E-Reads™ is
...a trail-blazing reprinter of out-of-print genre and general fiction and nonfiction by leading authors. Our books are available in all e-book formats and paperback. Read the latest publishing news and provocative blogs by top commentators in the traditional and digital publishing fields.
Thin Air
George E. Simpson
It's a mystery that dates back to World War II--what happened to the USS Sturman and its crew. For Naval Investigator Nicholas Hammond, the search will challenge him…and the answers will, like bodies floa...
Shadow of Ashland
Terence M. Green
“THE BOOK YOU HAVE TO READ”–Entertainment Weekly "Things have to be settled, or they never go away." Only weeks before she dies in March, 1984, Leo Nolan’s mother shows her son a rose she says w...
The Longest Way Home
Robert Silverberg
"What wonders and adventures he has to tell us," is how Ursula K. LeGuin characterized the world of Robert Silverberg, and in The Longest Way Home, he takes readers on another dazzling odyssey. Joseph, ju...
Marriage Is a Bad Habit
Ruth Dickson
When Ruth Dickson released her 1967 book MARRIED MEN MAKE THE BEST LOVERS, it went off like a bombshell. Defenders of the “sanctity” of marriage rose up to dismiss her frank, innovative, thoroughly resear...
Orion's Dagger
Paula Downing King
With ORION’S DAGGER, Paula E. Downing presents the thrilling final installment of THE CLOUDSHIPS OF ORION trilogy, which Starlog magazine called “special...a thoroughly engrossing story.” The trio wa...
Fair Warning
George E. Simpson
America is set to finally end World War II with a devastating act--dropping the atomic bomb over Japan. But what if a secret mission was set in place to alter the course of history? In this fast-paced, and i...
Rogues of the Black Fury
Travis Heermann
When a band of shadowy fanatics abducts Javin Wollstone’s little sister, Bella, from his care, his only hope to bring her home is turning to a hard-bitten band of special warriors, the Black Furies, led by C...
The Sudden Star
Pamela Sargent
The appearance of a white star bathing the world in a deadly glare turns Earth into a nightmare of fear and death. Rape and murder are as common as suicide. Medical help is allowed only for certain diseases, a...
Philosophy and the Challenge of the Future
John Lange
The sciences, as opposed to politics and religion, have their roots in philosophy. Philosophy has been spoken of as the mother of the sciences, although she is, in many cases, more of a grandmother or grea...
The Man in the Moon Must Die
Jeff Bredenberg
What do a cunning old man, a code-slopper gone rogue, a pair of lowlife tech-runners, a sexually frustrated AI, and a hermaphrodite underworld boss have in common? They're all out to get Benito Funcitti, ow...
FEATURED TITLES
The Gentle Degenerates
Marco Vassi
Marco Vassi was possibly the greatest erotic writer of his generation. His first publisher at Olympia Press, Maurice Girodias, compares his talent for prose to Henry Miller's writing. His sexual exploratio...
Guardian Angel
Linda Winstead Jones
Defying her father's wishes that she find a suitor and marry, Melanie Barnett is well equipped to sharp shoot anyone who gets in her way in Paradise, Texas. She isn't out to play the love game, but when a mask...
China to Me
Emily Hahn
A revolutionary woman for her time, Emily Hahn takes us on an adventure through the many faces that populate the landscape of China. Blending fiction and non-fiction seamlessly, Emily Hahn looks at everything...
Grey Wolf, Grey Sea
E.B. Gasaway
The history of one of World War II’s most successful submarines, U-124, is chronicled in GREY WOLF, GREY SEA, from its few defeats to a legion of victories. Kapitanleutnant Jochen Mohr commanded his German ...
Died Blonde
Nancy J. Cohen
There's no love lost between Marla and Carolyn Sutton. Carolyn has never forgiven Marla for leaving Hairstyle Heaven to open her own place, especially since Marla's clientele grew as Carolyn's faded away. Ca...
The Magicians
James Gunn
Unseen by an apathetic society, a stupendous battle is being waged between good and evil. In the center of an unassuming town, gathered in a nondescript hotel, are the most powerful forces of time eternal: t...
Sex and Violence in Hollywood
Ray Garton
This breakout thriller by the master of horror was previously released only as an oversized Subterranean Press hardcover edition. Sex and Violence in Hollywood will take its place on the shelf next to othe...
I Have No Mouth and I Must Scream
Harlan Ellison
First published in 1967 and re-issued in 1983, I Have No Mouth and I Must Scream contains seven stories with copyrights ranging from 1958 through 1967. This edition contains the original introduction by Th...
China Quest
Elizabeth Lane
It is 1861 and Hong Kong is the most exotic, remote place on earth for a westerner like Serena Rose Bellamy Bolton. She is as greedy for love as she is for treasure. For Jason Frobisher, Hong Kong is just ano...
The Chieftain
John Norman
A science fiction series filled with interplanetary adventure, rebellion and mortal combat by the author the The Gorean Saga. First in the series, The Chieftain. This is the age of the Telnarians. Their vas...
Tales of the Village Rabbi
Rabbi Harvey M. Tattelbaum
In the late fifties and sixties, Greenwich Village was the quirkiest, most charming, jazzy, eccentric and urban of environments, the center of all that was both quaint and "cool": brownstones and beatniks, co...
The Silver Horse
Elizabeth A. Lynn
Seeing the Silver Horse as a cute toy, Susannah gives it to her brother, Niall, as a present. One night Susannah awakens and finds neither her brother nor the Silver Horse; racing to the park, she sees her brot...
The Rapture Effect
Jeffrey A. Carver
In a galaxy-spanning novel of adventure and philosophical conflict, set in the year 2165, a fleet of colonizing starships from Earth approaches the planet Argus, 138 light-years from Earth. During their years...
Southern Rapture
Jennifer Blake
Lettie Mason vowed to bring the man who killed her brother during the American Civil War to justice. Now the war is over and she finally can. Yet, she falls into her brother's murderer's embrace and her emoti...

Posts Tagged ‘Blio’

Blio Offers a Million Books, Even If You Can Only Read 645,000 of Them

Earlier this week Baker & Taylor introduced its Blio e-book reader software to attendees of the the Digital Book World conference. First presented at the Consumer Electronic Show, the product made an unusual splash because – unlike the scores of e-reader devices presented at the Las Vegas expo, Blio is not hardware. It’s a platform.

After watching the spellbinding demo I owe Baker & Taylor an apology for twitting them about the name of their product. With use it will become as familiar to us as Google or Kindle. And it will be used often and well, I guarantee. It is an absolutely terrific product.

By downloading the free software you can read an e-book on just about any tablet, phone, or netbook. Unlike so many e-readers Blio’s screen is full color, not E Ink, making it the perfect vehicle for such products as color-illustrated textbooks or children’s picture books. “Blio actually lays out the ‘pages’ as they would be seen on paper, with typography and illustrations copied across,” write Priya Ganapati and Charlie Sorrel on Wired.com’s Gadget Lab. “It also uses video.” In fact, with Blio loaded into your reader you can interact with your book by importing illustrations – jpegs and videos – from the publisher’s website, making your book a living thing. This is especially true for children’s books with read-aloud features, interactive text, automatic page-turning, and a lookup archive for every single word – at least of every word in the book demo’s at DBW.

Blio’s bookstore will be rolled out in February with one million free books plus proprietary titles supplied by publishers. Ganapati and Sorrel add: “Other big features include a text-to-speech capability, an online library that stores each customer’s books, making them available on any Internet enabled device, including smartphones. The books can also be downloaded for offline reading.

Downside? Craig Morgan Teicher, writing for MediaBiestro’s Galleycat, says they include “an apparent lack of Mac support: the system requirements on the Website list only Windows. Also, blogger Mike Cane points out that the Website shows no support for writers to create their own eBooks, meaning this is unlikely to become a self-publishing platform, a factor which many think is essential to the future of publishing.” Having witnessed the interactivity of Blio I’m not sure how Cane came to that conclusion. I can visualize Blio as a great vehicle for the creation of vooks.

Think you might be interested? Come on in – the software’s free. Click here.

Richard Curtis


The God of Dumb Names Strikes Again

How much money goes into developing an e-book reader or a reading software program? Millions of dollars, certainly. You would think that investors and developers would want to do everything in their power to protect their investment, right? And when it came to naming their device they would use the same skill and market research that car manufacturers bestow on, say, “Escalade”, or that pharmaceutical corporations use to come up with “Flomax”, yes? They would not leave it to some unimaginative functionary with a tin ear, would they? Because if they did, they would end up with some execrable word that makes it difficult if not possible for their e-reader to succeed. A name like…Flepia. Or Cool-er. Or WordsGear. Or Que.

Yes indeed, you would certainly think so. But those are the names of recently introduced e-readers. You can read about them in Another E-Book Reader with a Dumb Name. And then there’s the Nook, whose modest success is certainly not due to the prurient associations its name evokes.

One would hope that any newcomer in the field would look at this sorry nomenclature and select a name rivaling the brilliance of “Kindle”. So, it is with great bafflement that we report that in January Baker and Taylor will be introducing a book platform called…Blio. According to Mike Shatzkin, it’s ” the Next Big Thing in ebooks.” It certainly sounds cool. Writes Shatzkin:

“Blio is a software client that can work on “any device with an operating system”, which means computers and iPhones, but not Kindles. Based only on the demo we saw from Baker and Taylor Senior VP Linda Gagnon last week (of course I’d rather be reporting on something I saw on my own computer or iPhone), the presentation is the best I’ve ever seen. The type is crisp and sharp, it has full multiple-media functionality (video, graphics, TTV, links to the web), and it does tricks, my favorite of which is that you can see (on a PC screen) many pages at a time dealt out like a deck of cards. Then you find the ones you want and hone in on them. There are many ways to use that capability, particularly for an illustrated how-to book or a textbook.

You can read about it in detail in Shatzkin’s blog, and if he says it’s brilliant, that’s good enough for us. But…Blio? What does it mean? If it’s a play on “Biblio”, we’re not sure how many users are going to get the pun. Did they mean to say “Brio”? That would have been a great name. Con Brio means “spirited” or “animated” (and if you’re a developer feel free to use the word). If you google “Blio” the first thing you get is “Did you mean bilo?” If you google Baker and Taylor Blio you get “Did you mean Baker and Taylor bio?” Google on and you will learn that BLIO is an acronym for such places as North Carolina’s Business License Information Office and the British Library, India Office.

We wish Baker and Taylor every success with its Blio and can’t wait to see a demo. We just wonder if they aren’t handicapping themselves with another dumb name.

Richard Curtis





 
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