Product Killers and Death Matches Is this all hype?

So yesterday I was catching up on older Scientific American podcasts. Back on May 19 the host, Steve Mirsky sat down with MacWorld editor Jason Snell to discuss the iPad vs the Kindle. Both were aboard a cruise ship during MacMania (oh to be invited to that!). The reason I bring this up has to do with what Snell called “product killers” and how this phrase really does not apply to e-books and the death match supposedly between the iPad and the Kindle and e and print books.
Snell argues that e-books are not killing print books, though publishers seem to believe this to be true. Instead e-books are complementing print books and boosting sagging book sales.  According to the US Census Bureau there are 309,418,642 people living in the US. Though Amazon will not tell us how many Kindles have been sold, we can almost safely assume it is nowhere near this number. Apple says there has been two million ipads sold; this is a drop in the bucket compared to our population.  Even if only half of us read that still leaves a lot of people who do not own an electronic reader so Snell’s argument rings true with me.
Snell also points out that Amazon is going to unveil an application that will allow iPad users to download books from their sight. This means Amazon not only sells its own e-reader, but is willing to sell e-books for its competitor. Snell says Amazon had to make a decision; does it want to sell Kindles or sell books. It seems this new application show us Amazon is more interested in selling books than competing in a death match with Apple.
E-books may be hot sellers right now but they are not in a death match with print books. As I was researching material for this post I came across an interesting interview with bestselling author M J Rose. She tells the story of how she became published. First she sent a manuscript out the old fashion way. This only garnered her rejection letters. Next she published it herself as an e-book and tried to advertize it on a website. She put the word out asking if people would kindly read it in exchange for a review. Many more people responded that they would prefer a print copy than wanted to read it in e form. She decided to pay for some print copies and ended up selling 1,500 in a year. A publisher saw a review of her book and asked for a copy. The rest is history; M J Rose became a bestselling author. It was only after she was known that e copies of here- books started to sell.  Rose says she feels e-books can be helpful to new authors, but will not replace those who want print books. It seems from her story the two types of books can complement each other.  I noticed over at Librarything’s Early Reviewer site requests for print books far outweigh requests for e-books.  This backup what Rose says about book requests.
So death matches and product killers may not apply to the publishing world as Snell argues. Perhaps what all this new technology means is that as consumers we will have choices on how we read and what we read on. The death matches the publishing world is yelling about may just be hyperbole; the sky is not falling on print books after all.  

Our Promised Land a Review

I want to say up front I received this book from Librarything’s Early Reviewer program. Thank you Librarything and thank you Michael Darkow for the book.
Our Promised Land is a novel that centers around the Jewish/Palestine fight over Jerusalem . I do not know a lot about the conflict, but am always looking to books to help me understand. I know that after WWII the UN promised the displaced Jewish people a place of their own. Jerusalem was the land the Jewish survivors wanted despite the fact that Jerusalem was the Palestine homeland. What I do not understand is why this land was promised to the Jews and why it seems the Palestine people were displaced. Many cultures call Jerusalem their holy land, and once again it became a place of conflict because of the UN and Jewish people’s decision to drive the Palestines from their homes. It is confusing because Nazi Germany had just pushed Jewish people from their home; I would think the Jewish people would be more sensitive to the Palestine people. There must be more to the conflict, and I need to read up on it to better understand both sides.
Our Promised Land does not answer any of my questions but it does show the lengths people will go to ensure they have a home, and how war can spiral out of control. Darkow introduces the reader to two main characters; Ellie who survives a Nazi concentration camp and Yasif a Palestinian who  wants peace and travels to America in order to get away from the fighting only to be pulled in when his brother dies after a botched suicide attack. The two mens lives intersect when espionage and double identities pull them together.
The book is short; less than 200 pages. This did not give Darkow enough time to develop the characters so I cannot say I connected with any of them. Some of the scenes seemed rushed while others went on a little longer than necessary and did not add to the plot. I would have like to have learned more about Ellie’s transition from Holocaust survivor to officer in the Israeli Army. As an espionage novel the plot works, though at times it is a little farfetched for me; then again I am not into spy novels so it may have had a normal plot for the genre.  All I can say is Our Promised Land showed me what men will do to call a piece of land home and reminded me that war is fought on many levels. If you like books about war and espionage this short tense novel may be for you. Just keep in mind Darkow does not just write about conflict he asks his readers to think about conflict. This is something we should all do more often.
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