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Do You Have A Price Point In Mind When Purchasing a Novel?
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I have limit for books (it can disappear)of $25 a month. Last month's I brought 7 books for the amount. If I had brought the latest books of my favorite authors I might got only one possibly two. This month so far I have brought 6 books.
I have already read two of the $10+ books from my library and have one I am now reading. On hold another and on hold for several more.
Group reads if I want the book I will probably buy; if not I won't.
Our income is social security.


1. It takes me about 8-10 hrs to read a 400 page book, so even paying the $25 for a hardback it's costing me only about $3 per hr. There aren't a lot of pleasures you can get @ that price (certainly not a movie), not to mention the artistic, moral & spiritual values of reading them. Morally and spiritually valuable BTW includes some fairly tough stuff, like Gillian Flynn's Sharp Objects & Robert Kolker's The Lost Girls, that shows evil for what it is.
2. Even so, I tend to limit my purchase of new hardbacks mostly to works by authors I like personally & tho' I've not met them in person are friends through Facebook, email, & blogs. Currently they include Andrew Taylor, Sharon Bolton & Francis Cottam.
3. As cheap books take just as long to read as full-price hardbacks, the 99p specials & freefers aren't bargains it if they are not worth 10 hrs that could have been better spent doing something morally or spiritually valuable, including reading something better. If you check my Goodreads shelves, you can find out what I think meets those criteria.
4. Still, I'm always curious & try to be open to new authors & experiences. I'll download almost anything that looks appealing if it's under $2 or I can get it from the public library.
5. Whilst I was typing this, the UPS man arrived with a lb. of coffee @ $15. So I'm literally 'penny wise & pound foolish'!

So I like ebooks more, you can adjust the Font-size and it takes no place on the shelf. But I do not like to pay a lot, for english-language books I set myself 10 Eur as the maximum price for fiction (non-fiction is ok to cost more), thats just under 14 Us$.
For a few writers I tend to make exceptions but never in the range above 15 Eur (nearly 20 Us$). Being that my backlog of owned (bought) books is now rather large, I will rather wait for a bargain or the general price of a book I want to sink.
As I am German and that is my first language I tend to read a few books in German, be it the original language in which they are written or a translation from non-english, say french ( Jean-Christophe Grangé ). JC Grange is the perfect example, the books are too long and not perfect (older 4 stars, the last ones I read 3) and I do not want to pay too much for them. The last one I bought used and got a big softcover, that was heavy, but ok, and the one I still want to buy I have waited nearly a year, only now it is cheap enough for me, but still 9 Eur, so I am not sure it is worth it.
I thought that with bargains under 2 Us$ or free books I could read a lot and still save money, but most cheap books I do not like, bad grammar, little spellchecking - a no-go for me, if there are too many mistakes, plot holes (The Chaos I am looking at you) or too much bad romance. So I rather spend money on a few good books, and look for price-drops in ebooks and sometimes buy a book at Barnes and Nobles, rather than at Amazon.
If I had bought all my books in their printed version, I would have spent a lot more (100%?) and gotten less books, and would still have to store them somewhere.
For me: ebooks. Still thinking of buying a waterproof device (Kindle PW is available modified, Kobo will offer the H2O in October), so I can read in the bath tube.

This isn't about value per hour for me - this is purely about being a voracious reader who can no longer afford that habit.
Good to know. Hope to hear more on this. I wonder if I should get kindle unlimited but I don't think I can read enough books in a month to make it worth my while.

Right. I'm guessing that only certain authors are available for this. So, for $10, in order for it to be worth it, you have to read at least 4 books a month. Something to think about.

It's worth thinking about if you can do 4 books a month. Not sure I can.

Fire Storm by Mike Worley $2.99
Deadly Bonds L.J. Sellers 4.99
The Finisher by David Baldacci $7.99
I've not read either by the first two authors before - Mike's book has grabbed me and I'm loving it. Baldacci's book is for a group read that I will be participating in. I wouldn't have spent the money on this particular Baldacci book if I couldn't have gotten it under the program.

I buy hardcover books through Literary Guild. When a book is coming out in a series that I read, I add it to my wish list and then when they have a sale, I buy the lot. I buy when they are either $10 each or buy one get one free, which is a better deal because their regular price is around $18. Plus, the shipping is free if you spend at least $25, which is easy enough. I think $10 or less for a new hard cover book is a good deal.



GBP 3.99 = Us$ 6.33 = Eur 5.05
GBP 6.99 = Us$ 11.62 = Eur 8.45
As a rough estimate for buying without looking it up, I would say a British-Pound is just under two US-Dollars.
Buying quite often at Amazon.Com and Amazon.co.uk (being in Germany) I built myself a few additional links to Safari and Firefox to mark a number and right-klick to view it in converted currency.
Here is a link to the Yahoo Currency converter:
Us$ 5.05 to Eur.
Also I agree, that a lot of free or cheap books are just not worth it (to stay on topic).

I read one book a month, more if it is a really tood book and listen to 1 or 2.

Thanks for noticing, you should try spelling my surname ...





Happy reading!
I, too, have a hard time passing the bargain bin or a charity sale without browsing.


Zowie! Four books a week? That's impressive! :) In this case it seems like the Kindle Unlimited would work out well for you. Keep us posted. . .

Good point, Betty, and a good way to try out new-to-you authors. Have you read any of the five yet?

I love that I can check out new-to-me authors/books on Kindle for low prices though. Then if I enjoy their work I would be happy to pay for other books from the same author.
In my case, it depends on the book although I have a wish list on Kindle and there are cases where I will wait for the price to drop on a book before I buy it.
Another point to this question. A new hard covered book could be $25 yet it would also be $10 on Kindle or Nook. Any thoughts?