Amazon Now Selling More Kindle Books Than Print Books
Amazon began selling hardcover and paperback books in July 1995.
Twelve years later in November 2007, Amazon introduced the revolutionary Kindle and began selling Kindle books. By July 2010, Kindle book sales had surpassed hardcover book sales, and six months later, Kindle books overtook paperback books to become the most popular format on Amazon.com.
Today, less than five years after introducing Kindle books, Amazon.com customers are now purchasing more Kindle books than all print books – hardcover and paperback – combined.
I started my writing career with e-books in 2002.
I sold the Health Cards Treatment System for Bipolar Disorder, Bipolar Happens! and Tips for Talking with Health Care Professionals as e-books from the very beginning.
I knew that e-books would take over eventually. I know, many people still want books and that is fine, but the future is in products that take up limited space Just think of the possibilities. You can read books you don’t want anyone to see. No one to ask questions when you read books on bipolar disorder in the break room!
Even teenagers can read bipolar books in private.
What do you think about this?
Four of my books are on the Kindle: Loving Someone with Bipolar Disorder, Take Charge of Bipolar Disorder, Get it Done When You’re Depressed and Bipolar Happens!
Click here for a special deal on Bipolar Happens! It’s a great book for anyone who is affected by the illness-and teens tell me they love it.
Julie
Hi Julie,
I have written to you previously and have your books and card system. All have been very helpful. There was a letter to the editor in our local Akron Beacon Journal paper which absolutely floored me when I read it. Since I have been diagnosed as bipolar since 1969, I have been able to watch changes in the attitudes of the public towards this illness. If you would like a good starting point, visit the restored mental hospital in Williamsburg, Virginia, or rent the recent John Carpenter movie entitled “The Ward.” I thought we had made great progress until I read the following letter in The Beacon:
Letters to the editor – June 15
What imbalance ?in brain chemistry?
In a June 10 story,