readers can now buy all Pegasus Pulp e-books at Amazon Canada. Links will be added to the individual book pages once I get around to it. And yes, I know I keep saying that, but Amazon is opening stores faster than I can edit the book pages. Never mind the problem of updating the prices of 29 different e-books to match those at Kobo before the price-matching bots strike.

What is more, another book of mine hit a bestseller list, this time at Amazon Spain, for Under the Knout is:

I’m directly under Philippa Gregory and Paul Auster respectively as well as next to Hugh Howey’s Wool, too, all of which is very good company to be in.

Meanwhile, I also realised that I neglected to publish my November sales figures. So here they are: Continue reading

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Pegasus Pulp e-books now available at Amazon Brazil

Amazon apparently opened a Brazilian store today, so now all our e-books may also be bought at Amazon BR. The full list of available titles is here, while links will be added to the respective book pages as I get around to it.

Meanwhile, you can always look up all retailers where our books are available at the brand new retailer page.

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Pegasus Pulp E-Books are now available at Barnes & Noble… and elsewhere

Yes, it’s really true! Pegasus Pulp e-books are finally available at Barnes & Noble, so all Nook owners can now buy our e-books at their favourite store. Alas, our books are not yet available at the new Nook UK store, but it’s coming (I hope).

Here’s the list of all our books (sans Cartoony Justice, which hasn’t been distributed yet) available at Barnes & Noble. The individual book pages will be updated with Barnes & Noble as well as Casa del Libro and W.H. Smith links in the next few days.

Barnes & Noble is the big announcement of today, but I also have a couple of other new sales channels to announce. For in addition to running their own site, the good folks at Kobo also distribute to several other international e-tailers. As a result, you can now buy Pegasus Pulp e-books at W.H. Smith in the UK, at Chapters Indigo in Canada as well as BLZ and Libris in the Netherlands.

And since our list of retailers is steadily growing, we now have a special Retailer page, which can also be accessed via the menu bar.

And since we love physical bookstores as well (perhaps a little too much, as my groaning shelves attest), Randall Wood has a great idea for the bookstore of the future. Found via The Passive Voice.

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New Story Available: Cartoony Justice

Here at Pegasus Pulp, we’re pleased to present our newest release. This one is called Cartoony Justice and it’s a story that’s very dear to my heart.

As you can tell by the cover, Cartoony Justice is something of a departure from my usual fare. After all, it’s a story that features magic, talking pigs, flying anvils, singing and dancing bananas and cartoons. In fact, Cartoony Justice is an homage to the Saturday morning cartoons of my childhood and a bit of virtual revenge against those pundits who wanted to ban them.

Cartoony Justice is the sort of story that indie publishing was made for, because it’s the story that gained more “Love it, but don’t know what to do with it” rejections than any other.

So here it is, the story that was too weird for New Weird, too bizarre for Bizarro:

Cartoony Justice
Cartoony Justice It’s Saturday morning. Time for the Dead End Show, everybody’s favourite cartoon program. Hosted by Linda and Dead End Cat, with special guest star Diane, the Vitamin Queen.

It’s Saturday morning and Stella is trying to sleep. When she is rudely awakened, she tunes in to watch the Dead End Show but instead finds an infernally boring film about… bananas?

Something nefarious is going on here and Stella is determined to get to the bottom of it. And considering that Stella is the most powerful sorceress on Earth, nobody in his right mind would stand in her way.

Frederick J. Waardehem PhD has not been in his right mind for a long time now. What is more, he really hates Saturday morning cartoons. They are loud and crude and violent and have absolutely no educational value at all. Which is why they should be banned. After all, won’t someone think of the children?

Waardehem has persuaded the TV station to cancel the Dead End Show and replace it with educational and wholesome programming, starting with Waardehem’s personal favourite, a documentary about bananas.

But trouble is heading for Frederick J. Waardehem. Trouble in the form of Stella, mighty mistress of magic, and her friend Diane, Vitamin queen and alien amazon warrior. They’re angry, they’ve got magic and they will soon make Waardehem regret his banana fixation.

This is a 5300 word short story of cartoons and talking pigs, singing bananas, flying anvils and magic.

For more information visit the Cartoony Justice page.

Buy it for the low price of 0.99 USD, EUR or GBP at Amazon US, Amazon UK, Amazon Germany, Amazon France, Amazon Spain, Amazon Italy, Amazon Japan, Kobo, Barnes & Noble, DriveThruFiction, OmniLit/AllRomance ebooks, W.H. Smith, Casa del Libro and XinXii.
More formats coming soon.

Some of the links are not yet live, because some distributors take more time than others. And yes, Barnes & Noble is not a typo, since I’m distributing to Barnes & Noble now. So Pegasus Pulp books should show up there sometime soon (I hope).

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Another Interview with Cora

I’ve been interviewed yet again and answer 5 questions for authors and talk a bit about Murder in the Family at Randomize Me.

If you want to read some of the other interviews I have done, the links are archived at our Interviews page.

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October 2012 Sales Figures

I’ve got a big post about why Amazon is neither the devil nor the second coming, but merely a business partner coming up, but for now here are my October sales figures. I realized that I forgot to post them, even though November is already more than half over.

On the Kindleboards, lots of people have been complaining about horrible October sales figures. Personally, I can’t complain, because October 2012 was my second best sales month ever, though the KDP Select crowd would probably still scream about my low sales. Continue reading

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New crime short available: He never brings me flowers…

First of all, I have two new sales channels to announce of especial interest to overseas readers. Amazon has decided to expand its Kindle store to Japan, so all Pegasus Pulp e-books are now available at Amazon Japan. What is more, our e-books are now also available at the Spanish retailer Casa del Libro, for those readers in Spain who want an alternative to Amazon ES or need epub/pdf format. And though it’s not really a new sales channel, but merely one of Kobo‘s distribution partners, I’ve also decided to link directly to W.H. Smith on the book pages from now on, because W.H. Smith is a pretty big deal in the UK. Finally, for those US readers who own a Nook, our e-books should also be coming to Barnes & Noble soon.

What is more, I’ve also got a new or rather a semi-new release, for I have published two more of the short crime stories collected in Murder in the Family as in a standalone edition.

He never brings me flowers...He never brings me flowers…

Waiting for your boyfriend to finally come home from work can be hell, especially if it’s your anniversary and you suspect he forgot – again. But does the ringing of the doorbell promise roses and sex and the long overdue proposal or something far more sinister?

Lovers’ Ridge

A foundling, a newborn, abandoned and left to die. But tonight, he will have his revenge on the parents who deserted him. Tonight, they will pay, at the very place where the story once began, at Lovers’ Ridge…

For more information, visit the dedicated He never brings me flowers… page.

Buy it for the low price of 0.99 USD, EUR or GBP at Amazon US, Amazon UK, Amazon Germany, Amazon France, Amazon Spain, Amazon Italy, Amazon Japan, Kobo, DriveThruFiction, OmniLit/AllRomance ebooks, W.H. Smith, Casa del Libro and XinXii.
More formats coming soon.

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E-Readers in the Wild in the UK

I’m currently in Aberdeen in Scotland (for more information see my main blog).

As always when I’m travelling, I also paid some attention to e-readers seen in the wild and in stores. Though frankly, so far I did not see a single e-reader in the wild during this trip, though I saw an e-reader in a Bremen tram (where they’re a very rare sight indeed) last week. I think it was an Oyo, the e-reader peddled by the Thalia bookstore chain.

However, I did see some e-readers in British shops. A big highstreet W.H. Smith had a very nice display of Kobo readers to try out. They had the whole range from the basic model to the Kobo Vox tablet and plenty of accessories, too. I played around with the readers on display (in Germany, you can only get the most basic Kobo reader in stores) and quite liked the Kobo Glo, though I’ll probably go with a Kindle in the end.

You can buy Pegasus Pulp e-books at the W.H. Smith online store by the way.

I had hoped that I could also testdrive some of the more advanced Kindles, since Staples only offers the most basic model in Germany and the display models never work. And Amazon had just recently announced a partnership with UK bookstore chain Waterstone’s to sell Kindles. Alas, while the stores were being remodeled to include Kindle kiosks, there were no Kindles on display yet. Too bad, because I had hoped to try out the Paperwhite.

As for the Nook, I didn’t see any at Blackwell’s, which supposedly sells them, but then it was a tiny store. I didn’t even try John Lewis, because I don’t want a Nook anyway, since there’s no store to go with them. Besides, I had heard that Barnes & Noble had to delay their UK launch.

In the meantime, I bought a bunch of print books. Apparently, the mass market paperback is all but extinct in the UK, which bothers me, because mass market paperbacks have always been my favourite format. If a format had to die, couldn’t they have killed off those annoying hardcovers?

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German TV discovers indie publishing – and some sales figures

The Frankfurt Book Fair is taking place at the moment, so the amount of literature coverage on TV has gone up as well. As in previous years, e-books and e-readers are a hot topic of discussion.

Tonight I chanced to watch tagesthemen, a major TV news program. And the obligatory book fair report was about e-books and e-reading. The first part of the report was about the challenges that e-books and the sale of print books via the Internet pose for bookstores (though only approx. 15 percent of all book sales in Germany are online sales). But then the report started talking about self-publishing and even interviewed German indie author Martina Gercke, whose romance Holunderküsschen (Juniper kisses) is one of Germany’s big indie publishing successes. In general, the report was balanced and positive. No “Wah, the sky is falling – Amazon is going to eat us all” rhetoric and a positive portrayal of indie authors. Indeed, the report concluded with the words that e-books, print books and audio books will coexist and that none of them will cannibalize the other. The whole thing is available online here, by the way. Alas, only in German.

For all of those who are waiting on news about the state of the German e-book market as well as the current market share of e-books in Germany, one interesting figure I have found is that eleven percent of the German population occasionally read e-books on tablets, smartphones and dedicated e-readers. However, the same people who read e-books also continue to read print books, so the actual market share of e-books is lower. Nonetheless, the revenue generated by e-books has grown by 260 percent (from an admittedly low level) and is now at 175 million Euro in 2012.

In that light, I am happy to announce that the launch of our line of German language e-books has been a success. Sales are still modest, but nonetheless German language books made up almost a third of my total sales in September, which is a success in my book. Plus, September was my best sales month ever (and would have been even without German books), though my sales are still modest by other people’s standards.

Under the cut you’ll find some details about our sales figures for August (where I sort of forgot to post the figures) and September: Continue reading

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