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cover-224x300.jpgJane, over at Dear Author, has a good post on the failure of publishers to provide color covers on their ebooks. Even if you are reading on a Kindle or a Sony Reader, both have a grey scale level that would allow a decent reproduction of a real book cover:

For some reason, many print publishers have this belief that readers of ebooks don’t want the color cover that print readers get. Not only do readers of ebooks get shafted on the color cover, they don’t get back cover copy or a stepback picture. Digital consumers like pictures too.

I’ve heard that the reason that publishers aren’t including the color cover copy is because the digital readers are black and white. Given that 50% of consumers of digital are reading from a laptop and a significant portion are using the iPhone or iTouch, that excuse simply doesn’t fly. When I first started buying ebooks, there were no commercial readers on the market. It was either buying an eBookwise on the secondary market (production had been halted on those devices) or reading on my laptop. I read on my laptop.

The odd thing is that sometimes you get color covers from some publishers and other times you do not. It’s like there is no quality control in the generation of an ebook. Take, for example, the Jill Sorenson book. Random House won’t provide the color cover, but it does provide two other images that are in the paper book:

 
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