iPad debut ignites price war between Amazon and publisher Macmillan

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  • Reply 81 of 102
    jragostajragosta Posts: 10,473member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by iGenius View Post


    Since when do material costs determine market price? I was under the impression that supply and demand set market prices.



    That was exactly my point. Everyone is whining that eBooks cost less to produce than paper books so their price should be lower. My comment was that if you expand that to art, that my paintings should be worth more than Picasso's or Monet's as long as I use more paint and canvas than they do.



    Markets set prices and cost of production is irrelevant (other than the obvious fact that if the cost of production is greater than the market will accept as a selling price that the product will fail.
  • Reply 82 of 102
    john.bjohn.b Posts: 2,742member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Macadamias View Post


    And publishing is just what Amazon wishes to do. To get their new terms of only 30% cut going to Amazon, they get a license to publish for the Kindle platform along with other stipulations in their favor. I believe that is also a major sticking point with the traditional publishers.



    And I doubt that Amazon will be offering any of the usual help to authors that publishers give. Some artists may not need any guidance and help producing their work, but even big names in every field find great value that type of relationship.



    I seriously doubt that either Amazon or Apple wants to get into all the care and feeding that goes into being a real publisher, which involves far more than converting a manuscript into an e-book.



    For an author, the advantages of a publishing deal with an established publishing house is pretty obvious; I'm not sure what an author gets from turning over e-book publishing rights -- and the ability to set prices -- over to the Amazon Kindle team. At least Macmillan, etc. share the author's vested interest in having a book succeed; Amazon only cares that they sell a lot of books but not any particular book. Amazon is never going to fund a book tour to raise awareness and generate sales; for starters its not money they would spend and, besides, where would they hold them?



    Sure, Amazon gives the book exposure on a highly trafficked website. But an author doesn't need to turn over their e-book rights to Amazon to get that...
  • Reply 83 of 102
    brucepbrucep Posts: 2,823member
    Editg
  • Reply 84 of 102
    melgrossmelgross Posts: 33,510member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by benice View Post


    What a disgrace. Apple are saying publishers should be able to set their own prices (OK, good), but then saying they expect prices to be around a certain price (to drive a revenue base).



    As someone else said, it smacks of price-fixing. It's also hypocritical.



    With these kind of turf wars and a series of mixed messages coming out (especially from the intermediary's who are starting to sound like old fashioned monopolists) it's easily enough for consumers to lose confidence in the e-book model at all.



    Way to go guys. Remember the old MP3/DRM fights you had back then amongst yourselves and between your customers, well this is the same old crap served on us consumers that you expect us to accept again. Good luck with that.



    You don't understand the agreement.



    The $12.99 to $14.99 price is only for NEW hardcover release time.



    McMillian has said that they want to price books from $4.99 to $14.99. That's the pricing choice.



    When a book first comes out the cost is all up front, as it is with all new products. Most books sell very few copies, and the publisher loses money on them. If the book sells well enough to move to trade paper, the price drops, again if it makes it to paperback, there's another price drop. McMillian want's to simulate those price drops. I see nothing wrong with that.



    Publishers will likely all want DRM. All published books have that. It's not up to Apple to eliminate it, as they won't then get product to sell. The question is how that DRM will be implemented. Right now, books in the app store can be used on your iPhone/Touch. Will that be the case her, just adding the iPad to that, or will we have the iTunes model, which is 5 computers and unlimited iPhone/Touches? If it's the latter, it's pretty good.
  • Reply 85 of 102
    melgrossmelgross Posts: 33,510member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by nvidia2008 View Post


    Really? So are they making a profit on the softcovers? What's happening with Amazon?



    I guess you know that I was talking about the e-book version.
  • Reply 86 of 102
    melgrossmelgross Posts: 33,510member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by iGenius View Post


    So you are happy that the prices are higher?



    No one is ever happy when prices are higher. But Amazon was selling books at a loss to jumpstart e-book sales for themselves. That's a losing proposition. They were also getting 65% of the sales price. Publishers were getting more than the book was selling for, in the case of new books. That's not a sustainable model for them. At some point, they would have to drop the hammer, and cut the price to the publisher in half, as it's been assumed they would do. That's not a sustainable model for publishers.



    Apple is trying to let everyone make money on this. That's a sustainable model.



    The price will drop the longer the book is out.



    And, in addition, for the vast majority of titles that don't sell enough copies in paper form to pay the publisher back, and are therefor yanked from print, well, they can remain in the electronic bookstore at lower prices.



    It's best for everyone.
  • Reply 87 of 102
    melgrossmelgross Posts: 33,510member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by bodypainter View Post


    and once again we see how it's not about the customer, but about making money out of the customer. a digitally distributed book does not have a cover, no printing costs, no distribution with a truck and a person that hands over the book to you, types in the price and gives you change for your money and still it costs the same? that is not fair!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!



    And so the editors, proofreaders, copy people, those who manage the whole complex endeavor, and other people involved should do their work for free? And the marketing people who make certain the book gets advertised so that people know its out, plus the Ad costs, shouldn't be factored into this either? What about the artist who has to get paid for the painting on the cover, or the people who write the cover book and author info, or the photog's who sometimes take the picture of the author? Or the cost of registering the book with the international registry and copyright system?



    There's a lot that goes into a book other than printing it and distributing the physical copy.



    The author usually gets an advance, and gets about 25% of the sale price after that, of it sells. Eliminate that as well?



    What's not fair is your not wanting to pay for all that. Printing and distributing is only about 25% of a books cost.
  • Reply 88 of 102
    melgrossmelgross Posts: 33,510member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by iGenius View Post


    Since when do material costs determine market price? I was under the impression that supply and demand set market prices.



    Material, and running costs set the lower limit on pricing, if only they are considered. Publishing is a low net margin business. Some people here seem to think that vast profits are being made. That's not the case.



    But, what's being done here, to a certain extent, is that publishers want to change the profit to loss percentages on the books they publish. As most books lose money for the publisher, it becomes a business of major best sellers where they make money, and the vast majority on which they lose money. Some of the profit from those best sellers goes to support new authors whose books are likely to fail, though obviously publishers hope they won't.



    By keeping prices of e-books at a certain minimum, they hope to make more of those books profitable. But the price MacMillian is talking about is $4.99, which is a very good price for a book. If keeping a book published in the e-store for that price helps everyone to make some money from it, it;s a good idea.



    What isn't being understood is that this is all still very new. Pricing will work itself out in time.
  • Reply 89 of 102
    melgrossmelgross Posts: 33,510member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Macadamias View Post


    The marginal cost of an eBook approaches zero only when the quantity sold is high enough.



    The cost to make an eBook "edition" is separate from the costs for a physical copy. So they aren't trying to subsidize the physical books. If anything, they would have to subsidize the eBooks because they aren't making enough money on them yet for the cost of making an electronic edition.



    It never approaches zero, because, at the very least, the author must be paid, and then there is the cut to Apple or others, which is needed to pay for the costs of developing and running the store, which includes the credit card fees, taxes etc.



    So to a great extent, even if an author has the rights, how much that author want to get paid for each copy sold becomes a large, or the largest part of the selling price. If they don't have the rights, then the costs are higher.
  • Reply 90 of 102
    melgrossmelgross Posts: 33,510member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by jragosta View Post


    That was exactly my point. Everyone is whining that eBooks cost less to produce than paper books so their price should be lower. My comment was that if you expand that to art, that my paintings should be worth more than Picasso's or Monet's as long as I use more paint and canvas than they do.



    Markets set prices and cost of production is irrelevant (other than the obvious fact that if the cost of production is greater than the market will accept as a selling price that the product will fail.



    That's clearly not true. Writing has never been sold the way paintings, sculpture, and other physical works have been sold.



    No matter who the author, the book price is fairly consistent. The only variables have been the number of pages, and the quality of the edition.
  • Reply 91 of 102
    melgrossmelgross Posts: 33,510member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by brucep View Post


    YOUR SARCASM RADAR WAS DOWN



    i work with book companies for 3o yrs

    i understand very few books ever turn a profit





    i understand there idiots

    every single one of them



    BUT many many books that are already out there need only to be priced at $7.99 and sell in the hundreds of thousands

    and every one gets rich if you have 600 great titles



    pure fcuking greed and stupidity keeps the book price so high on the internet



    APPLE AFTER 18 MONTHS WILL REDUCE ALL PRICES BY 40 PERCENT

    AMD REDUCE BY 60 PERCENT IF YOU BUY 5 BOOKS AT A SHOT



    the people I know

    have stated THAT FOR A FACT



    <<<<authors will now write direct to apple >>>





    PEACE



    bruce p



    9



    L



    Your sarcasm was well buried, I'll give you that.



    Publishers simply want to do in the e-book store what they do in the bookstores. That is to attempt to make their money up front so they lose the least amount possible on the average book, while being able to continue to sell then at lower pricing as time goes on.



    As the physical costs of a book are only about 25% of the price, eliminating that cost doesn't drop the cost down to zero just because it's electronic. I've made more than a few posts here about that.



    At some point, the publishers costs have been returned, and they've made a profit, they hope. After that, the cost is dropped on the next less expensive printing format. Trade copy, then pocket novel.

    If not enough books are sold in hardcover, then they never make it to the next lower lever, and end up on the remainder tables.



    By pricing e-books at about the price minus printing costs, plus profit, it seems fair to me. It will help the publisher break even faster, and hopefully, the author will be able to make more money on a longer run, as the e-book can stay in the store forever.
  • Reply 92 of 102
    tekstudtekstud Posts: 351member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by anantksundaram View Post


    Stop working yourself up into a lather by having a conversation with yourself (glad to see that you're finally posting beyond your obligatory three words).



    And, get real. You're not the only one that 'multitasks.'



    And, while you're at it: (i) Grow up; (ii) Get a life.



    Yes master! lol!
  • Reply 93 of 102
    did anyone ever see the james bond movie, "Live And Let Die". Mr Big gave his dope away for free to put his competition out of business. in this saga Amazon is Mr Big.



    publishers, brick and mortar bookstores and authors cannot survive a $9.99 model. eventually you will be downloading $10 of crap.



    opinions are great if they're worth reading or if the writer knows a thing or two



    how about boycotting amazon until they lower the price of the kindle to $99.99?



    http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/htm...azon-macm.html



    http://scottwesterfeld.com/blog/?p=2138



    http://www.tobiasbuckell.com/2010/01...le-via-amazon/



    http://www.antipope.org/charlie/blog...outsiders.html



    http://whatever.scalzi.com/2010/01/3...ebook-pricing/



    http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/03/op...03galassi.html



    http://news.bookweb.org/news/7130.html



    http://www.tbiresearch.com/amazon-se...e-books-2010-1



    http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/17/bo...gernert&st=cse



    http://finance.yahoo.com/news/In-Ama...&asset=&ccode=
  • Reply 94 of 102
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by iGenius View Post


    Agree. But that is not what is meant by the term marginal cost.



    Apologizes, I find I did misuse the term. However, I believe that Melgross has it right.



    Quote:
    Originally Posted by melgross View Post


    It never approaches zero, because, at the very least, the author must be paid, and then there is the cut to Apple or others, which is needed to pay for the costs of developing and running the store, which includes the credit card fees, taxes etc.



    So to a great extent, even if an author has the rights, how much that author want to get paid for each copy sold becomes a large, or the largest part of the selling price. If they don't have the rights, then the costs are higher.



    So looking at it that way, that part of the marginal cost would be a major part of any selling price. I have a feeling this is true for many physical copies as well, as their marginal cost is quite low when part of a large print run. The printing, transporting, and storing is spread over a large number of books and the cost compared to an ebook isn't as dramatic as many think.



    Now when a book has less demand, like later in it's life, the ebook will most likely have a smaller marginal cost than the printed version. Disregarding any remaining books in storage of course. However that marginal cost will still not be zero.
  • Reply 95 of 102
    brucepbrucep Posts: 2,823member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by melgross View Post


    Your sarcasm was well buried, I'll give you that.



    Publishers simply want to do in the e-book store what they do in the bookstores. That is to attempt to make their money up front so they lose the least amount possible on the average book, while being able to continue to sell then at lower pricing as time goes on.



    As the physical costs of a book are only about 25% of the price, eliminating that cost doesn't drop the cost down to zero just because it's electronic. I've made more than a few posts here about that.



    At some point, the publishers costs have been returned, and they've made a profit, they hope. After that, the cost is dropped on the next less expensive printing format. Trade copy, then pocket novel.

    If not enough books are sold in hardcover, then they never make it to the next lower lever, and end up on the remainder tables.



    By pricing e-books at about the price minus printing costs, plus profit, it seems fair to me. It will help the publisher break even faster, and hopefully, the author will be able to make more money on a longer run, as the e-book can stay in the store forever.



    YES YES

    except when you compare two massive total amounts

    the numbers get scary ..also before i start to compare i will also say some authors will sell direct to apple and some may even not end up in paper at all .



    OKok hereis why i agree with up to this point ,,



    If i can sell 20 million books . and i am given a choice to sell

    ebook style or

    trad style



    Well 20 million books is a lot of trees axes gas lumber companies tv shows about lumber companies

    paper mills rivers re cycled paper ink colors inks drafting tables

    Thousands of workers

    All of them eating food

    Each stop along the line we ship stuff here and there

    Book stores with all theiR over head cost and all that taxes on all the steps too

    On and on to make 20 million lovely books !!



    or 20 million cool dude's DOWN LOAD the same amount saving mother earth all that waste

    and we can now MINUS THE COST OF ALL THE 20 million books when we make the totals .



    SIMPLE MATH MY DEAR FRIEND



    at some point the ebook style cost level out and will only slowly rise



    paper book have a heavy load to carry with built in costs that only go up and =never go down ,



    so if MacMillion in 6 yrs sells 200 million books >> split in half between paper and ebook

    THE EBOOKS OVER ALL GROSS COST WILL BE FAR LOWER ,





    $6,99 BEST SELLERS from top writers will be here soon sold direct to you from them .







    peace



    9
  • Reply 96 of 102
    benicebenice Posts: 382member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by melgross View Post




    /snipped/



    Right now, books in the app store can be used on your iPhone/Touch. Will that be the case her, just adding the iPad to that, or will we have the iTunes model, which is 5 computers and unlimited iPhone/Touches? If it's the latter, it's pretty good.



    Have to admit that would be a great outcome. Multi-device readability amongst a family of devices would be fantastic. That is, in fact, fairly close to the hard copy approach we're used to, with a book or music on the shelf at home being useable by all in the house. The ability to share like that is an important part of the value proposition.
  • Reply 97 of 102
    john.bjohn.b Posts: 2,742member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by brucep View Post


    $6,99 BEST SELLERS from top writers will be here soon sold direct to you from them .



    Top writers have said they aren't really interested in publishing, marketing, and distribution.



    And there are only a handful of authors who could even pull this off (i.e. have enough of a following that people would seek them out). Dan Brown, Stephen King, etc.



    I'm sure a lot of indie writers would like to do this, but they don't have the following to pull this off. Publishers have been trying to solve the "how do the unknowns get known" problem for a long time, and the internet actually makes that *harder* to be an unknown author in a vast sea of unknown authors.
  • Reply 98 of 102
    melgrossmelgross Posts: 33,510member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by brucep View Post


    YES YES

    except when you compare two massive total amounts

    the numbers get scary ..also before i start to compare i will also say some authors will sell direct to apple and some may even not end up in paper at all .



    OKok hereis why i agree with up to this point ,,



    If i can sell 20 million books . and i am given a choice to sell

    ebook style or

    trad style



    Well 20 million books is a lot of trees axes gas lumber companies tv shows about lumber companies

    paper mills rivers re cycled paper ink colors inks drafting tables

    Thousands of workers

    All of them eating food

    Each stop along the line we ship stuff here and there

    Book stores with all theiR over head cost and all that taxes on all the steps too

    On and on to make 20 million lovely books !!



    or 20 million cool dude's DOWN LOAD the same amount saving mother earth all that waste

    and we can now MINUS THE COST OF ALL THE 20 million books when we make the totals .



    SIMPLE MATH MY DEAR FRIEND



    at some point the ebook style cost level out and will only slowly rise



    paper book have a heavy load to carry with built in costs that only go up and =never go down ,



    so if MacMillion in 6 yrs sells 200 million books >> split in half between paper and ebook

    THE EBOOKS OVER ALL GROSS COST WILL BE FAR LOWER ,





    $6,99 BEST SELLERS from top writers will be here soon sold direct to you from them .







    peace



    9



    Bruce, I understand your point. But, and this is the most important part, most authors never sell more than a couple thousand books. A very large number never sell more than a few hundred, that is, of any one title.



    James Patterson is the only worldwide author who sells 20 million books in a year, because he writes with other authors, and has 9 titles a year. For everyone else, even a million is tough to sell.



    If publishers and authors hold their e-books back until well after hardcover sales are finished, in other words, sometime during the trade paperback sales (if any), then, maybe, maybe, significantly lower prices are warranted.



    But when they sell them at the same time, the pricing must be different, because both hardcover editions and e-book editions are competing to pay for the authors advance, and all of the publishing costs. If the e-book costs are so much lower, then those costs will never be realized, as too many e-books will be sold vs the hardcover, to pay for them.



    It's real economics here, not just the wishes of people who only care about cheaper book pricing.



    The e-book price must cover all the costs minus the printing and associated costs, which is about 25% of the sales price. so initial e-book pricing, when they come out at the same time as the hardcover, should be about 25% less.



    Once those costs are brought back, and the book is in paperback, the costs can be dropped significantly. But there are still costs to be realized even then. Pricing must be realistic so that everyone can continue profiting on it, or otherwise there is no reason to publish it.



    Everything isn't peace and love, Bruce, people have to be able to earn a proper living from their work.
  • Reply 99 of 102
    brucepbrucep Posts: 2,823member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by melgross View Post


    Bruce, I understand your point. But, and this is the most important part, most authors never sell more than a couple thousand books. A very large number never sell more than a few hundred, that is, of any one title.



    James Patterson is the only worldwide author who sells 20 million books in a year, because he writes with other authors, and has 9 titles a year. For everyone else, even a million is tough to sell.



    If publishers and authors hold their e-books back until well after hardcover sales are finished, in other words, sometime during the trade paperback sales (if any), then, maybe, maybe, significantly lower prices are warranted.



    But when they sell them at the same time, the pricing must be different, because both hardcover editions and e-book editions are competing to pay for the authors advance, and all of the publishing costs. If the e-book costs are so much lower, then those costs will never be realized, as too many e-books will be sold vs the hardcover, to pay for them.



    It's real economics here, not just the wishes of people who only care about cheaper book pricing.



    The e-book price must cover all the costs minus the printing and associated costs, which is about 25% of the sales price. so initial e-book pricing, when they come out at the same time as the hardcover, should be about 25% less.



    Once those costs are brought back, and the book is in paperback, the costs can be dropped significantly. But there are still costs to be realized even then. Pricing must be realistic so that everyone can continue profiting on it, or otherwise there is no reason to publish it.



    Everything isn't peace and love, Bruce, people have to be able to earn a proper living from their work.



    DAMN SAM



    i agree with you

    yes yes yes i do !!!



    and of course by now you all know i am a dreamer



    i am only extending down the road what VIRTUAL PUBLISHING has already started

    the book market place is a old school fragmented over priced wasteful disgrace



    i own thousands of books

    i love books



    Apple has thrown down a gauntlet and then it has AS always stepped back . TO watch and to learn .



    I say thousand's of jobs in the book industry will disappear forever

    10 ten times more jobs will be invented

    i say costs will be cut to the bone

    i say paper books will sell even more than before

    E books will only increase over all reading

    e books can open up small run book pressings to a world wide market making



    an obscure 12 yr old indian child can write a short series of heart wrenching poems >>20 million can be DL in hours and sell for .25 cts each by passing all gate keepers

    <this model can be applied to any true great content writers >>



    whole living forest will be saved by apple kindle and the coming cheap book reader revolution



    the complete works of Shakespear will be available ON a or iIN a LEATHERr bound book reader / with back up BR dvd with added video and multi media extra's about the BARD .

    <<this model can be applied to any book series >>



    ebooks will force less waste

    ebooks will have titles that stay in the clouds for ever trapped in cyper hell.

    the strained human condition will over come many hardships by pouring out their hears thru the written word



    sci fi writers like Heinlein and the rest of the golden age guys will be afforded paper back sized ebook readers with futuristic ever changing covers that reflect the current title of mood or whatever the reader wants

    all the great sci fi short stories from pulp mags and short novella's short novels to complete series



    below is Heinlein

    or Rocket Ship Galileo, 1947 *

    Beyond This Horizon, 1948 (initially serialized in 1942, and at that time credited to Anson MacDonald)

    Space Cadet, 1948 *

    Red Planet, 1949 *

    Sixth Column, 1949 (initially serialized in 1941, and at that time credited to Anson MacDonald) (aka: The Day After Tomorrow)

    Farmer in the Sky, 1950 (Retro Hugo Award, 1951) *

    Between Planets, 1951 *

    The Puppet Masters, 1951 (re-published posthumously with excisions restored, 1990)

    The Rolling Stones, 1952 (aka: Space Family Stone) *

    Starman Jones, 1953 *

    The Star Beast, 1954 *

    Tunnel in the Sky, 1955 *

    Double Star, 1956 -- Hugo Award, 1956 [2]

    Time for the Stars, 1956 *

    Citizen of the Galaxy, 1957 *

    The Door into Summer, 1957

    Have Space Suit?Will Travel, 1958?Hugo Award nominee, 1959 [3] *

    Methuselah's Children, 1958 (originally a serialized short story in 1941)

    Starship Troopers, 1959 -- Hugo Award, 1960 [4]

    [edit]Middle Heinlein novels

    Stranger in a Strange Land, 1961 -- Hugo Award, 1962 [5], (republished at the original greater length in 1991)

    Podkayne of Mars, 1963 *

    Orphans of the Sky, 1963 (fix-up novel of two connected short stories, both originally published in 1941)

    Glory Road, 1963?Hugo Award nominee, 1964 [6]

    Farnham's Freehold, 1965

    The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress, 1966 -- Hugo Award, 1967 [7]

    I Will Fear No Evil, 1970

    Time Enough for Love, 1973?Nebula Award nominated, 1973 [8]; Hugo and Locus SF Awards nominated, 1974 [9]

    [edit]Late Heinlein novels

    The Number of the Beast, 1980

    Friday, 1982?Hugo, Nebula, and Locus SF Awards nominee, 1983 [10]

    Job: A Comedy of Justice, 1984 - Nebula Award nominee, 1984 [11]; Locus Fantasy Award winner, Hugo Award nominee, 1985 [12]

    The Cat Who Walks Through Walls, 1985

    To Sail Beyond the Sunset, 1987

    [edit]Early Heinlein works published posthumously





    [ ]"Future History" short fiction

    "Life-Line", 1939

    "Let There Be Light", 1940

    "?And He Built a Crooked House?", 1940

    "Misfit", 1939

    "The Roads Must Roll", 1940

    "Requiem", 1940

    ""If This Goes On?"", 1940

    "Coventry", 1940

    "Blowups Happen", 1940

    "Universe", 1941

    ""?We Also Walk Dogs"" 1941 (as Anson MacDonald)

    "Common Sense", 1941

    "Methuselah's Children", 1941 (lengthened and published as a novel, 1958)

    "Logic of Empire", 1941

    "Space Jockey", 1947

    "It's Great to Be Back!", 1947

    "The Green Hills of Earth", 1947

    "Ordeal in Space", 1948

    "The Long Watch", 1948

    "Gentlemen, Be Seated!", 1948

    "The Black Pits of Luna", 1948

    "Delilah and the Space Rigger", 1949

    "The Man Who Sold the Moon", 1951, (Retro Hugo Award)

    "The Menace From Earth", 1957

    "Searchlight", 1962

    [edit]Other short speculative fiction

    Note that all the works initially attributed to Anson MacDonald, Caleb Saunders, John Riverside and Simon York, and many of the works attributed to Lyle Monroe, were later reissued in various Heinlein collections and attributed to Heinlein.



    At Heinlein's insistence, the three Lyle Monroe stories marked with the symbol '§' were never reissued in a Heinlein anthology during his lifetime.



    "Magic, Inc.", 1940 (aka: "The Devil Makes the Law")

    "Solution Unsatisfactory", 1940 (as Anson MacDonald)

    "Let There Be Light", 1940 (as Lyle Monroe)

    "Successful Operation" 1940 (aka: "Heil!") (as Lyle Monroe)

    "They", 1941

    ""?And He Built a Crooked House?"", 1941

    "By His Bootstraps", 1941 (as Anson MacDonald)

    "Lost Legacy", 1941 (aka: "Lost Legion") (as Lyle Monroe)

    "Elsewhen", 1941 (aka: "Elsewhere") (as Caleb Saunders)

    § "Beyond Doubt", 1941 (as Lyle Monroe with Elma Wentz)

    "The Unpleasant Profession of Jonathan Hoag", 1942 (as John Riverside)

    "Waldo", 1942 (as Anson MacDonald)

    § ""My Object All Sublime"", 1942 (as Lyle Monroe)

    "Goldfish Bowl", 1942 (as Anson MacDonald)

    § "Pied Piper", 1942 (as Lyle Monroe)

    "Free Men", 1946 (published 1966)

    "Jerry Was a Man", 1947

    "Columbus Was a Dope", 1947 (as Lyle Monroe)

    "On the Slopes of Vesuvius", 1947

    "Our Fair City", 1948

    "Gulf", 1949

    "Nothing Ever Happens on the Moon", 1949

    "Destination Moon", 1950

    "The Year of the Jackpot", 1952

    "Project Nightmare", 1953

    "Sky Lift", 1953

    "Tenderfoot in Space", 1956 (serialized 1958)

    "The Man Who Traveled in Elephants", 1957 (aka: "The Elephant Circuit")

    "?All You Zombies?", 1959

    [edit]Other short fiction

    "A Bathroom of Her Own", 1946

    "Dance Session", 1946 (love poem)

    "The Witch's Daughters", 1946 (poem)

    "Water Is for Washing", 1947

    "They Do It with Mirrors", 1947 (as Simon York)

    "Poor Daddy", 1949

    "Cliff and the Calories", 1950

    "The Bulletin Board", 1951

    [edit]Collections

    The Man Who Sold the Moon, 1950

    Waldo & Magic, Inc., 1950

    The Green Hills of Earth, 1951

    Assignment in Eternity, 1953

    Revolt in 2100, 1953

    The Robert Heinlein Omnibus, 1958

    The Menace From Earth, 1959

    The Unpleasant Profession of Jonathan Hoag, 1959 (aka: 6 X H)

    Three by Heinlein, 1965

    A Robert Heinlein Omnibus, 1966

    The Worlds of Robert A. Heinlein, 1966

    The Past Through Tomorrow, 1967 (almost-complete Future History collection, missing "Let There Be Light" and Orphans of the Sky).

    The Best of Robert A. Heinlein, 1973

    Expanded Universe, 1980

    A Heinlein Trio, 1980 (omnibus of The Puppet Masters, Double Star, and The Door Into Summer)

    The Fantasies of Robert A. Heinlein, 1999 (omnibus of Waldo & Magic, Inc. and The Unpleasant Profession of Jonathan Hoag)

    Infinite Possibilities, 2003 (omnibus of Tunnel in the Sky, Time for the Stars, and Citizen of the Galaxy)

    To the Stars, 2004 (omnibus of Between Planets, The Rolling Stones, Starman Jones, and The Star Beast)

    Off the Main Sequence, 2005 (short stories including three never before collected)

    Four Frontiers, 2005 (omnibus of Rocket Ship Galileo, Space Cadet, Red Planet, and Farmer in the Sky)

    Outward Bound, 2006 (omnibus of Have Space Suit?Will Travel, Starship Troopers, Podkayne of Ma





    WOW

    have read ever title at least 4 times

    at least



    now for a flat fee and a monthly charge

    you can get all these titles like the "The Long Watch", 1942<<which made me cry >>



    the color ebook reader will be free and you get all at once or little by little the COMPLETE WORKS of a master writer



    <<<<<< Robert A. Heinlein >>>>>>> !!!!!!!!



    a copy will be stored in the clouds for you if you lose it OR need space

    a series of plain backup dvd's will mailed to you for a small 5 dollar each fee

    or for 25 dollars each 8 otr 9 full spectrum MULTI MEDIA INCLUDING ALL OF f Robert A. Heinlein MOVIES IN SHINING BR 16 g each discs will be mailed to for back up or TV /LAPTIOP play back .



    so many great books above

    in one small space

    and yes by the way a tiny surcharge 3 bucks each the paper back versions will also be mailed to you from small local printers to adorn you book shelves



    the whole world can re discover Robert A. Heinlein

    i want the Worlds children to know Robert A. Heinlein and URSALA Le GUIN



    from free e books to $2500 ebooks

    the market will give us so many lost or ignored great writers

    for a very low price to kill the pirates

    and economies of scale will make them higher profit now tha before



    the gate keeps will die



    i named one great author >> there are hundreds to fit this model



    and think about school books ??





    see my point my friend

    WHILE all you say is true

    i say

    the waste will be gone

    and the world will be exposed to all the great heros of yesteryear



    i dream this of course





    the massive clutter of new works right now is beyond my feeble mind to fix



    i am not sorry for long post

    just seeing a list of RAH books sends me !!!!!



    <<as the film strip darkened

    he lay there breathing slowly

    all the nukes were broken apart

    the green hills of earth would play for 6 straight days as his body slowly decended to earth

    to feel that cool breeze coming from the sides of the green hills of earth

    one last time >>>



    peace bruce
  • Reply 100 of 102
    brucepbrucep Posts: 2,823member
    my best post

    read
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by brucep View Post


    DAMN SAM



    i agree with you

    yes yes yes i do !!!



    and of course by now you all know i am a dreamer



    i am only extending down the road what VIRTUAL PUBLISHING has already started

    the book market place is a old school fragmented over priced wasteful disgrace



    i own thousands of books

    i love books



    Apple has thrown down a gauntlet and then it has AS always stepped back . TO watch and to learn .



    I say thousand's of jobs in the book industry will disappear forever

    10 ten times more jobs will be invented

    i say costs will be cut to the bone

    i say paper books will sell even more than before

    E books will only increase over all reading

    e books can open up small run book pressings to a world wide market making



    an obscure 12 yr old indian child can write a short series of heart wrenching poems >>20 million can be DL in hours and sell for .25 cts each by passing all gate keepers

    <this model can be applied to any true great content writers >>



    whole living forest will be saved by apple kindle and the coming cheap book reader revolution



    the complete works of Shakespear will be available ON a or iIN a LEATHERr bound book reader / with back up BR dvd with added video and multi media extra's about the BARD .

    <<this model can be applied to any book series >>



    ebooks will force less waste

    ebooks will have titles that stay in the clouds for ever trapped in cyper hell.

    the strained human condition will over come many hardships by pouring out their hears thru the written word



    sci fi writers like Heinlein and the rest of the golden age guys will be afforded paper back sized ebook readers with futuristic ever changing covers that reflect the current title of mood or whatever the reader wants

    all the great sci fi short stories from pulp mags and short novella's short novels to complete series



    below is Heinlein

    or Rocket Ship Galileo, 1947 *

    Beyond This Horizon, 1948 (initially serialized in 1942, and at that time credited to Anson MacDonald)

    Space Cadet, 1948 *

    Red Planet, 1949 *

    Sixth Column, 1949 (initially serialized in 1941, and at that time credited to Anson MacDonald) (aka: The Day After Tomorrow)

    Farmer in the Sky, 1950 (Retro Hugo Award, 1951) *

    Between Planets, 1951 *

    The Puppet Masters, 1951 (re-published posthumously with excisions restored, 1990)

    The Rolling Stones, 1952 (aka: Space Family Stone) *

    Starman Jones, 1953 *

    The Star Beast, 1954 *

    Tunnel in the Sky, 1955 *

    Double Star, 1956 -- Hugo Award, 1956 [2]

    Time for the Stars, 1956 *

    Citizen of the Galaxy, 1957 *

    The Door into Summer, 1957

    Have Space Suit?Will Travel, 1958?Hugo Award nominee, 1959 [3] *

    Methuselah's Children, 1958 (originally a serialized short story in 1941)

    Starship Troopers, 1959 -- Hugo Award, 1960 [4]

    [edit]Middle Heinlein novels

    Stranger in a Strange Land, 1961 -- Hugo Award, 1962 [5], (republished at the original greater length in 1991)

    Podkayne of Mars, 1963 *

    Orphans of the Sky, 1963 (fix-up novel of two connected short stories, both originally published in 1941)

    Glory Road, 1963?Hugo Award nominee, 1964 [6]

    Farnham's Freehold, 1965

    The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress, 1966 -- Hugo Award, 1967 [7]

    I Will Fear No Evil, 1970

    Time Enough for Love, 1973?Nebula Award nominated, 1973 [8]; Hugo and Locus SF Awards nominated, 1974 [9]

    [edit]Late Heinlein novels

    The Number of the Beast, 1980

    Friday, 1982?Hugo, Nebula, and Locus SF Awards nominee, 1983 [10]

    Job: A Comedy of Justice, 1984 - Nebula Award nominee, 1984 [11]; Locus Fantasy Award winner, Hugo Award nominee, 1985 [12]

    The Cat Who Walks Through Walls, 1985

    To Sail Beyond the Sunset, 1987

    [edit]Early Heinlein works published posthumously





    [ ]"Future History" short fiction

    "Life-Line", 1939

    "Let There Be Light", 1940

    "?And He Built a Crooked House?", 1940

    "Misfit", 1939

    "The Roads Must Roll", 1940

    "Requiem", 1940

    ""If This Goes On?"", 1940

    "Coventry", 1940

    "Blowups Happen", 1940

    "Universe", 1941

    ""?We Also Walk Dogs"" 1941 (as Anson MacDonald)

    "Common Sense", 1941

    "Methuselah's Children", 1941 (lengthened and published as a novel, 1958)

    "Logic of Empire", 1941

    "Space Jockey", 1947

    "It's Great to Be Back!", 1947

    "The Green Hills of Earth", 1947

    "Ordeal in Space", 1948

    "The Long Watch", 1948

    "Gentlemen, Be Seated!", 1948

    "The Black Pits of Luna", 1948

    "Delilah and the Space Rigger", 1949

    "The Man Who Sold the Moon", 1951, (Retro Hugo Award)

    "The Menace From Earth", 1957

    "Searchlight", 1962

    [edit]Other short speculative fiction

    Note that all the works initially attributed to Anson MacDonald, Caleb Saunders, John Riverside and Simon York, and many of the works attributed to Lyle Monroe, were later reissued in various Heinlein collections and attributed to Heinlein.



    At Heinlein's insistence, the three Lyle Monroe stories marked with the symbol '§' were never reissued in a Heinlein anthology during his lifetime.



    "Magic, Inc.", 1940 (aka: "The Devil Makes the Law")

    "Solution Unsatisfactory", 1940 (as Anson MacDonald)

    "Let There Be Light", 1940 (as Lyle Monroe)

    "Successful Operation" 1940 (aka: "Heil!") (as Lyle Monroe)

    "They", 1941

    ""?And He Built a Crooked House?"", 1941

    "By His Bootstraps", 1941 (as Anson MacDonald)

    "Lost Legacy", 1941 (aka: "Lost Legion") (as Lyle Monroe)

    "Elsewhen", 1941 (aka: "Elsewhere") (as Caleb Saunders)

    § "Beyond Doubt", 1941 (as Lyle Monroe with Elma Wentz)

    "The Unpleasant Profession of Jonathan Hoag", 1942 (as John Riverside)

    "Waldo", 1942 (as Anson MacDonald)

    § ""My Object All Sublime"", 1942 (as Lyle Monroe)

    "Goldfish Bowl", 1942 (as Anson MacDonald)

    § "Pied Piper", 1942 (as Lyle Monroe)

    "Free Men", 1946 (published 1966)

    "Jerry Was a Man", 1947

    "Columbus Was a Dope", 1947 (as Lyle Monroe)

    "On the Slopes of Vesuvius", 1947

    "Our Fair City", 1948

    "Gulf", 1949

    "Nothing Ever Happens on the Moon", 1949

    "Destination Moon", 1950

    "The Year of the Jackpot", 1952

    "Project Nightmare", 1953

    "Sky Lift", 1953

    "Tenderfoot in Space", 1956 (serialized 1958)

    "The Man Who Traveled in Elephants", 1957 (aka: "The Elephant Circuit")

    "?All You Zombies?", 1959

    [edit]Other short fiction

    "A Bathroom of Her Own", 1946

    "Dance Session", 1946 (love poem)

    "The Witch's Daughters", 1946 (poem)

    "Water Is for Washing", 1947

    "They Do It with Mirrors", 1947 (as Simon York)

    "Poor Daddy", 1949

    "Cliff and the Calories", 1950

    "The Bulletin Board", 1951

    [edit]Collections

    The Man Who Sold the Moon, 1950

    Waldo & Magic, Inc., 1950

    The Green Hills of Earth, 1951

    Assignment in Eternity, 1953

    Revolt in 2100, 1953

    The Robert Heinlein Omnibus, 1958

    The Menace From Earth, 1959

    The Unpleasant Profession of Jonathan Hoag, 1959 (aka: 6 X H)

    Three by Heinlein, 1965

    A Robert Heinlein Omnibus, 1966

    The Worlds of Robert A. Heinlein, 1966

    The Past Through Tomorrow, 1967 (almost-complete Future History collection, missing "Let There Be Light" and Orphans of the Sky).

    The Best of Robert A. Heinlein, 1973

    Expanded Universe, 1980

    A Heinlein Trio, 1980 (omnibus of The Puppet Masters, Double Star, and The Door Into Summer)

    The Fantasies of Robert A. Heinlein, 1999 (omnibus of Waldo & Magic, Inc. and The Unpleasant Profession of Jonathan Hoag)

    Infinite Possibilities, 2003 (omnibus of Tunnel in the Sky, Time for the Stars, and Citizen of the Galaxy)

    To the Stars, 2004 (omnibus of Between Planets, The Rolling Stones, Starman Jones, and The Star Beast)

    Off the Main Sequence, 2005 (short stories including three never before collected)

    Four Frontiers, 2005 (omnibus of Rocket Ship Galileo, Space Cadet, Red Planet, and Farmer in the Sky)

    Outward Bound, 2006 (omnibus of Have Space Suit?Will Travel, Starship Troopers, Podkayne of Ma





    WOW

    have read ever title at least 4 times

    at least



    now for a flat fee and a monthly charge

    you can get all these titles like the "The Long Watch", 1942<<which made me cry >>



    the color ebook reader will be free and you get all at once or little by little the COMPLETE WORKS of a master writer



    <<<<<< Robert A. Heinlein >>>>>>> !!!!!!!!



    a copy will be stored in the clouds for you if you lose it OR need space

    a series of plain backup dvd's will mailed to you for a small 5 dollar each fee

    or for 25 dollars each 8 otr 9 full spectrum MULTI MEDIA INCLUDING ALL OF f Robert A. Heinlein MOVIES IN SHINING BR 16 g each discs will be mailed to for back up or TV /LAPTIOP play back .



    so many great books above

    in one small space

    and yes by the way a tiny surcharge 3 bucks each the paper back versions will also be mailed to you from small local printers to adorn you book shelves



    the whole world can re discover Robert A. Heinlein

    i want the Worlds children to know Robert A. Heinlein and URSALA Le GUIN



    from free e books to $2500 ebooks

    the market will give us so many lost or ignored great writers

    for a very low price to kill the pirates

    and economies of scale will make them higher profit now tha before



    the gate keeps will die



    i named one great author >> there are hundreds to fit this model



    and think about school books ??





    see my point my friend

    WHILE all you say is true

    i say

    the waste will be gone

    and the world will be exposed to all the great heros of yesteryear



    i dream this of course





    the massive clutter of new works right now is beyond my feeble mind to fix



    i am not sorry for long post

    just seeing a list of RAH books sends me !!!!!



    <<as the film strip darkened

    he lay there breathing slowly

    all the nukes were broken apart

    the green hills of earth would play for 6 straight days as his body slowly decended to earth

    to feel that cool breeze coming from the sides of the green hills of earth

    one last time >>>



    peace bruce



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