Start Making Money With Kindle Publishing: Ever wonder how to publish a Kindle eBook on Amazon? It's fairly easy. All you need is a KDP (Kindle Direct Publishing) account, which is free and available to anyone anywhere in the world. In this video blog, I'm going to show you step-by-step how to publish a Kindle eBook and get started selling on Amazon. ![]() However, keep in mind, publishing your book is the easy part. The real keys to success with Kindle publishing are marketing and promoting your book, to generate sales and have lasting success. These are the master skills of a Kindle publisher that will make you money with your Kindle eBook, which is taught inside my K Money Mastery course. Watch the video below to learn exactly how to publish your own Kindle eBook on Amazon. Want to learn step-by-step how to start making money with Kindle publishing? Click here to learn about my flagship course, K Money Mastery 2.0: ★☆★ VIEW THE BLOG POST: ★☆★ ★☆★ SUBSCRIBE TO ME ON YOUTUBE: ★☆★ ★☆★ FOLLOW ME BELOW: ★☆★ Blog: Facebook: Twitter: Instagram: Podcast: ★☆★ MY PRODUCTS & COURSES: ★☆★ Morning Ritual Mastery: Kindle Money Mastery: 24 Hour Book: Kindle Optimizer: ★☆★ WANT TO BE COACHED BY ME? ★☆★ You can apply for my 1-on-1 and group coaching programs here: ★☆★ RECOMMENDED RESOURCES: ★☆★. ![]() I am on sabbatical for the next few weeks. While I am gone, I have asked some of my favorite bloggers to stand in for me. This is a guest post from Jeff Goins. He is the author of Wrecked and his forthcoming memoir, The In-Between. You can follow Jeff on or find out more about him. If you want to get noticed in the digital age, waiting for someone to choose you is the worst strategy. You have everything you need to start sharing your message today—fingers, keyboard, and the Internet. Buy Self-Publishing Ebooks: The Absolute Beginner's Step-by-Step Guide To Ebook Publishing: Read 35 Kindle Store Reviews - Amazon.com. This is an introductory guide to how to self-publish. Anyone can make their ebook and print book available for sale in the most important market. ![]() Even if they don’t consider themselves writers, most people dream of writing a book. And there’s to do so. The stigma of self-publishing is fading away, replaced by countless success stories from first-time authors making a name for themselves. How are they doing it? By publishing eBooks on. Forget what you think you know about Amazon. It’s much more than an online shopping cart or web store. ![]() There’s a reason guys like and have published exclusively to Amazon. It has a lot going for it: • Amazon is largest paid search engine in the world. People don’t Google things with their credit cards out, ready to buy, like they do with Amazon. ![]() • Amazon dominates the book market. • Amazon’s review system is an authority metric (even if someone plans to buy elsewhere). • Amazon is a marketing machine. Once you start selling a certain number of copies, it refers your book to others who have never heard of you. • Amazon makes it easy. You can publish elsewhere, but few places get your book online and ready in a matter of hours. When you publish first (and maybe exclusively) to Amazon, you concentrate your sales in a single place and can climb the best sellers lists faster. Yes, you can get published, see your message spread, and make good money using nothing more than a keyboard and your brain. Here’s how: Step 1: Write When publishing an e-book, the first step is, of course, to write it. Think in terms of three drafts: • The “vomit draft.” This is just what it sounds like—you’re throwing up on the blank page. Certainly not the most warming image, but you get the idea. Here, you will write the Table of Contents, sketch out each chapter, and put down all your ideas, scenes, and stories. Don’t make it pretty; just make it. • The review draft. This is where you spend some time developing what you want to say and how. At this point, you should share the work with a few close friends for feedback. • The editorial draft. This is where you get help from a professional or close friend who knows not only grammar, but story structure and elements of style. Each draft may, in fact, have multiple versions and iterations. But this three-step approach will help you get the work finished without endlessly stalling. Step 2: Format and Design Once you’ve written a book you’re proud of, here’s what to do next: • Format it for Kindle. You can try this yourself using a program called Calibre, or you can just pay someone to do it—which I recommend. If this is your life’s work, it’s worth paying a few hundred dollars to get it done right. • Design the cover. Please don’t skimp on this or have your cousin Vinny who just discovered PhotoShop “take a whack at it.” If you’re on a budget, check out or, both affordable crowd-sourcing services. Ask for an image that is a JPEG file and at least 2500 pixels on the longest side with a height/weight ratio of 1.6 (what Amazon recommends in their ). • Double check everything and have friends proofread for errors. This is an important step, so don’t blaze through it. If you need more guidance, check out. Step 3: Publish How do you actually make your book available for sale on Amazon.com? This is, perhaps, the part that intimidates most people. And the truth is it shouldn’t. All it takes is twelve simple steps: • Go to and sign in (you’ll need an Amazon account). • Register your tax info for royalties. • Click “Bookshelf” and then “Add new title.” • Fill out the form, including book title, description, and keywords you want people to search to find your book. • Upload the cover file (JPEG format). • Upload the book file. • Test your book with Amazon’s online viewer to make sure it looks right. • Click “Save and continue” and advance to the “Rights and Pricing” page. • Choose “Worldwide Rights.” • Choose a 70% royalty rate and select your price, letting the international prices adjust based on the US price. Most e-books are priced $2.99-9.99 (this is what I recommend to maximize your royalty rate). • Click Save and Publish. • Amazon will email you when the book is ready, which may take 24–48 hours but often happens much more quickly. Step 4: Promote Now, you’re ready to tell the world about your book. But before you do that, you need some reviews. Reviews are important, because they’re your “social proof” that will legitimize your work to new readers. Before the book’s release, send the book to friends, family, and followers online who would be willing to leave a review. If you don’t know anyone who would be willing to do that, check out, a platform that helps authors get free, ethical reviews. Once the book is published, remind your early readers to leave reviews. Expect 25-50% of those who promised, to actually comply. And they don’t all have to be 5-star reviews. In fact, having a few honest critiques of your work will give it a greater authority than a bunch of superficial praise. People can leave reviews on Amazon only a few days before the book is published. So one way to get around this is to publish your book a week before you tell anyone about it. That way, you can build up a good amount of early reviews, which help sell the book to new readers. When it “officially” releases, you can then direct people to the page where they will see some glowing reviews of your work. Step 5: Launch After you get some reviews, it’s time to launch your e-book. Every book launch should be unique, but here are a few things that work every time: • Send an email to your list of friends, family, and/or blog subscribers, announcing the release of your book. • Offer an incentive for those who buy the book. This can be a time-sensitive offer or ongoing opportunity., who made over $20,000 in 90 days with an eBook, gave away the audiobook, 30-day email course, and exclusive membership to an online community with his book. Make it a no-brainer that people can’t pass up. • Promote the book via word-of-mouth and social media. Is a great resource for hand-crafting messages that people can easily share. Another effective strategy is to use a launch team of volunteers to help you spread the word. • Share your e-book with online forums and book directories., who sold over 80,000 copies of his books, said this was a key strategy. • As the book begins to sell, tell people about it. This is called “social proof” and will create a snowball effect that can help you sell even more. • Give the book away., who struggled to sell more than a few hundred copies of his novel in a year, decided to give away the e-book version. And in a week, over 60,000 people downloaded it. The next week, he sold another 2,000 copies. Books can spread pretty fast when everything is digital: the product, the promotion, the distribution. In other words, if you ever wanted to get a message in front of a lot of people, there’s never been a better time. The days of waiting years to be picked and published are over. So what are you waiting for? (For more help on self-publishing for Kindle, check out the, which is free this week exclusively for Michael Hyatt readers.) Question: What’s one question or tip you have about self-publishing? Click here to leave a comment.
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![]() Simon & Schuster [ ] This now-discontinued series of paperbacks started in 1979 as a continuation of the hardcover books, hence the volume numbers start as #59 and ended in 2005 with volume 190. In 2005, Grossett & Dunlap released hardcover versions of volumes 59 through 66. These volumes were in the blue glossy flashlight cover format, similar to the original 58 covers. The artwork on these books was from the original Wanderer paperback covers, although severely cropped to fit the covers. In March 2013, Grossett and Dunlap discontinued publication of volumes #59-66 in hardcover. Dec 31, 2016 This is my Hardy Boy book collection. Compare 28 Hardy Boys: Books Collection products at SHOP.COM, including Hardy Boys Clue Book Collection (Bk's 1-4), Hardy Boys Mystery Collection (Boxed Set of 10. ![]() (retitled ) 69. Cave-In (retitled Cave-In!) 79. (last book with internal illustrations) 83. Nancy Drew and the Hardy Boys: Be a Detective Mystery Stories (1984–1985) [ ] In these books the reader controls the outcome of the story by choosing different options of advancing the plot, similar to the books. ![]() ![]() • The Secret of the Knight’s Sword • Danger on Ice • The Feathered Serpent • Secret Cargo • The Alaskan Mystery • The Missing Money Mystery The Clues Brothers [ ] The Clues Brothers books were aimed at younger readers, particularly in third and fourth grades. The series was introduced in 1997 and was cancelled in 2000 for lack of popularity. Starting in 2013 the series is available as ebooks. This series had some big differences from the other Hardy Boys books, such as: • The Hardy Boys don't solve major crimes as they do in the others. • In these books, Joe and Frank are only 8 and 9, unlike the other books where they are 17 and 18. • They go to Bayport; in the others, they go to Bayport. Forever Lost 37. Movie Menace (Deathstalker Trilogy) 38. Movie Mission 2012 39. Movie Mayhem (Last book in series. Hardy Boys UB canceled January 2012) 40. The Case of the MyFace Kidnapper (working title) Series cancelled before publication. Title listed for preorder on Amazon.com and other on-line retailers before being removed. No cover art was posted. Speculated to be the first book in a new trilogy. Plot listed as follows: Frank and Joe's latest case involves the dangerous underside of social networking. A football friend from a nearby school contacts the Hardys when a team member goes missing! One minute he was at a massive beach party that everyone from school was invited to via MyFace; the next moment he was GONE! The MyFace parties continue, but so do the crimes: robbery, kidnapping, car theft.can murder be far behind? Is MyFace a social network of friends or a network of something far more sinister?. Spy Set - Box set of volumes 1–4 (2005) Super Mysteries [ ] • 1. Special Ghost Story edition - 2008 Nancy Drew and the Hardy Boys Super Mystery Series (2007–2012) [ ] The Nancy Drew and the Hardy Boys Super Mystery books are a new series first published in June 2007 and are not to be confused with the Nancy Drew and Hardy Boys SuperMystery series that was published between 1988 and 1998. This is a series of the series and series. Books are narrated in the first person with chapters alternating between Nancy's, Frank's, and Joe's view. Series was cancelled with Nancy Drew: Girl Detective and The Hardy Boys: Undercover Brothers in 2012. • Terror on Tour - 2007 • Danger Overseas - 2008 • Club Dread - 2009 • - 2010 • Bonfire Masquerade - 2011 • Stage Fright - 2012 Undercover Brothers Graphic Novels [ ] The Undercover Brothers also appear in a series of. The Ocean of Osyria - 2005 2. Identity Theft 3. Malled - 2006 5. The Deadliest Stunt 14. Haley Danelle's Top Eight 15. Live Free, Die Hardy! Spells the Hangman 19. Chaos at 30,000 Feet! Deadly Strategy The New Case Files [ ] (A new graphic novel series from Papercutz) • Crawling with Zombies • Break-Up! • Nancy Drew: The New Case Files #3 -- 'Together With The Hardy Boys' (This book is listed as number 3 in the Nancy Drew series, but is also the 3rd story in the Hardy Boys series, and concludes the plot that was begun in Hardy Boys #1 and #2, and Nancy Drew #1 and #2) The Hardy Boys Secret Files [ ] The Hardy Boys Secret Files is a series begun in 2010 by the publisher under their imprint. It features the Hardy Boys, Frank and Joe, as grade-school detectives. Three new titles are published yearly as paperback books and eBooks. This series rebooted in 2016 as the Hardy Boys Clue Book series. • • • • • • • • • • (October 2012) • (April 2013) • (August 2013) • (December 2013) • (April 2014) • (August 2014) • (December 2014) • (April 2015) • (August 2015) • (December 2015) The Hardy Boys Adventures (2013-current) [ ] In 2011 Simon & Schuster cancelled the Undercover Brothers series and launched a new series, Hardy Boys Adventures, publishing four volumes in 2013. The reboot series publishes two to three new titles a year in paperback, hardcover book with dust jacket, and as eBooks. This series is written in the first person with chapters alternating between Frank's and Joe's narration. The first four titles had an initial printing of 25,000 copies in paperback and 2,500 copies in hardcover. Books 5 through 8 had an initial print run of 25,000 in paperback and 5,000 in hardcover. Books 9 and 10 had an initial print run of 10,000 in paperback and 5,000 in hardcover. Audio books released starting in 2015 on CD and download, read by Tim Gregory. The first three titles will be published as a single volume in June 2016 using the cover art from the first book in the series. Perfect Getaway 13. Final Cut 35. Terror on Track 58. Open Season 60. Grave Danger 62. Final Gambit 63. Cold Sweat 64. Endangered Species 65. The Phoenix Equation 67. Lethal Cargo 68. Rough Riding 69. Mayhem in Motion 70. Rigged for Revenge 71. Real Horror 72. Screamers 73. Road Pirates 75. No Way Out 76. Survival Run 78. Dead of Night 81. Sheer Terror 82. Poisoned Paradise 83. Toxic Revenge 84. False Alarm 85. Dead Man in Deadwood 88. Inferno of Fear 89. Darkness Falls 90. Deadly Engagement 91. Hot Wheels 92. A Taste for Terror 95. Illegal Procedure 96. Against All Odds 97. Pure Evil 98. Peak Of Danger 102. Wrong Side of the Law 103. Law of the Jungle 106. Competitive Edge 112. Unpublished Titles [ ] Several ISBN numbers were issued for books #128 and beyond before the series was cancelled. Book #128 would have been called and was written by Jerry Novick. A complete manuscript exists for this story. The story written for release as Casefiles #130 was ultimately used as Hardy Boys Digest #150. It is not known if other manuscripts or story outlines exist for other unpublished Casefiles stories. The A Nancy Drew and Hardy Boys SuperMystery series also had ISBN numbers issued for future titles that ended up being cancelled. The planned #37 entry was being written by Louise Munro Foley and had the working title The Playhouse Mystery. An untitled volume #38 was listed as forthcoming on an on-line book sales site. Collector's editions and foreign publications [ ] From 1998 to 1999, Simon & Schuster published three that contained three previously published Casefiles stories (Vol. 1 #'s 38, 39 and 40; Vol. 2 #'s 48, 51 and 52; Vol. 3 #'s 55, 58 and 59). In 2005, Simon & Schuster reprinted Vol. 3 in hardcover with a different cover that used the current Hardy Boys Mystery Stories (Digest) cover of a file folder with modified art from Hardy Boys #152, exclusively for Borders Bookstores. The Canadian rights to the Casefiles and its spin-offs have been held by Paperjacks (April 1987-December 1989) and Distican, Inc./Simon & Schuster Canada (January 1990 – present; Simon & Schuster US bought out Distican in 2002 and just changed the company name). Aside from inserting an ad for their 'Books By Mail' program, their address on the copyright page, and a small Maple Leaf with 'Printed In Canada' being put on the front covers, and distributing the books, Paperjacks was allowed no other editorial/layout changes to the books. Once Distican took over the rights in January 1990, the books were all published in the US and just distributed by Distican in Canada with no publishing occurring in Canada. Simon & Schuster UK have published many 2-in-1 and 3-in-1 books of the Casefiles since the early 1990s in the UK and other British Commonwealth Nations (except Canada). In 2005/06 Simon & Schuster UK reissued four Casefiles under the Undercover Brothers label, with two other books being planned but cancelled before publication. Armada/Collins held the UK/British Commonwealth (except Canada) rights to the Casefiles from about 1988 till 1991, with reprint rights continuing on throughout the 1990s, allowing Armada to publish different 2-in-1 and 3-in-1 books of the first 10 Casefiles. Nancy Drew and Hardy Boys SuperMystery Series (1988–1998) [ ] The Hardy Boys and teamed up in this 36 volume series of. This series follows the formula of the main characters and their friends typically involved in separate mysteries that end up being connected. The sleuths join forces to solve the overall mystery. This series is based in the Nancy Drew Files and Hardy Boys Casefiles continuity, so murder, romance, and flirtation between the series regulars are common. Nancy Drew and Frank Hardy share an attraction in this series, though after a brief kiss in The Last Resort this attraction is not acted on. Subsequent books focus on the respect and friendship that developed between the two and their continued feelings for Ned Nickerson and Callie Shaw. Several spin-off series were cancelled by Simon and Schuster at the end of 1997, including the Nancy Drew and Hardy Boys SuperMystery series. • • • • • • The Paris Connection • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Hardy Boys and Tom Swift Ultra Thriller Series (1992–1993) [ ] The two volume Ultra-Thriller series is a short-lived Hardy Boys spin-off that joined boy inventor Tom Swift with the -solving Hardy Boys, Frank & Joe. Although the was used, the series was more akin to the then-current series and listed in the Tom Swift books as part of that series. Published as mass market paperback books under the Archway imprint of Simon and Schuster. • Time Bomb • Other Books [ ] There have been many Hardy Boys spin-off books and minor series over the years. The Hardy Boys Handbook: Seven Stories of Survival (1980) [ ] Not to be confused with, The Hardy Boys Handbook: Seven Stories of Survival was first published in 1980 by Wanderer Books (an imprint of ) and contains seven short stories with instructions for wilderness survival, 134 pages long. Written and illustrated by outdoor journalist and survival instructor Sheila Link under the Hardy Boys imprint, published in hardcover in different format than the rest of the series. Nancy Drew and the Hardy Boys: Super Sleuths (1981, 1984) [ ] The first and the Hardy Boys: Super Sleuths book was published in 1981 with the sequel published in 1984. Both volumes contain seven short stories with Nancy Drew and the Hardy boys working together and are written under the pen-name of and. Both books were published under Simon & Schuster’s Wanderer Books imprint. • Nancy Drew and the Hardy Boys: Super Sleuths - 1981 • Nancy Drew and the Hardy Boys: Super Sleuths #2 - 1984 Nancy Drew and the Hardy Boys: Campfire Stories (1984) [ ] This book was first published by Wanderer Books in 1984 and like the Super Sleuths books, and listed as co-authors. National Director of Program Services, Camp Fire, Inc, Karen W. Bartz wrote a foreword for this book. Carolyn Keene and Franklin W. Dixon also wrote a foreword. The Hardy Boys Ghost Stories (1984) [ ] This was first published in 1984 by Simon & Schuster under their Wanderer Books, and then in 1987 by their Minstrel Books imprint. In 2002 it was published yet again by another Simon & Schuster imprint; Aladdin Paperbacks. Because there were so many reprints, several (four) different editions with different cover art exist. References [ ]. The Penguin Hardy Boys Complete Set: Available for the first time in one complete collection only at Amazon.com. The Hardy Boys have been America's favorite detective duo for over 75 years. Now, for the first time, you can purchase all sixty-six classic Hardy Boys titles in one complete set! #1: The Tower Treasure #2: The House on the Cliff #3: The Secret of the Old Mill The Penguin Hardy Boys Complete Set: Available for the first time in one complete collection only at Amazon.com. The Hardy Boys have been America's favorite detective duo for over 75 years. Now, for the first time, you can purchase all sixty-six classic Hardy Boys titles in one complete set! Throw two over-achieving high school guys, a convertible, hot girlfriends, great buddies, and a dad who's an FBI agent in with some mysteries far beyond the scope of most professionals. What more could a young guy want? These books rock, although quite unrealistic and I think about anybody could come up with a story line. Something mysterious happens to Frank and Joe or someone they know. They investigate. They get caught. They go do something cool, like fly an airplane. The Throw two over-achieving high school guys, a convertible, hot girlfriends, great buddies, and a dad who's an FBI agent in with some mysteries far beyond the scope of most professionals. What more could a young guy want? These books rock, although quite unrealistic and I think about anybody could come up with a story line. Something mysterious happens to Frank and Joe or someone they know. They investigate. They get caught. They go do something cool, like fly an airplane. Their 'best chum' Chet has a hobby that happens to help them come up with an idea to catch the criminals. Chet gets caught. They rescue Chet. They get caught rescuing Chet. They are put someplace dark or really cool, like a cave or giant house. They're in the middle of making a getaway with all the evidence they need when their dad comes on the scene takes over, catches the criminals and thanks the boys. Frank and Joe live happily ever after with Callie and Iola (who happens to be Chet's sister). I was at a Facebook party today and we were asked what our favorite childhood books were. Someone mentioned these and these were at the TOP of my childhood list! I HAD to write a review. I LOVE these books! I think they are great for EVERY kid out there! There is nothing in these books that should prevent any child/young teen from reading them. There is no sexual content and no bad language. They are a great adventure to go on with the characters as the Hardy boy brothers solve mysteries as they I was at a Facebook party today and we were asked what our favorite childhood books were. Someone mentioned these and these were at the TOP of my childhood list! I HAD to write a review. I LOVE these books! I think they are great for EVERY kid out there! There is nothing in these books that should prevent any child/young teen from reading them. There is no sexual content and no bad language. They are a great adventure to go on with the characters as the Hardy boy brothers solve mysteries as they stumble upon each one. Each story was so intriguing I sat for hours as a child and read every single one of these books in this series. After I would finish one, I would pick the next one up. My frustration was our school library only allowed us to check out 2 books every 2 weeks! So my parents would take us to our local library once a month, time permitting. They only allowed us to check out 3 of the same genre books at one time. I guess in a way, these books were so terrific for a child to get lost in, having the library limit us was probably a good thing so we didn't just whip through the whole set so fast. I specifically remember one of the best days of my life as a fifth or six-grader. I was home sick from school, and I was in bed not feeling well at all. I did not go into the living room to watch television, I really stayed in bed as I felt that sick. I did pick up one of these books thinking I might try reading to take my mind off of how I felt. I ended up reading it all the way through. After that one was over I picked up my second book I had from this series, and read it all the way through. (Thank gosh we had just gone to the school library the day before!) I then had nothing but a book from another series, so I started that book. Even though I was feeling so sick, I will remember that as one of the best days of my childhood! This is how great this series of books are. This entire series of books is a 5-star PLUS from me! These are great gifts to get kids, even kids who are not interested in reading - possibly to get them to read! There is just something about these books that if a child is open enough to try to read, they will pull them right in and get them reading! This was the first 'series' of books that I was exposed to as a kid. Discovered the Hardy Boys in 1972 and spent that whole summer consuming them daily. I spent more time in trouble that summer because chores went undone because of these books. They also kept me in ice cream! A free cone for every ten books read. I read other books that summer (Lassie, Come Home being the largest I'd read up to that time in my life), but these were pretty much my constant companion. As I found more and more titl This was the first 'series' of books that I was exposed to as a kid. Discovered the Hardy Boys in 1972 and spent that whole summer consuming them daily. I spent more time in trouble that summer because chores went undone because of these books. They also kept me in ice cream! A free cone for every ten books read. I read other books that summer (Lassie, Come Home being the largest I'd read up to that time in my life), but these were pretty much my constant companion. As I found more and more titles over the years, I'd read them, love them and had a large collection on my shelves. I credit The Hardy Boys with my love of the genres (YA -don't judge- as well as mystery) and would love to track them all down again. I've been a Hardy Boys fan for a pretty long time. When I first started I think I was only 10 or 11, but years later I'm still hooked on them and re-reading them. I'm actually starting my own collection, actually, of the paperbacks because my mum has the hardbacks (this set). I'm so glad that they still make these books, even now, but I'm a little nervous about when I finish the ATAC series because I've heard that in the latest series they're banned from solving mysteries. I'm not sure how that I've been a Hardy Boys fan for a pretty long time. When I first started I think I was only 10 or 11, but years later I'm still hooked on them and re-reading them. I'm actually starting my own collection, actually, of the paperbacks because my mum has the hardbacks (this set). I'm so glad that they still make these books, even now, but I'm a little nervous about when I finish the ATAC series because I've heard that in the latest series they're banned from solving mysteries. I'm not sure how that would work, since they still -do- solve mysteries, but I guess I'll find out! Honestly, I don't like the label 'for boys around 12' (correct me if I'm wrong on that), because I fit neither of those terms. In any case, I love this series to bits. I'd recommend it to pretty much anyone I know. The Hardy Boys was my favourite series (besides Harry Potter) when I was in elementary school. Now that I think about it, these books were what got me into mystery books in general. Nearly all the books I read had some sort of mystery aspect to them, and even if they didn't I would inspect the book to figure out the ending as early as possibly. I even spent most of my free time solving puzzles when I wasn't reading. I sort of became obsessed with being the best puzzle solver amongst my friends, The Hardy Boys was my favourite series (besides Harry Potter) when I was in elementary school. Now that I think about it, these books were what got me into mystery books in general. Nearly all the books I read had some sort of mystery aspect to them, and even if they didn't I would inspect the book to figure out the ending as early as possibly. I even spent most of my free time solving puzzles when I wasn't reading. I sort of became obsessed with being the best puzzle solver amongst my friends, there was just nothing more satisfying to me than reading a good book and feeling clever! I am sure these books are outdated now, but I still recommend any mini-Sherlocks out there to give it a try. You've got nothing to lose right? The Hardy Boys will always have a piece of my heart.:). I actually read 1-60, but never finished the last 6. Dixon's writing is repetitive from book to book; it seems like each one follows the same writing structure. In comparison to modern novels, well, you can't compare the two. These books are from the 60s and are written simply and to the point. No gritty drama, violence, language or shocking plot twists; just two boys and their friends trying to solve some mysteries. Not to discount the books too much, I have to say that I was absolutely enthrall I actually read 1-60, but never finished the last 6. Dixon's writing is repetitive from book to book; it seems like each one follows the same writing structure. In comparison to modern novels, well, you can't compare the two. These books are from the 60s and are written simply and to the point. No gritty drama, violence, language or shocking plot twists; just two boys and their friends trying to solve some mysteries. Not to discount the books too much, I have to say that I was absolutely enthralled by these books as a kid and hold no hard feelings towards them today. If you're looking for a quick read (a few hours at the most) and a glimpse into the world of literature in the 1960s, read any of these books. Loved the Hardy boys growing up!!! Still like to pick one up now and then, but the plots have gotten a little stale. Example 1: Pretty much in every book Frank and Joe (and/or Chet or Tony) have a new hobby that just happens to provide the means to crack the case Example 2: At the end of each book the bad guys revealed everything, who did what and how they pulled off the crime. Sometimes the hardy boys are the prisoners and the bad guys are bragging, and sometimes the bad guys are prisoners and Loved the Hardy boys growing up!!! Still like to pick one up now and then, but the plots have gotten a little stale. Example 1: Pretty much in every book Frank and Joe (and/or Chet or Tony) have a new hobby that just happens to provide the means to crack the case Example 2: At the end of each book the bad guys revealed everything, who did what and how they pulled off the crime. Sometimes the hardy boys are the prisoners and the bad guys are bragging, and sometimes the bad guys are prisoners and start arguing and blaming each other, but at the end of every book the bad guys reveal all their secrets. I could add more, but I still like the hardy boys for a fun quick read. I can't tell you how much I loved the Hardy Boys books when I was younger. I read every one the Lawrence Library in Pepperell, MA had to offer. And that was not just a few. Frank and Joe Hardy, Chet Morton, Biff Hooper, Tony Prieto and the gang were some of my best friends along the way. I always wanted to live a life with as much adventure as the Hardy Boys. I just didn't know where to start. I guess I even secretly wished some bad guys would want to get into a fist fight with me or kidnap me s I can't tell you how much I loved the Hardy Boys books when I was younger. I read every one the Lawrence Library in Pepperell, MA had to offer. And that was not just a few. Frank and Joe Hardy, Chet Morton, Biff Hooper, Tony Prieto and the gang were some of my best friends along the way. I always wanted to live a life with as much adventure as the Hardy Boys. I just didn't know where to start. I guess I even secretly wished some bad guys would want to get into a fist fight with me or kidnap me so I could make a daring escape. This series by Franklyn W. Dixon, many a time, left me wishing I had the entire series with me. Unfortunately, they were a hard find and every new mystery book I found thrilled me to the core. I wish they could republish this entire series along with the Clue brother series. Well, a girl got to wish for something:) Anyway, I thoroughly enjoy reading these little mysteries. Surprisingly, even after I read a lot of grown-up mystery thrillers, my fondness for these kid-adventures never stopped Oh. This series by Franklyn W. Dixon, many a time, left me wishing I had the entire series with me. Unfortunately, they were a hard find and every new mystery book I found thrilled me to the core. I wish they could republish this entire series along with the Clue brother series. Well, a girl got to wish for something:) Anyway, I thoroughly enjoy reading these little mysteries. Surprisingly, even after I read a lot of grown-up mystery thrillers, my fondness for these kid-adventures never stopped. Even now, on a cold night, these warm my thoughts!!:). ![]() Hayek ISBN: 974 Genre: Business & Economics File Size: 23.99 MB Format: PDF, Docs Download: 567 Read: 410 A classic work in political philosophy, intellectual history and economics, The Road to Serfdom has inspired and infuriated politicians and scholars for half a century. Originally published in 1944, it was seen as heretical for its passionate warning against the dangers of state control over the means of production. For Hayek, the collectivist idea of empowering government with increasing economic control would lead not to a utopia but to the horrors of Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy. This new edition includes a foreword by series editor and leading Hayek scholar Bruce Caldwell explaining the book's origins and publishing history and assessing common misinterpretations of Hayek's thought. Caldwell has also standardized and corrected Hayek's references and added helpful new explanatory notes. Supplemented with an appendix of related materials and forewords to earlier editions by the likes of Milton Friedman, and Hayek himself, this new edition of The Road to Serfdom will be the definitive version of Friedrich Hayek's enduring masterwork. Category: Business & Economics. Author: Thomas E Woods ISBN: 974 Genre: Business & Economics File Size: 58.38 MB Format: PDF, ePub, Docs Download: 562 Read: 1292 Leviathan is back The threat of statism has reemerged in force. The federal government has radically expanded its power—through bailouts, “stimulus” packages, a trillion-dollar health-care plan, “jobs bills,” massive expansions of the money supply, and much more. But such interventionism did not suddenly materialize with the recent economic collapse. The dangerous trends of government growth, debt increases, encroachments on individual liberty, and attacks on the free market began years earlier and continued no matter which political party was in power. This shift toward statism “will not end happily,” declares bestselling author Thomas E. In Back on the Road to Serfdom, Woods brings together ten top scholars to examine why the size and scope of government has exploded, and to reveal the devastating consequences of succumbing to the statist temptation. ![]() The New Road to Serfdom Daniel Hannan US$ 14.99 Close [X] About eBooks.com Launched in 2000, eBooks.com is a popular ebook retailer hosting over a. The Road to Serfdom: Text and Documents, The Definitive Edition by F. Hayek in DJVU, DOC, FB2 download e-book. The NOOK Book (eBook) of the Hayek's The Road to Serfdom: A Brief Introduction by Bruce Caldwell at Barnes & Noble. FREE Shipping on $25 or more! Download Ebook: the road to serfdom in PDF Format. Also available for mobile reader. ![]() Author: David Linden ISBN: 584 Genre: File Size: 87.56 MB Format: PDF, Docs Download: 111 Read: 346 Friedrich Hayek's 1944 Road to Serfdom is a classic of conservative economic argument. While undeniably a product of a specific time in global politics - which saw the threat of fascism from Nazi Germany and its allies beguilingly answered by the promises of socialism - Hayek's carefully constructed argument is a fine example of the importance of good reasoning in critical thinking. Reasoning is the art of constructing good, persuasive arguments by organizing one's thoughts, supporting one's conclusions, and considering counter-arguments along the way. The Road to Serfdom illustrates all these skills in action; Hayek's argument was that, while many assumed socialism to be the answer to totalitarian, fascist regimes, the opposite was true. Socialist government's reliance on a large state, centralised control, and bureaucratic planning - he insisted - actually amounts to a different kind of totalitarianism. Freedom of choice, Hayek continued, is a central requirement of individual freedom, and hence a centrally planned economy inevitably constrains freedom. Though many commentators have sought to counter Hayek's arguments, his reasoning skills won over many of the politicians who have shaped the present day, most notably Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan. Author: Bruce Caldwell ISBN: 744 Genre: Business & Economics File Size: 48.24 MB Format: PDF, Kindle Download: 121 Read: 1079 The Road to Serfdom, F. Hayek’s 1944 warning against the dangers of government control, continues to influence politics more than seventy years after it was turned down by three American publishers and finally published by the University of Chicago Press. A classic work in political philosophy, intellectual and cultural history, and economics, the definitive edition of The Road to Serfdom included this essay as its Introduction. Here, acclaimed Hayek biographer and general editor of the Collected Works of F. Hayek series, Bruce Caldwell explains how Hayek came to write and publish the book, assesses misunderstandings of Hayek’s thought, and suggests how Hayek’s fears of Socialism lead him to abandon the larger scholarly project he had planned in 1940 to focus instead on a briefer, more popular and political tract—one that has influenced political and economic discourse ever since. Category: Business & Economics. Author: Friedrich A. Hayek ISBN: Genre: Economic policy File Size: 81.91 MB Format: PDF, ePub Download: 455 Read: 757 The Road to Serfdom remains one of the all-time classics of twentieth-century intellectual thought. For over half a century, it has inspired politicians and thinkers around the world, and has had a crucial impact on our political and cultural history. With trademark brilliance, Hayek argues convincingly that, while socialist ideals may be tempting, they cannot be accomplished except by means that few would approve of. Addressing economics, fascism, history, socialism and the Holocaust, Hayek unwraps the trappings of socialist ideology. He reveals to the world that little can result from such ideas except oppression and tyranny. Today, more than fifty years on, Hayek's warnings are just as valid as when The Road to Serfdom was first published. Category: Economic policy. Author: Friedrich A. Von Hayek ISBN: Genre: Political Science File Size: 28.67 MB Format: PDF, ePub, Docs Download: 343 Read: 449 The Road to Serfdom By Friedrich A. Hayek New Edition The very magnitude of the outrages committed by the National Socialists has strengthened the assurance that a totalitarian system cannot happen here. But let us remember that 15 years ago the possibility of such a thing happening in Germany would have appeared just as fantastic not only to nine-tenths of the Germans themselves, but also to the most hostile foreign observer. There are many features which were then regarded as 'typically German' which are now equally familiar in America and England, and many symptoms that point to a further development in the same direction: the increasing veneration for the state, the fatalistic acceptance of 'inevitable trends', the enthusiasm for 'organization' of everything (we now call it 'planning'). The character of the danger is, if possible, even less understood here than it was in Germany. The supreme tragedy is still not seen that in Germany it was largely people of good will who, by their socialist policies, prepared the way for the forces which stand for everything they detest. Few recognize that the rise of fascism and the road to serfdom. Marxism was not a reaction against the socialist trends of the preceding period but a necessary outcome of those tendencies. Yet it is significant that many of the leaders of these movements, from Mussolini down (and including Laval and Quisling) began as socialists and ended as fascists or Nazis. In the democracies at present, many who sincerely hate all of Nazism's manifestations are working for ideals whose realization would lead straight to the abhorred tyranny. Most of the people whose views influence developments are in some measure socialists. They believe that our economic life should be 'consciously directed' that we should substitute 'economic planning' for the competitive system. Yet is there a greater tragedy imaginable than that, in our endeavour consciously to shape our future in accordance with high ideals, we should in fact unwittingly produce the very opposite of what we have been striving for? Category: Political Science. After I detailed the ins and outs of the on Thursday, I got a letter from Macworld reader Gerald A. Wingrove, who is intrigued by the Kindle but unclear how it works with his Mac. ![]() Since this is Macworld, after all, I thought it was worth a refresher about how the Kindle and the Mac interact. Gerald writes: Over the years I have made great use of the free books available on the Gutenberg website. Is it possible, with a Kindle via the internet, to take onboard for reading, books from Gutenberg? As the Kindle has a USB port, is it possible to connect it to the G5 and have it appear on the desktop, so that PDF and MP3 files can be dragged and dropped into it for reading and listening to? Is it possible to buy and use a Kindle without getting ones self tied into the Amazon spider’s web? The Kindle’s been around so long, I didn’t really consider how a lot of people have never seen one and plenty more have never attempted to attach it to a Mac. So let me clarify matters a little. ![]() Yes, the Kindle has a USB port. (In fact, the USB port doubles as a charging port—the Kindle power adapter is a plug with a USB port and a USB cable!) Plug one end of that USB cable into a Mac and the other into a Kindle, and the Kindle will announce it’s entering USB Drive Mode. A new volume, called Kindle, will appear on your Mac. You can open it up and see the files inside. The key folders inside the Kindle volume are audible, documents, and music. The audible folder is where audiobook files from audible.com live. Music is a place where you can put MP3s and then play them back while you’re reading, and even listen via the Kindle’s headphone jack! But the most important folder is documents: this is where all your books, newspapers, and magazines live. If you’ve bought stuff from Amazon and downloaded it onto your Kindle, you’ll see that stuff in the folder. But you can also drag book files right from your Mac into that folder, assuming that they’re compatible with the Kindle. Kindle only reads books in the Mobi, PRC, and plain-text formats. ![]() ![]() (You can also drag in PDFs, but I generally don’t recommend it. Kindle does a bad job with PDFs.) The good news is, Project Gutenberg and many other ebook resources offer downloads in a Kindle compatible format, usually Mobi. Some independent ebook sellers, such as, also sell books in Kindle-compatible format. To copy a book to your Kindle, just drag the file into the Documents folder, eject the Kindle from your Mac, and unplug the USB cable. How can the answer be improved? Kindle 3 For Dummies Cheat Sheet. Kindle Fire HD For Dummies Cheat Sheet. Connecting your Kindle via USB cable and transferring books via. Connect the Kindle to your computer using a USB cable. If you don't have a USB cable. TRANSFERRING E-BOOKS TO KINDLE FOR ANDROID. ![]() The book should automatically appear in the list of books on your Kindle. (This is also a great way to add things to your Kindle when the Kindle itself can’t get a data connection. During a trip a while back, my Kindle couldn’t get wireless service but my MacBook was on an wired hotel network. Amazon lets you download books and newspapers directly from the Amazon website’s “Manage My Kindle” section and then drag them onto your Kindle via USB.) So what if you’ve got a book that’s in ePub format, which the Kindle won’t read? Download the free app and use it to. This open-source app isn’t easy to use, but once you figure it out, it will force those files into the right format. (Calibre won’t work with ePub files that are wrapped in copy-protection.) Amazon also offers some file-conversion services itself. If you email a Microsoft Word file to [your-kindle-name]@free.kindle.com, you’ll find it automatically delivered to your device via Wi-Fi. Using a Kindle does require you have an Amazon account—Kindles generally come already paired with the Amazon account you used to buy them!—but that doesn’t mean you have to buy books from Amazon. If you want to use a Kindle just for free books from the Internet, you can do it. Oh, one last note: In my previous story I mentioned that Amazon doesn’t let you use custom screensavers on your device, even if you pay for the non-“Special Offers” version. That’s true, but it doesn’t mean you can’t get custom screensavers. You just need to be brave and visit the, where there are details on how to jailbreak various models of Kindle and do things like install custom screensaver images and even swap in new fonts. I’ve limited my Kindle jailbreaking to the screensaver hack, but it’s great: I’ve got a folder full of 800x600 black-and-white images, and even in a room with a half-dozen Kindles, I always know which one’s mine. GOOD BOOKS This should be a no-brainer, but every book you publish should be well-written. It should also be well-edited, and well-formatted. GOOD PRICE You're going to have to experiment with this one. I have my novels priced at $3.99, my novellas and short story collections at $2.99, my trilogy sets at $9.99, and short stories at 99 cents. ![]() ![]() Some of my peers sell for more, some for less. It's all about finding that sweet spot between unit sales and profit. ![]() I like my ebooks to be impulse buys, so I keep the prices low. Your results may vary. VOLUME The more books you publish, the greater your chances at finding readers. Besides new titles, you can also combine and split up titles to maximize your virtual shelf space. I have box sets. Use your Amazon account to sign in to KDP or create a new one. Make sure your browser is updated. Go to your Bookshelf. In the 'Create a New Title' section, click + Kindle eBook. Enter your information for each section: Kindle eBook Details: Enter your title, description, keywords, categories, etc. How can the answer be improved? You've mastered the Interwebs by publishing your eBook on Lulu.com. You're a Level 10 Author! But to rank up to Bestselling Mobile Device Master, you must submit your eBook for distribution. This sends your eBook to online retailers across the globe, including Amazon's Kindle store. Kindle is the world's. The Ultimate Guide to Publishing Your eBook on. How do you set up business licensing for selling ebooks online through amazon/kindle. I have single short stories that are also part of collections. I have joined forces with other authors, each of us putting a title into a set. I also love to collaborate. That's an easy way to swap fans and increase readership SOCIAL MEDIA AND ADVERTISING My take on Twitter and Facebook is similar to my take on advertising. Maybe it'll bring in some sales, but I haven't found it brings in enough to justify the time and money spent. I have 10,000 followers on Twitter. They don't follow me because they are anxiously awaiting news of my next published book, They follow me because of what I have to offer. Namely, information. Sure, some of them may buy my books. But this number is minuscule compared to the number of people who have never heard of me before, and discover me for the first time surfing an ebook retailer. My ebook has sold over 200,000 copies. In December it was featured in Kobo and earned $3,000 that month. In the last week, this book has earned me $2500 on Amazon. I self-pubbed The List in 2009. This is not a new book. I don't advertise it. I don't blog about it, or tweet, or send out email blasts. It is being discovered by people on their own. Kobo certainly gave it a boost by featuring it, but it was luck Kobo decided to do so. The List just came off a 5 day free period on KDP Select, which no doubt got it some attention, but that was zero cost to me and didn't involve me tooting my own horn anywhere. I've done things in the past to increase my sales. Sending out review copies. Visiting bookstores. And I saw some success doing these things. But that success pales next to simply being discovered by strangers who haven't heard of you before. Kobo and Amazon make it easy to find ebooks you like. Their user interfaces are surprisingly smart. Instead of pimping the books you've got, spend time writing more books to publish, then let their algorithms do their thing. PLATFORMS It's no secret that about 90% of my sales have been on Amazon. But 10% haven't. And that 10% equals a lot of money when you've sold a million ebooks. I like dealing with Amazon. They are so smart, so motivated, and do so much right. They're the one to beat, and their online store is the best in the world. I also like dealing with Kobo. They're dedicated, hungry, and also extremely smart. If you haven't visited lately, you should. They're doing some really cool stuff, making the shopping experience easier, better, and more fun. Smashwords continues to raise the bar, innovate, and blaze new trails. Coker is one of the smartest men in the biz. I've done well with Smashwords. I'm just now uploading my titles to Apple, so I don't have anything to report yet. But I'm not a fan of their iBookstore. It's clunky, not fun to surf, and lacks the ease of Amazon and Kobo. B&N's PubIt program is easy to use, but I'm not impressed with their online store. Still, I've made some good money there. Createspace is very easy to use, their books look great, and they integrate into both Amazon and B&N with ease. Overdrive caters to libraries, and I'm making some money there, but they aren't easy to upload to. In fact, I'm not even sure they have opened up their site to self-pub yet. As a writer, you should be on as many of these platforms as possible. The more places your books are available, the better. Competition is good, because it makes everyone try harder, forcing them to raise their game to higher levels. As a result, I haven't gone all in with Amazon. I don't like the exclusivity aspect of KDP Select. Amazon customers would have more choices, and authors would make more money, if it wasn't exclusive. I also don't like proprietary formats. I think Kindles should read epub, and Nooks and Kobo ereaders should read mobi files. FOREIGN SALES My feeling are mixed on this issue. One one hand, my agent has been amazing selling the foreign rights of my self-pubbed ebooks. I'm in more countries than I'd ever been in during my legacy years. On the other hand, every right you sell is one you can't exploit yourself. I've translated two works into German myself, at significant cost (a novel can cost $4k or more), but I'm in the black and set to earn profits forever. Forever is a long time. But even though I'm doing well with ebooks, I'm not prepared, nor do I have to contacts, to translate every one of my fifty IPs into ten languages. I also don't have the 8 million dollars that would cost. So my current solution is to sell foreign rights, but limit the term to three or four years, then they revert. That way I can make easy money now, and have the option of do it myself later without losing those rights forever. AGENTS If you want foreign deals, audio deals, movie and TV deals, or even a legacy deal, you probably need an agent. But I don't recommend searching for one until you've sold a lot of ebooks. 50,000 is a good number. And I said sell, not give away for free. EXPERIMENT There isn't a single thing I'm saying here that you should automatically believe. Don't trust me, or any other so-called expert. Instead, try things out for yourself and draw your own conclusions. Many newbies reading this don't understand what it is like to have a publisher controlling your book. Many even welcome that opportunity. I couldn't be happier having complete control over my intellectual property. Being able to change covers, prices, titles, content, quickly and efficiently, is invaluable to me. I can publish instantly, on all platforms, and reach more readers than publishers can. This is a business. You need to adopt a businesslike attitude. Businesslike doesn't mean tweeting every ten minutes, begging your 27 followers to buy your book. Businesslike means looking at numbers and understanding what they mean. Hiring out for things you can't do yourself, or hiring out when your time becomes so valuable you need to. Learning how to repeat cause and effect. I have an accountant, a financial planner, and an assistant. I hire out for cover art, formatting, and proof-reading. I use a close-knit group of bestselling authors as editors. I discuss strategies with peers, often try new things that fail, and am constantly trying to prepare for the future by watching trends, predicting what will happen next, and analyzing my own habits. Self-awareness is something everyone claims to have, but few people do. If you want to sell ebooks, look at why you buy ebooks. When was the last time you: • Bought an ebook you saw in a tweet? • Clicked on an Internet ad? • Followed a Facebook ad? • Bought an ebook because you got a postcard in the mail? • Bought an ebook because you got an email about one? • Read a free ebook? I agree with Joshua, awesome post. Allen: I think Joe is switching exclusivity periods and multi-platform disponibility. For example, you won't find The list on Kobo for some time. About Kobo: yes, they have improved. But on the sliding first page of the french Kobo site (adult novels), you can read: 'adult litterature becomes free and invade your readers. The automn will be scorching'. Hey, guys, we are in winter! Another think I dislike on the french Kobo website is that for the moment, they do not list ebooks by language in subgenres like SF & Fantasy: you'll find there ebooks in english, italian, french. I've been asking them to change that for a year. So, not very happy there. On the cooperation side, it seems to be a great way to improve your visibility. How do you do that, Joe? Are the rights being divided by Amazon and Kobo between multiple authors of the same work, or does it work differently? Would you recommand for an author a minimum threshold to do cooperation, like 1000 ebooks sold, whith authors in the same field level? I don't like the exclusivity aspect of KDP Select. Amazon customers would have more choices, and authors would make more money, if it wasn't exclusive. I also don't like proprietary formats. I think Kindles should read epub, and Nooks and Kobo ereaders should read mobi files. I'm hoping Amazon's publishing imprints (Thomas and Mercer, 47 North, Montlake, etc.) will eventually allow their ebooks to be sold on other retail sites. Then maybe the bookstores will stop boycotting them as well. Seems like it would be good for Amazon, and for the authors who write for them. I understand why they didn't allow this previously, but with e-reader sales leveling off in favor of tablets, it would seem to be the next logical step. T&M has been a joy to work with, but I want my ebooks to be available everywhere. Amazon accounts for 78% of my sales. Smashwords distribution accounts for 15% and sales on my own sites totals 7%. So, outside of Amazon I'm making another 22%. It's a close call whether going exclusive with Amazon would bring me more sales or not, really I don't care in the least. What matters is retaining your buyers contact info - being able to contact them by email, and being able to sell to them directly with no commission taken. Amazon doesn't just want exclusive, they don't even want you to sell your OWN BOOKS! Joe, I haven't seen you mention Google Authorship as something to take part in. It is important. I know you're not up on the latest search engine stuff, and maybe you don't care, as the only search engine that you probably count as important is Amazon's within site search. For those that cannot do well at Amazon, and that are looking for something else to come to the rescue - a serious effort at grabbing some Google love, might do the trick. Google Authorship is the next wave of Google search focus. Well, it's a big part anyway. Google+, and quality links to your author site can help a lot down the road and shouldn't be ignored. I'll stop here because blogger doesn't allow long comments. Cheers, and best of luck to everyone. Loved it, thanks for the post. As far as what propels me to buy an eBook, a FB page is huge. If i see that one of my friends liked something and it looks shiny, I checked it out. From there if it still looks shiny after I check out the FP page I like it, then buy it as soon as I can. Because I am like this I made a FB page for my eBook that's coming out in a few months. I'm so conflicted on platforms! Everytime I've tied to dump KDP I find that I get more KDP borrows than sales everywhere else combined. My paperbacks are everywhere, of course, but so far the numbers don't seem to support my eBooks going everywhere. Kobo looks great, I like the Kobo glow. I hope they get enough market share where it makes sense for me to utilize them. Great news and glad to see you're back on the blog circuit.. When you suggest being on all distributor platforms you should comment relative to an author's baseline sales. If an author only sells ten books a month on Amazon, going everywhere is not cost effective to capture another three unit sales. The other sites you'll have to figure out how best to market there, you'll get obsessed with the reports, and need to do formatting and accounting and etc. Better to create more content.. My numbers are up just enough now to say I can add one more distributor for a new title and experiment, but I have fourteen products now... Excellent post. I'm just starting out, but have had a lot of good success because I'm putting out a lot of material, keeping it reasonably priced (I like what you say about impulse buying, and optimizing my Amazon page to make it easy for people to find my book in the search engines. One tip I have (actually I've been writing a book about this and put it up on Kindle, but I'm not going to name it because I don't want this to be a plug) is to artfully pack your description, from the author and author bios with as many of the keywords people will search for using the Kindle search engine. Not to the point that it's unreadable, but enough so that your book shows up in the first few pages. I also cross promote. I do free giveaways with links in the back of the free books to all my other books. I see an uptick in sales every time I do a freebie. 'Bought an ebook you saw in a tweet?' I don't get Twitter. I bought one I saw recommended on G+ just a few days ago. 'Clicked on an Internet ad?' 'Followed a Facebook ad?' 'Bought an ebook because you got a postcard in the mail?' Not only have I never done this, I've never gotten a postcard in the mail recommending an e-book. 'Bought an ebook because you got an email about one?' However, I should clarify that this email was from a friend, recommending the book. 'Read a free ebook?' I'm doing that now -- preparatory to writing a review of it. (Does that count?) I wonder if your own experience here might be typical only of those who come to self-publishing after some degree of legacy publishing success, Joe. You already had a fan base and needed only to inform them of where to find your new offerings. Those who start without that advantage might need to do things a little differently in terms of building platform and visibility. Joe- and please don't take this wrong, but when you said SELL you did mean that you got paid something for each copy? I'm asking because there's more than a few people who are writers on the web who seem to confuse the words sell and the phrase 'give away' to pump up their numbers. I don't think that you do that; you did mention in this post one of your titles and made that clarification. Yeah, I DO want you to make a ton of dough- as a newbie who's been following you since I started this in December, the amount of hope and great advice is priceless. Or are you just taking note of a happy milestone Just a happy milestone. Took a little less than four years to reach it. Hope to get the next million quicker. Joe's Ebook Store - does not seem to work. Currently down for repairs and restructuring. Can I get your permission to add this as a guest post on my blog? People are always welcome to repost my blog posts, or sections from them. But please try to keep my words in context. I get quoted out of context a lot, and it misrepresents my meaning. Joe, Congrats, congrats, congrats. You deserve every bit of your success. Quick word of caution on using Author Central for tweaking book descriptions: if you're going to bold, center, etc., do it in your KDP back office with HTML code. If you do it in Author Central it overrides your KDP book description. Had this come up because I wanted to add an image (for tracking reasons) to my description. Made the mistake of using Author Central to change one of my book descriptions and now I can't touch that account. Apparently it's a funny Amazon thing. Again, just thought I should mention so you guys don't have the same thing happen to you. All the best! Great info, Joe. Loved the 'why you buy' bullet list at the end. Does anyone click on Internet or Facebook ads? Why would you? I've bought from a recommendation tweet, but never from a 'buy my book' tweet. For those who have queried about using html in book descriptions, here is a link describing From my understanding, doing it through Author Central limits your word count, at least it used to, so it's best not to do it this way. They may have changed that now, though. (Sorry, the link didn't work in my previous comment.). Anonymous said. Joe - Thanks for the transparency and complete and utter lack of BS in your analysis. Joe et al - I will have 4 titles in a series ready to be released later this year. I figured I'd use Amanda Hocking's approach: release in rapid succession, offer the first for free or really cheap, etc. I like what I'm hearing about Kindle Select so I'm going to try it. I'm wondering what the best way to do this is. Should I just make all 4 titles available on the same day, or should I stagger their release(s)? Should I do the 5 free days back to back to back to back, or should I stagger that for all the titles as well? The obvious answer is, I need to experiment but wanted to know if anyone had any experience/advice. Thanks in advance. KDP and Free events are still a trigger to give you a bump in the rankings leading to more sales. Not what they were a year ago and it's been diminishing since then. It used to be enough to just make your book Free and promote it a little. Now to differentiate yourself from everyone else using Free, you need to fully leverage your friends and fans in social media, make use of Facebook groups that promote free and have a following and determine if any other email blasters/advertisers are worth the cost of advertising. In my opinion, they are, but I'll better tell you after I come off of a 3 day Free promo where I've gone from almost no daily sales pre-promo to today, after 15 hours, I'm sitting at over 20,000 downloads #131 in Free Kindle and #3 in Police Procedurals. We'll see what this means for sales this weekend and next week after two more days of Free promotion and downloads. While people are discovering me through Free downloads, I need to go finish that second book for them to buy and enjoy later. The game keeps changing, we just need to figure out how to play it. Joe, you spent years criss-crossing the country and appearing at hundreds of independent bookstores; that's how you originally made your name as an author, and it's what helped propel your sales when you first began selling through KDP. Could it be that your sales are beginning to lag now, at least in part, because you have not made that same commitment to 'in-person marketing'--meaning, meeting and interacting with your readers, rather than relying on Amazon's algorithms--over the past few years? And because you've turned your back on the very stores that propelled you to success in the first place? A very informative post. I've just taken the first steps in self-publishing after previously being with conventional publishers (Penguin for the first three books and then one book with Healing Arts Press). Although I'm finding the self-promotion that must necessarily go with self-publishing hard work, it's not nearly as much of a headache as working with a publisher... And it's so much more rewarding financially! I have not investigated much further than Amazon and Kindle but will follow your suggestions regarding other e-publishers. Ruth Lever Kidson. Loved your take on using multiple platforms to sell your book, but I disagree with your point here: 'Instead of pimping the books you've got, spend time writing more books to publish, then let their algorithms do their thing.' Publishing a book, then crossing your fingers that it will sell sounds weak. There is nothing wrong with spreading word of how helpful your material is. If you can provide value to your niche, you will get more people interested in your book. As a rule of thumb, care about your niche and you will get noticed. Jack Reamer ebookmuse.com. Having, at the grand old age of 49, just self-published my first book (I've always enjoyed writing poetry - never even imagined that I could write a novel), I'm now trying to market it & came across your blog and yes, I've fallen into every deep crevice that you've mentioned. Thank you for sharing your knowledge that I know I am going to come back to many times until I get the hang of it *sigh*. Am going to read through your previous blogs but maybe you can direct me - have you written anything on how to get reviews? (yes.too late I've realised how important these are too) Thank you again. Thank you for confirming my thoughts on Facebook and Twitter. I can't see the benefit. I've not sold even a tenth of what you have sold but hope to sell more than I am at this point. I'm divided about exclusivity on Amazon. I sell the majority of books there so am going to start using KDP Select. As an avid reader using Kindle Unlimited that seems to me a no brainer. By putting my books into Select I'm finding more readers reading my books through the KUL that wouldn't try me by paying for the book. It hasn't generated reviews which I was hoping for but that may be remedied by posting a request within the book file right at the end of the novel rather than after the end stuff. Thanks for a great article. This is wonderful information that Mr. Konrath has put out about ebooks. Not many people can do the actions to make a Positive change occur in their lives and live Happier! I received some great information about how to look at selling my own ebook in a different aspect point of view. My favorite one is to treat it like a business, because you have to. It is a mindset that helps to see what you have to offer, on your products and services and if it's going to bring any solutions to help other people. Great blog post. Please keep making more helpful comments to appease your community of bloggers! Publish on Amazon's Kindle Reach millions of readers by publishing in Amazon's Kindle store. Amazon is the largest online retailer in the world and the Kindle is by far the most popular eReader on the market. With eBook sales gaining year over year, publishing for Kindle simply makes sense for authors. And when you publish with BookBaby, your book will be available for purchase on Amazon.com, the Kindle eBook Reader, the Kindle Fire and dozens of other devices. We'll even convert your book to Kindle eBook format for free. Why publish with BookBaby? BookBaby has a knowledgeable customer service staff available by phone and email five days a week. We take the headache out of eBook publishing by offering all the services you need like eBook conversion, editing, cover design, printing, and more — all in one place. BookBaby was founded by writers and authors just like you. Why not publish directly with Amazon? There are two ways to publish on Kindle. You can sign up directly with Amazon, or you can use an eBook distribution service like BookBaby. The advantage of working with BookBaby is that you get access to the widest distribution network available for independent authors — including iBooks for iPad, and the Barnes & Noble’s eBook store for the Nook. And that’s just the beginning. BookBaby offers a wide array of services so that your publishing experience is a breeze. Our publishing experts will help you every step of the way, so that your book gets the attention to detail that it deserves. Publish your book with BookBaby and we’ll ensure that your eBook sits on the same virtual shelf as New York Times’ best sellers, Pulitzer Prize winners, and time-honored classics. What if my book is already published on Amazon? If your eBook is only on Amazon, you're missing out on millions more potential readers for your eBook. BookBaby can distribute your eBook to many other online retailers across the globe, including iBooks, Barnes & Noble, Kobo and many more. In fact you can pick any combination of retail store distribution during our easy-to-use eBook sign up process. How much do I get paid per eBook sale on Amazon? • When an eBook priced between $2.99 and $9.99 is purchased by a customer with a billing address in the United States, Austria, Belgium, Canada, France, Germany, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Monaco, Switzerland, United Kingdom (including Guernsey, Jersey and Isle of Man), Amazon will pay you 70% of your average retail price for that month’s sales, minus a small delivery fee determined by the file size of your book. • If customers outside of the aforementioned countries purchase your book, you will receive 35% of the purchase price (with no delivery charge). If you price your book higher or lower than that suggested range (2.99-9.99), you keep 35% of all sales in all countries. Come up with an idea. EBooks are no different from any other type of book except in their medium of publication, so the most important first step to writing one is to decide on, and develop, an idea for one. The basic way to do this is to sit down and write a brief phrase or sentence that encapsulates the information you'd like to put in your book. Once you have that, you can build on it to create a finished product. • Writers who plan to create a book of fiction will have to spend considerably more time coming up with ideas and plot points. Read for more relevant advice. • The eBook format has the advantage of being not only open to self-publishers, but essentially free for them, which means that “books” too short to really be worth printing on paper can make perfectly valid eBooks. Therefore, feel free to use a simple idea. Expand your idea. Start with the basic idea you wrote down, and think about different aspects of it. It may be helpful for you to draw a web of concepts to do this. For example, let's say you wanted to write a book about how to sell real estate for beginners. You could write down things like “licenses and fees,” “selling techniques,” and “cost vs. Expected returns.” Connect specifics that are related to each of them, and so on, until you have enough detail to see the structure of the words in your head. • Different books call for different approaches. Memoirs and self-help books might do better with a vertical outline; a book of fixes for common household problems will probably come together faster using a web of ideas. Organize your details. After unpacking and expanding your core idea, you should have a lot of information about your basic topic written down. Rearrange and organize it in a vertical outline until it makes sense to you and matches the way you'd like your book to flow. Think in terms of what your audience will need to know first, and put basics at the beginning. Once those have been covered, more advanced concepts can follow without losing the reader. • Each step along your line will end up being a chapter in your book. If you can break the chapters into groups as well (for instance, if your book on home repairs has chapters that can be divided by room or type of problem), feel free to turn those into larger sections that contain a few related chapters each. Write the book. Don't worry about a title, table of contents, or any of the other stylistic elements of the book yet. Just sit down and start writing it. You may find it's easier to “start in the middle” by writing a chapter of your choice first; you may prefer to start at the very beginning and write straight through. Just remember that you don't have to pick one method and stick with it. Use whatever techniques you need to complete the book. • Writing a book – even a short book – takes time. The important thing is to persevere. Set aside time each day to write, or write until you hit a certain word count. Don't stand up from your desk until you meet your goal. Even if you feel stuck, the act of writing something down will help loosen up your mind, and before you know it your words will be flowing again. Keep at it for as long as it takes. ![]() Review and rewrite. Once your book is finished, let it sit for a week or so, and then come back to it with a critical eye. Look at the order of the chapters and sections first. Do they make sense to you? Often, you'll find that some pieces seem to make more sense in a different spot than where you'd originally placed them. After you're satisfied with the order of the book, read each chapter in order and edit and revise it. • Like writing, editing takes time – not as much time, but still a significant amount. Pace yourself by editing a certain number of words or chapters each day. • You will often find that words, like chapters, simply need to be rearranged. Do your best to keep related ideas together, and don't forget to alter connecting sentences so that the new order still fits the text. • It has often been said that “deletion is the soul of editing.” If you find that a chapter is going down the proverbial rabbit-hole on a particular point, bring it back in line with the overall flow of that chapter by deleting the extra detail. • If such information is absolutely vital, consider setting it aside in a sidebar instead, or try to more smoothly incorporate it into the text so that it continues to flow smoothly when you read it. Add the details. Once the body of your book looks solid, it's time to add a title, and any front or end material (such as an introduction or a bibliography) you'd like to add. Titles usually reveal themselves during the writing of the book; when in doubt, a plainspoken title (such as “How to Sell Real Estate”) is usually a safe choice. • If you pick a very simple title, have a couple of alternates on hand in case it's already been used. Adding adjectives or even your own name (as in “wikiHow's Guide to Selling Real Estate”) are simple ways to do this. How to Write & Publish an eBook and Sell It. Digital reading devices have become incredibly..There are 8 books in the MY WAY Brand. Good luck to everyone with. If you want to take the first big step in your career as a writer, an ebook is. 9 Powerful Tips for Writing Your First Successful Ebook. Become a Better Writer. Jun 01, 2014 Whatever your reasons, it’s a dream or a fantasy of a lot of people. And here’s some good news. These days it’s incredibly easy. Thanks to companies such as Lulu and Amazon’s Createspace, and ebook readers like the Kindle and the Kobo and the Nook, it is simple and straightforward to publish your own book, professionally and. All eBooks related to business. Keep and read this guide as a reference as you'll be getting 100 powerful success tips to help you become a successful entrepreneur. Subscribe to our FREE email newsletter and receive a free eBook of. Since when did becoming a successful writer morph into reducing your work to a. • If you used information from elsewhere, always be sure to properly cite it in a bibliography. If your sources were friends, at least add in a page of acknowledgments so you can thank them by name. Like physical books, a major marketing tool for any eBook is its cover. Even though it's only a virtual cover, it's what potential buyers notice first. Consider springing for a professionally-designed cover, or go it alone if you think you can make something that looks good and will attract sales. Just be sure to get permission before you use any copyrighted images. • Even sections and pieces of copyrighted images are off-limits. When in doubt, get explicit permission from the copyright holder first. ![]() • Enable Night Mode: Turn on Dark Theme • Enable Cache: Preserve the contents extracted from eBook for faster subsequent reading • Library View at start: Always show the library view when Bookworm is opened • Customize font: Choose font family from available fonts on the system and font size • Customize reading profile: The text and background color for all three reading profiles can be customized • Auto load books: Multiple folders can be added (and removed) to automatically add supported eBooks into the library. Bookworm has the following shortcuts Location Shortcut Function Anywhere Ctrl + Q Close Bookworm Anywhere Ctrl + F Focus the Search Bar Library View Ctrl + V Switching between Grid View and List View Reading View Ctrl + L Return back to Library View from Reading View Reading View Left and Right Arrow Previous and Next page navigation Reading View Ctrl + '-' Decrease Font Size Reading View Ctrl + Shift + '+' Increase Font Size Reading View F11 Enter Full Screen Reading View Esc Exit Full Screen Reading View Ctrl + D Add/Remove Bookmark. Install Bookworm is currently developed for Elementary OS but the roadmap is to make it distro agnostic in the future If you are using Elementary OS then Bookworm is available on Appcenter for installation Bookworm is available as a PPA for Ubuntu (16.04 upwards) and other Ubuntu based systems. Shares 41 Brief: In this article, we are covering some of the best ebook readers for Linux. These apps give a better reading experience and some will even help in managing your ebooks. Lately, the demand for digital books has increased as people find it more comfortable in reading a book on their handheld devices, Kindle or PC. When it comes to the Linux users, there are various ebook apps that will serve your purpose in reading and organizing your ebook collections. In this article, we have compiled seven best ebook readers for Linux. These ebook readers are best suited for pdf, epubs and other ebook formats. Best eBook readers for Linux I have provided installation instructions for Ubuntu as I am using Ubuntu right now. If you use, you can find most of these eBook applications in the software repositories of your distro. Calibre is one of the most popular eBook apps for Linux. To be honest, it’s a lot more than just a simple eBook reader. It’s a complete eBook solution. You can even. With a powerful eBook manager and easy to use interface, it features creation and editing of an eBook. Calibre supports a variety of formats and syncing with other ebook readers. It also lets you convert one eBook format to another with ease. ![]() GTK+/Gnome application development. Get the book (PDF). Java application development on Linux. Get the book (PDF). Linux device drivers. Get the book. Linux kernel in. Self-service Linux – Mastering the art of problem determination. Get the book (PDF). The Linux command line. Get the book. Download Free eBook:Foundations of GTK+ Development - Free chm, pdf ebooks download. The biggest drawback of Calibre is that it’s too heavy on resources and that makes it a difficult choice as a standalone eBook reader. Features • Managing eBook: Calibre allows sorting and grouping eBooks by managing metadata. You can download metadata for an eBook from various sources or create and edit the existing field. • Supports all major eBook formats: Calibre supports all major eBook formats and is compatible with various e-readers. • File conversion: You can convert any ebook format to another one with the option of changing the book style, creating a table of content or improving margins while converting. You can convert your personal documents to an ebook too. • Download magazines from the web: Calibre can deliver stories from various news sources or through RSS feed. • Share and backup your library: It gives an option of hosting your eBook collection over its server which you can share with your friends or acccess from anywhere, using any device. Backup and import/export feature allows you to keep your collection safe and easy portability. Installation You can find it in the software repository of all major Linux distributions. For Ubuntu, search for it in Software Center or use he command below: sudo apt-get install calibre. FBReader is an open source, lightweight, multi-platform ebook reader supporting various formats like ePub, fb2, mobi, rtf, html etc. It includes access to popular network libraries from where you can download ebooks for free or buy one. FBReader is highly customizable with options to choose colors, fonts, page-turning animations, bookmarks and dictionaries. Features • Supports a variety of file formats and devices like Android, iOS, Windows, Mac and more. • Synchronize book collection, reading positions and bookmarks. • Manage your library online by adding any book from your Linux desktop to all your devices. • Web browser access to your stored collection. ![]() • Supports storage of books in Google Drive and organizing of books by authors, series or other attributes. Installation You can install FBReader ebook reader from the official repository or by typing the below command in terminal. Sudo apt-get install fbreader Or, you can grab a.deb package from and install it on your Debian based distributions. Okular is another open source and cross-platform document viewer developed by KDE and is shipped as part of the KDE Application release. Features • Okular supports various document formats like PDF, Postscript, DjVu, CHM, XPS, ePub and others. • Supports features like commenting on PDF documents, highlighting and drawing different shapes etc. • These changes are saved separately without modifying the original PDF file. • Text from an eBook can be extracted to a text file and has an inbuilt text reading service called Jovie. Note: While checking the app, I did discover that the app doesn’t support ePub file format in Ubuntu and its derivatives. The other distribution users can still utilize it’s full potential. Installation Ubuntu users can install it by typing below command in Terminal: sudo apt-get install okular. Lucidor Lucidor is a handy e-book reader supporting epub file formats and catalogs in OPDS formats. It also features organizing the collection of e-books in local bookcase, searching and downloading from the internet and converting web feeds and web pages into e-books. Lucidor is XULRunner application giving you a look of Firefox with tabbed layout and behaves like it while storing data and configurations. It’s the simplest ebook reader among the list and includes configurations like text justifications and scrolling options. You can look out for the definition from Wiktionary.org by selecting a word and right click > lookup word options. It also includes options to Web feeds or web pages as e-books. You can download and install the deb or RPM package from 5. Bookworm Bookworm is another free and open source ebook reader supporting different file formats like epub, pdf, mobi, cbr and cbz. I wrote a dedicated article on features and installation for Bookworm apps, read it here: Installation sudo apt-add-repository ppa:bookworm-team/bookworm sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get install bookworm 6. Easy Ebook Viewer is another fantastic GTK Python app for reading ePub files. With features like basic chapter navigation, continuing from the last reading positions, importing from other ebook file formats, chapter jumping and more, Easy Ebook Viewer is a simple and minimalist ePub reader. The app is still in its initial stage and has support for only ePub files. Installation You can install Easy Ebook Viewer by downloading the source code from and compiling it yourself along with the dependencies. Alternatively, the following terminal commands will do the exact same job. Sudo apt install git gir1.2-webkit-3.0 libwebkitgtk-3.0-0 gir1.2-gtk-3.0 python3-gi git clone cd Ebook-Viewer/ sudo make install After successful completion of the above steps, you can launch it from the Dash. Buka is mostly an ebook manager with a simple and clean user interface. It currently supports PDF formats and is designed to help the user focus more on the content. With all the basic features of pdf reader, Buka lets you navigate through arrow keys, has zoom options and you can view 2 pages side by side. You can create separate lists of your PDF files and switch between them easily. Buka also provides a built-in translation tool but you need an active internet connection to use the feature. Installation You can download an AppImage from the If you are not aware of it, read. Alternatively, you can install it from the command line: sudo snap install buka Final Words Personally, I find Calibre best suited for my needs. Also, Bookworm looks promising to me and I am using it more often these days. Though, the selection of an ebook application totally depends on your preference. Which ebook app do you use? Let us know in the comments below. J K Rowling (1965 - ) Legend has it that J.K. Rowling was a struggling single mother when she wrote the beginning of Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone, on scraps of paper at a local cafe. But her efforts soon paid off, as she received an unprecedented award from the Scottish Arts Council enabling her to finish the book. Since then, the debut novel has become an international phenomenon, garnering rave reviews and major awards, including the British Book Awards Chidren's Book of the Year and the Smarties Prize. ![]() Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Free PDF Book Deathly Hallows by J. Rowling Read Online with Free Download J. Rowling is a British author, novelist and film producer. She is best known as the author of Harry Potter series. Amazon.com: Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows eBook: J.K. Rowling: Kindle Store. Visit the Harry Potter Store Our Harry Potter Store features all things Harry. ![]() Description eBooks.com's Ebook Reader lets you read your favourite books on the go. Go to eBooks.com and choose from a massive collection of popular books that you can download in a jiffy. Or read your books online from any internet-connected device. Ebook Reader is free, and optimized for the iPad, iPhone and iPod touch. It supports multitasking on both iPhone/iPad, and high resolution Retina Display graphics.. Turn pages with a tap or swipe. Zoom with a pinch. Never lose your place in the book. Landscape or portrait orientation is lockable. Read sample chapters before you buy. Easy navigation inside the book. Download and install our free iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch app to start reading millions of ebooks on the go. Reading on a Kindle vs. An iPod Touch. Books, can i read a kindle on my ipod touch, ebook, fiction, good music for kindle reading, ipad, ipad reading in bed. The iPod does not have an ebook-specific reader, or just a text format good for reading ebooks. It's unfortunate, because the style and capabilities of iPods make. Jun 26, 2017 How to Read Books for Free on an iPhone. As we all know, being an avid reader can be extremely expensive. Both the traditional paperback copies and the new eBook. Jun 25, 2009 There's been a lot of talk about the Amazon Kindle as well as other eBook readers. But did you know you can read eBooks on your iPod Touch or iPhone too?. Search for text inside books. Night-reading mode is easy on the eyes. Adjust font size with a tap.. Login with your existing eBooks.com account. ![]() ![]() Sync your eBooks.com online bookshelf with all your iOS devices. Online synchronization of your bookmarks, highlights, notes and reading place with all your iOS devices. Importing of 3rd party books. 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