Humble Bundle Launches Its First eBook Bundle; Books From Neil Gaiman, Cory Doctorow, John Scalzi & More
from the keep-it-up dept
The Humble Bundle folks continue to do cool new things based on their basic (awesome) business model of bundling up a bunch of cool indie content in a simple, user-friendly, pay what you want system (with a charitable component). They've gone through six video game bundles (it's hard to keep up!), and over the summer they did their first music package, with a bunch of cool albums from the likes of Jonathan Coulton, OK Go, They Might Be Giants and MC Frontalot. And... today they announced their very first ebook offering. Same basic deal: bundle of books, pay what you want. The basic package includes:- Pirate Cinema by Cory Doctorow, an intense story of youthful techno-defiance
- Pump Six and Other Stories by Paolo Bacigalupi, a hard-hitting collection of 11 impactful stories
- Zoo City by Lauren Beukes, an alternate Earth mystical science fiction tale
- Invasion: The Secret World Chronicle by Mercedes Lackey, Steve Libby, Dennis Lee, and Cody Martin, a modern military superhero saga packed with bonus content
- Stranger Things Happen by Kelly Link, a delightful fantasy collection of 11 stories
- Magic for Beginners by Kelly Link, the cross-genre follow-up to Stranger Things Happen
- Old Man's War by John Scalzi, a science fiction war epic
- Signal to Noise by Neil Gaiman and Dave McKean, an ethereal graphic novel of a man’s last days
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Filed Under: cory doctorow, ebooks, humble bundle, john scalzi, neil gaiman, pay what you want
Companies: humble bundle
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I try to let people pay me what they want for my thinly-veiled Star Wars/Twilight crossover fan fiction, but I haven't sold a single copy.
Clearly we need to go back to the old system where an ill-advised publisher can push my crappy fiction onto people with a clever marketing campaign and take most of the proceeds while I get the joy of paying for my own book tour around the 2 local bookstores that I can convince to carry 2 copies each of my opus.
Where's my buggy whip?
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Now fess up, What did you do with the author? ;-)
Or maybe you forgot to copyright it? Yeah, that's the ticket!
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A few obscure bundlers / outlets always exist.
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Just ignore him and move on, he is full of shit.
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Re: A few obscure bundlers / outlets always exist.
If anything, in the future everything media-related will probably decentralized as all hell.
Instead of an "industry", I see media being more spread-out, not always following a set model for financing.
I doubt anyone knows whether that will be the most glorious thing to happen to culture, or if it will just turn out to be a massive clusterfuck.
Either way, you can't really deny that it will be interesting to watch.
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Re: A few obscure bundlers / outlets always exist.
The Humble Bundle works - you can't argue with that. It works, and works every time it's been tried for software. Now, the same model is being applied to books and it's already raised over $300,000 in less than 12 hours (at the time of writing). It's going to be a success.
Will it work for an entire industry? Of course not, but nobody other than trolling morons is even suggesting that particular strawman. There's a place for every model ranging from overpriced crap to bargain basement classics to physical books to whatever. The problem only comes when somebody dependent on one type of model decides they aren't making enough money and tries to enshrine their chosen model into law.
"except take away copyright, and they ain't going for it"
Please point to where - other than your own deranged imagination - anybody is suggesting this here. Copyright has its place, it just needs to be shifted back to the place where it actually works.
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Even though I don't like paying for e-books, I'll do it this one time, so as to promote alternative business models outside of the old copyright regime.
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While I have no clue if I will like all of the books, I do know that there are at least 4 authors that I have enjoyed in the past. The best part is that you get to see AND decide how your money gets allocated. To be honest, this had the feel of a well run offering and I was happy about my purchase before I'd even received the files.
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I've heard of a few of these authors (and read links from this site), so I have good feeling that at least one or two will be worthwhile reading.
But as business model, who can (honestly) criticise this? As the consumer you can decide the value and get what you want at the price you want or you can ignore it; the market will decide if it has a future.
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Another thing that Doctorow did with the collaboration he put out with Charles Stross a month or so ago- was to set up a section on craphound where you could request a book for a school library, and people can buy and donate copies.
I had to do one of those, i mean, how can you resist that?
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On the other hand, if anyone feels like barraging these guys to include any of my books in the next bundle, I won't stop you....
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I really like you, regardless of what everyone else says about you.
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I am not sure that changing from music to books is innovation. Perhaps you need to learn the definition of innovation, because clearly you don't seem to get it. It's not innovative when they do the same thing again, is it?
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FTFY
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You can find Pirate Cinema for free here: http://craphound.com/pc/. Just click the Download for Free link at the top.
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"There's plenty of good games (and fiction) around that people make because they love making things."
Yes, among them people who have their work on these bundles. We're talking indie products here, not corporate tat made by fame-seeking whores. Why not help this project be successful with a 1 cent charity donation?
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This is a Pay what you want deal.
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Yet another reason not to buy the $10+ eBooks that mainstream publishers are trying to force on us because they're scared they can't fleece people any more...
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Not the first ebook bundle
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Gaiman and Doctorow alone were the main reason why I bought this. Both are books I've heard about recently and had been wanting to read, as soon as I saw they were included I said heck yeah.
Looking forward to more like this.
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How to make money online
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