I suppose it was inevitable, but Amazon.com has announced that since April 1, it has been selling 105 eBooks for the Kindle for every 100 hardback or paperback books. More people are buying the electronic Kindle edition than the hard copies.
Amazon's only counting the books for which it charges - not the many free books it makes available in the Kindle format. If you were to include those books in the total count, the figures would be even further skewed towards the electronic format.
You can read the details here in an article from Computer World. The more I read books on my own Kindle, the more accustomed I become to the new format. Yes, I'm a lifelong reader, used to the feel and smell of a real book - but I'm also enough of a traveler to be grateful that I no longer really need to lug around an extra suitcase full of books.
In particular, as a reader of classic (and all too often out-of-print) mysteries, I am delighted to see more and more of my favorite authors are beginning to appear in Kindle editions. A lot of today's popular authors, of course, are also available on the Kindle. I trust the trend will continue.
Shameless plug: if you have been thinking about a Kindle, now might be a good time to do something about it - now that Kindle's price has come down so far. Please check it out here. And, of course, if you choose to buy it through my link, I do get a (small) commission - and you will have my thanks.
Hat tip: Shelly Palmer.
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