Posts Tagged: Amazon


17
Aug 10

17 books by Talbot Mundy for $1.99

I’m a big fan of the writing of Mr. Talbot Mundy, and today I bought a (digital) collection of tons of his writing at Amazon for $1.99.  I’m super amped about this, and thought I’d blog it in hopes of turning people onto this amazing writer. 

From the Wikipedia article on Mundy…

Born in London, at age 16 he ran away from home and began an odyssey in India, Africa, and other parts of the Near and Far East. By age 29, he had begun using the name Talbot Mundy, and a year later arrived in the United States, starting his writing career in 1911.

His first published work was the short story “Pig-Sticking in India”, which describes a popular, though now outlawed, sport practiced by British forces. Mundy went on to become a regular contributor to the pulp magazines, especially Adventure and Argosy .[1]

Many of his novels, including his first novel Rung Ho!, and his most famous work King of the Khyber Rifles, are set in India under British Occupation in which the loyal British officers encounter ancient Indian mysticism. The novels portray the citizens of Imperial India as enigmatic, romantic and powerful. His British characters have many encounters with the mysterious Thugee Cults. The long buildup to the introduction of his Indian Princess Yasmini and the scenes among the outlaws in the Khinjan Caves clearly influenced fantasy writers Robert E. Howard and Leigh Brackett. Other science-fiction and fantasy writers who cited Mundy as an influence included Robert A. Heinlein, E. Hoffmann Price, Fritz Leiber[2], Andre Norton [3], H. Warner Munn, Marion Zimmer Bradley and Daniel Easterman. [4] James Hilton‘s novel Lost Horizon was partly inspired by Mundy’s work. [5]

I can really see the similarity between Mundy’s writing style and Robert E. Howard’s (of Conan fame).  Which leads me to point out that Robert E. Howard was a good friend of H.P. Lovecraft, and I really believe those of you who are Lovecraft fans would adore the work of Mundy.  (If you don’t already that is.)   

[Side note: This post was composed froma mobile device.  So my writing style is going to be a bit foggy.  Sorry about that.]

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13
Aug 10

Advertising in Ebooks

High McGuire has a really interesting post about advertising in ebooks.  He has some interesting thoughts.

As with online book reviews that link to an online retailer (with affiliate fees), there is no reason an ebook about, say, rugby shouldn’t link to somewhere where I can buy tickets for the World Cup. If it’s a proper ebook – I mean, not just a book I can read on a digital device, but a proper ebook that is cloud-based and dynamically updated – then the link/interaction will point to 2011 tickets today, and in 4 years it will point to 2015 World Cup tickets. If I am reading about knitting I may well want to buy needles, and there’s no reason an ebook that makes me want to buy knitting needles shouldn’t help me do that (and make some money for the publisher, as well as the needle-maker, in the mean time).

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30
Jul 10

Amazon’s Jeff Bezos Says Some Smart Stuff

Today I found an interesting post by Amazon.com founder and CEO Jeff Bezos.

“Before if you were making a product, the right business strategy was to put 70% of your attention, energy, and dollars into shouting about a product, and 30% into making a great product. So you could win with a mediocre product, if you were a good enough marketer. That is getting harder to do. The balance of power is shifting toward consumers and away from companies…the individual is empowered… The right way to respond to this if you are a company is to put the vast majority of your energy, attention and dollars into building a great product or service and put a smaller amount into shouting about it, marketing it. If I build a great product or service, my customers will tell each other.”

I think this is totally true.  That is all.

(For those who care: Mr. Bezos was talking about the new Kindle on Charlie Rose‘s show when he said this.)

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29
Jul 10

Book Nerd! [Links]

~1~

Today I read a wonderful post over at INDX//mb.  The post states:

I have been trying to decide who I should link to when I link to books — Wikipedia? Kobo? Google? Who links where reminds me of what a powerhouse Amazon’s affiliate program is. I wonder if their first mover advantage is insurmountable? It seems so. No other retailer is even trying to build inbound links from across the web. And if a new entrant needs 10x the money and effort to unseat the incumbent, then the B&Ns, Indigos, and Borders of this world can’t afford it.

As a reader who blogs, this question resonated with me.  Most the time when I’m talking about a book I link to Amazon, and when I’m talking about a writer I link to Wikipedia.  But is there a better source of information about books / authors?  Later on in the same INDEX//mb post this appears:

Which brings me to The Open Library. There stated mission is “One web page for every book.” I am keen to link to TOL and I am eager to contribute edits where I can. The problem I have with it is the lack of a canonical page for the work rather than the book or the edition… For now, and perhaps forever, I will be linking to the best attempt at the canonical page on the net, at LibraryThing.com. (I just wish they added a TOL-style wiki.)

I spent some time poking around The Open Library site, and I’m kind of fascinated by it.

~2~

The second item I wanted to call some attention to is a post over at the O’Reilly Tools Of Change blog about something that I think is a bit of very exciting technology created by a company called Ricoh Innovations.  The post states:

How It Works
According to Jamey Graham, Distinguished Research Engineer at Ricoh, RI’s technology is similar to that of QR codes, but uses the natural patterns of an object or a page as opposed to a barcode. “Over the last few years we’ve developed algorithms for indexing & recognizing visual patterns. Using an Android or iPhone device, readers can snap a picture of a region on the page (text or images, or a combination) and they will be presented with online material just as if they’d scanned a barcode.”

With RI’s visual search system, areas of a page are mapped and linked to corresponding content. RI has developed both cloud and mobile versions of their device recognition engines, and are hoping that publishers will recognize the opportunity that their particular approach to visual search can offer to the reading experience — bridging the physical book with online media.

Ricoh recently launched their first app to accompany the soon-to-be-released novel by Matt Stewart, The French Revolution (Soft Skull). The app, dubbed the “French Rev,” links pages in the book with web-based content including videos, recipes, and music. Geo location data alerts readers to mapped locations from events in the book (set in San Francisco) such as Coit Tower, Pier 39, and the Golden Gate Bridge.

http://toc.oreilly.com/french%20rev%202.jpg

The linked nature of the web seems to be finding its way into traditional printed text.  The linking of text in books to information about real life locations and web based information is something that I think people should really be keeping an eye on.  This is the kind of locative media coming to life that William Gibson wrote about in his novel Spook Country.  Very exciting stuff.

~3~

The Penguin Blog wrote about their reissue of The Spy Who Came In From The Cold by John le Carré as a Penguin Modern Classics.  The blog states:

First published 47 years ago, and being reissued today in Penguin Modern Classics, le Carré’s ‘Spy’ still has the power to make you uncomfortably aware of the mechanics operating in the pit of your stomach. His relentless, unflinching and unforgiving vision of the world reminded me of the moral wasteland that permeates McCarthy’s scalpathon ‘Blood Meridian’ and leaves you with an overwhelming sense that no matter how good the good guys are; the bad guys will always win.

I’ve never read anything by le Carre but this discription, and the beautiful cover art (seen below) of the reissue has made me want to give him a try ASAP.

9780141194523

This cover art is really amazing.  It is simple and has a very classic look to it.  As I was scanning (rather than reading) the blog, it was this cover art that drew my attention.

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26
Jul 10

Just Thinking Out Loud: My Relationship to the CD As An Object

CDs: via mutednarayan's photostream

One thing I’ve noticed is that nowadays I can buy a used, but in prefect condition,  physical CD and have it cost me less than it would to buy the same album in MP3 format on iTunes or Amazon.

For someone like me this is a big deal because of the relationship I have with the CD as an object.  What do I mean by that?  Good question.  I mean, that during my formative adolescent years, when I was working my way through the muck that psychologist Erik Erikson would call the identity VS role confusion crisis and figuring out what sort of person I wanted to be, I used the music I listened to as a way to define who and what I was.  Which should be no surprise because damn near every adolescent has done and continues to do this.

However, when I was a kid, broadband internet access was a luxury that most people my age could not afford.  There were no iPods, and if you were to ask ten people if they had ever heard of a MP3, 9.5 of them would have responded by saying “A dot M P what?”  i.e. the CD was really the only act in town.  I remember frequently paying more than $20.00 to gain a CD.  I remember thinking that a CD burner was a gift something akin to Sisyphus stealing fire from the gods, I remember having to drive all over creation to find imports and rare singles.

Record companies loved this set up, and they became feasted on the money of consumers to such a point where they had an obesity problem.

Over the weekend I stopped in at Reckless Records near Chicago’s loop with the intention of finding something interesting.  I had no idea what that was going to be, but I was sure that I would know it when I saw it.  I picked up the album That Lucky Old Sun by Brian Wilson (of The Beach Boys fame).  The cut that I bought came with the album and a DVD that had some cool bonus stuffs on it, and it cost me $8.99 before tax.

As I walked out of that shop, with an album literally in my hands I felt a like I was participating in a ritual that has been such an important part of my defining who and what I am.  It was a deeply satisfying feeling.

Don’t Get Me Wrong:

I’m not saying that I hate MP3s, mind you, because nothing could be further from the truth.  I fucking love MP3s, as evidenced by how many I have sitting on my hard drives (yes, that is drives, plural), and how much time and money I’ve spent acquiring said MP3 files.  What I am saying is there is something about going to a record shop, taking a look around, finding something awesome, and walking out with it in your hands.  That something is not a something that I can get from buying an album as MP3 files, or downloading an album via BitTorrent.

Jut sayin’.

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