Acquiring Books for the TBR Pile: The Special Problem of eBooks
July 15, 2010 | 9:57 am
By Rich Adin
Avid readers are easily identified by the size of their TBR – to-be-read — pile: The bigger the list, the more likely the avid reader has crossed that fine line from avid read to avid hoarder. And ebooks are a special problem in this mix. But let’s begin at the beginning.
As my latest hardcover acquisitions were delivered by the post office, I decided it might be time to take a long, serious look at my TBR pile. The problem was that there were no spots available on my primary TBR bookshelf for these new books (only 2 this time, but I have several more due this month). My system isn’t scientific, but what it is, is this: When new books arrive, I put them on a top shelf because these are (supposedly) the books that are of most immediate interest to me and the ones that I think I will get to shortly. (Many, but not all, are added to my On Today’s Bookshelf articles, On Today’s Bookshelf, On Today’s Bookshelf (II), and On Today’s Bookshelf (III).) But to add them to that shelf means that a book or two have to be moved from the shelf. Room is limited.
So now I have moved a couple of books off the primary TBR shelf and into the vast stacks of TBR. Perhaps I’ll get to the books moved, perhaps not — at least that is what I am finding. I currently have more than 200 hardcover books in my TBR pile and on my TBR shelf. And as I note, that is just my hardcover books.
Which brings us to the special problem of ebooks. Yes, ebooks are a special problem because they take up virtually no space — just a bunch of bits and bytes, digits if you will, on a disk that can store gigabytes of digits. And so that TBR pool steadily grows. I looked this morning and I have more than 300 TBR ebooks, and that pile keeps growing.
What happens is that I read an ebook from the TBR pile and discover that I really like the particular author’s style. So rather than picking up another book from the TBR pile, I go buy other books from this liked author and read them. Not only hasn’t my ebook TBR pile declined by more than the one book, it has likely grown as I’ve added more to it while reading the like author’s books. Of course, if I discover that the author is terrible (sadly, a not uncommon finding with ebooks), then I not only stop reading the current ebook, but I tend to remove the author’s other books from the TBR pile. But they don’t disappear; they are still in some ebook zip file on my hard drive, just no longer in my TBR pile.
But unlike the hardcover TBR pile in which each hardcover book was purchased for money — definitely, one would think, an incentive to actually open the book and at least try reading it — I discovered that a good 80% (and probably closer to 85%) of the ebooks in my ebook TBR pile cost me nothing — they were freebies. This represents another problem or two.
First, it means that I am relentlessly adding to my TBR because it doesn’t cost me anything to do so. But that also means that the author hasn’t received any benefit. The author can’t receive any benefit until I actually read the ebook and discover how truly great the author is (we can only pray and hope). But, second, it also means that what was at the top of last week’s ebook TBR list because it was the most recently acquired, is now lost somewhere down the list, and unless it has a catchy title, there isn’t anything about the ebook to move it up the list.
That is a distinct difference between an ebook and a hardcover in my two TBR piles. Even a hardcover that I haven’t yet read although I bought it 8 months ago has a good chance of being the next book I read from that pile. The cover can attract me as I glance over the stack or the title can catch my eye as I rapidly skim the pile. With ebooks, that is much harder. Covers are often so amateurish that they are a turn off rather than a turn on. And it isn’t easy to skim covers or even titles. Finally, let’s face it, few books — e or p — really have great, catchy titles. Titles are the last bastion of the great marketer and few of us are great marketers.
So when does the TBR pool become so overwhelming that one says “Stop!” It’s easy with my print books because they cost me money and require space to store and I can rationally (although I have yet to do it) give those books the old Clint Eastwood make-my-day squint and say, “Enough! No more buying of books until I read 50 of these books!” But that moment never comes with ebooks, especially with free ebooks. There is no cost and no storage problem.
Consequently, ebook authors are disserved by readers like me. They get rewarded if I actually read and like their book because I will then immediately buy and read nearly everything else they have written. But that is the problem — they need to get read in the first place, and the only way to do that is to be at the top of the list, which is itself nearly impossible. An ebook TBR is like the drowning pool.
I have to admit that part of the problem is the poor quality of so many ebook offerings. I want to hedge my bets and make sure I have plenty of choices because of every 10 ebooks I acquire, I am certain that 8 or 9 will be trashcanned within the first 30 pages of reading. (In case you wonder why, take a look at some past articles that can be found under the tag Professional Editor, such as On Words & eBooks: Give Me a Brake!)
eBooks are a special TBR problem. I’m not sure how authors can solve it. It is truly a Catch-22: If you don’t offer a book for free, who will sample your work but if you do offer it for free, how can you know it will ever be read as opposed to hoarded? I suppose if you develop a reputation for quality that would help, but getting the word out that your writing is quality is tough. At least in my case, my ebook TBR pool is begging for a reliable solution.
Editor’s Note: the above is reprinted, with permission, from Rich Adin’s An American Editor Blog. PB



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Comments:
This is also the opportunity that publishers are losing with their mentality that DRM is required and the consumer is only purchasing a temporary license. People aren’t going to purchase a TBR pile under those conditions or if they do they probably won’t be able to read them by the time they get around to it.
My TBR list is still growing by 3 ebooks for every 1 I finish but I’m not purchasing from the price fixing cartel.
I think Rich has identified one of the issues with ‘free.’ People tend to use price as a signal. A zero price implies zero value. So, why should Rich hurry to read a book that the author/publisher has placed a zero value on? Now we all know the importance of promotion and have heard stories about authors whose ‘free’ eBooks have generated significant sales (of other books, of the same book in different formats). But as more and more books are made available for free, there is an inclination to acquire them but let them be pushed deeper and deeper into the stack.
As I’m a true believer in affordable books, this distresses me. I don’t think I can argue that it doesn’t happen, however.
Rob Preece
Publisher
I also have a growing TBR pile of ebooks. Some of these are freebies, some are very cheap, some normal price, and MANY are samples (which I use as a TBR list).
I have actually come to realize that this is NOT a problem.
First, I try to sort the book by genres (or collections for the Kindle). This helps a lot.
Second, when I finish a book and am thinking about starting the next one, I usually decide which genre I want to read (I like to jump around rather than read many similar books back to back).
Then, working with that collection (98% are Amazon books/samples), with whispernet on, I open the book or sample and click on the book description from the menu. That gets me back to Amazon’s page for that book. I look again at the description and sample the reviews. (I know that you don’t like customer reviews, but that is another area where we disagree). All of this refreshes me as to what the book is about (and why I was interested in it in the first place) and if I want to read it now. I do this for a number of books until I make my selection and then begin reading.
No problem. What’s the fuss? And no pile of physical books on my physical shelves in my den.
With my Kindle I’ve also had an ever increasing TBR collection. Being cheap, most are classics and free books (Baen titles especially). I’ve actually only bought a few ebooks. But my TBR list, while it does include purchased books, is primarily called “the public library.”
Here’s a tip: instead of buying books, request them from the library, then your TBR list is essentially automated, and you have an “expire date” on the book. And you’ll save money (you can give to your local “Friends of the Library” group!)
When I first got my Kindle, I grabbed freebies like I was never going to see a book again. Now, I’m more selective about freebies, and only get ones I’m really interested in. My electronic TBR pile consists of samples; when I’m ready to read a new book, I dip into my samples collection and find what I want to read next, and go get it. As you discovered, there is still a cost to the electronic TBR pile: it doesn’t fill up space, but it can fill up attention, and therefore must be managed.
Maybe I’m the only avid reader in the world who doesn’t have TBR books and never did. Even when I read paper, I bought a book, read that book, bought another. Okay, I used to order several at a time from Amazon to avoid shipping fees, but when they came they got read one after another. Same for library books. Bring home the stack, read them one after another and take them back.
Now that I have the Kindle and haven’t bought a paper book for over 2 years, I do usually have a few Samples on my Kindle, but my rule is if they’ve sat there for more than a week or two and I haven’t gotten to them, I’m not going to and I zap them. I don’t buy anything and don’t even download freebies without reading the Sample. Either it’s good enough for me to buy or it’s zap and move on.
I can’t even imagine 300 books I no longer remember anything about sitting on my Kindle, but I think it would just feel like a sink full of dirty dishes – something to either clean up or avoid.
I think hoarding is more of a personal issue than it is the result of eBooks. Some people like free stuff, and others are more selective and only read based on quality. For the people who like free stuff, I agree that the storage capacity of the Kindle and other ereaders is a temptation to keep adding more. For me, I prefer reading books people have recommended to picking up something free and deciding to read it. Also, if I do start reading a book that is not good quality, I will just stop reading it. In my opinion, if you are into a book that is painful to read the quality is so bad, don’t suffer through it. I don’t actually have an ereader, but it sounds like a good deciding factor is to read the sample before downloading the eBook.
You can organize your to-be-read books by using the Your Books section of http://kindle.amazon.com. Indicate which of your books have a reading status of “Hope to read”, the equivalent of TBR. Then, when you view the “Hope to read” tab you get to set a priority of High, Medium or Low.