We now return you to our regular programming.

Moderator: I'm Murrin
I can partly answer this one.Holsety wrote:Still, I've decided that if there can be paper copies ordered, I will get both. That way I can say I know an author reasonably well, at least online.
Thanks.Holsety wrote:I remember reading a portion of your first book online...IIRC, doesn't it start with a college professor teaching a class on feminism? Seemed brilliant, but I am no longer in the book reading mood![]()
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Can I get a refund on the full price?aliantha wrote:I created a coupon for the new book. This weekend, if you click the link for "SwanSong" in my signature below, and paste BG45X into the coupon box at checkout, you can get the book for 99 cents.
We now return you to our regular programming.
If you'd bought one at full price, I might be persuaded to do so. Alas for you, Smashwords sends me e-mails when I make a sale...Stonemaybe wrote:Can I get a refund on the full price?aliantha wrote:I created a coupon for the new book. This weekend, if you click the link for "SwanSong" in my signature below, and paste BG45X into the coupon box at checkout, you can get the book for 99 cents.
We now return you to our regular programming.
I haven't read ADWD in WEEKS! I read about the first 100 pages and then gave up. My mind is just a blob of self-reference at this point, there's no hope left for me.aliantha wrote:Yeah, I know what you mean. I've had a Sony Reader for several years, but I still read a lot of dead-tree books, my bookshelves are still stuffed. If people would quit giving me paperbacks they're done with, it would be a lot easier for me to give up the dead-tree habit.![]()
I tell you what, tho, I bought the e-book version of ADWD and have not missed lugging a doorstop around with me....
It's SOP for big-box booksellers such as B&N and the now-defunct Borders to consider mass market paperbacks as disposable. Once a month each store receives a list of what's not selling well enough, the offending books are pulled, and the covers are stripped off and sent back to the publisher for credit because it's cheaper than sending back the whole book. The rest of the book goes into the trash compacter (not recycling, mind you - gods forbid someone might recover something and read it without it having been paid for) - and that's hundreds, sometimes thousands of books going into landfill per store. Every month.deer of the dawn wrote:I'm not altogether convinced that paper books are more environmntally costly than computers. All the heavy metals and stuff in them, and then they only last 4-6 years whereas I've read paperbacks that were printed in the '60s; which if I put in the garden would soon be part of the earth again whereas a computer will be junk forever.