IN the vast sea of digital fiction, one recently voiced trade perception is that there are more authors than there are readers. Whoopee for readers! The choice of titles has never been greater, yet are these books worth reading?
As an avid reader, I welcome the comment that an established epublisher gets from 50 to 500 submissions per week. How this will evolve into published fiction is a statistic still to be discovered. Individual publishers, so far, have been wary of issuing any sales figures.
Statistics for ebooks as a whole (which includes non-fiction) confirm rate of growth similar to past years. Sales have doubled annually since records began. But what's the breakdown between fiction and non-fiction? Business and academic texts obviously claim the major slice of sales. How fares fiction? Who's reading it?
Well, for a start, I am. Printed books from my public library are a lifelong habit, as are purchased titles from a bookshop. Free downloads to my laptop have so far been limited to classic works that I never bothered to read before. Here I confess they are no more attractive onscreen and usually get dumped after a chapter or two. With few exceptions their language is dated, their time long past.
Other free fiction downloads are so numerous, and so awful, that I don't bother with them anymore.
But what about the BUYING of ebooks? Yes, I purchase them, mostly fiction, and delight in the big array on offer. These are the genuine titles. Their publishers have confidence in their worth.
What's more, free samples allow fairly accurate judgment by a digital shopper before proceeding to the checkout.
Sifting through these samples is a pleasant chore. The unappealing are simply deleted.
The great advantage over physical bookshop browsing is this: discovery of a good unfamiliar author is quicker. So is the capture of a current bestseller.
My favourite browsing is at Mobipocket, for reasons that need no mention here. Just visit and see for yourself.
At Booktaste we display some of the best finds. One click on a cover takes you to them.
Happy reading!
Occupation: Self-employed writer and literary critic.
Born 1969 in Scotland, Cathy Macleod is a lifelong journalist, widely travelled. She writes a weekly blog on news, views and interviews concerning the book world, at http://www.booktaste.com.
Happily married and twice a mum, she resides with her husband in Kalamunda, in the forested hills overlooking Perth, Western Australia.