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Enhanced e-book apps anticipate new readers

With the release of the iPad just weeks away, enhanced e-book apps are becoming a hot trend in publishing, with many major publishers announcing plans for enhanced titles.

Updated on: Mar 24, 2010 12:46 PM IST
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With the release of the iPad just weeks away, enhanced e-book apps are becoming a hot trend in publishing, with many major publishers announcing plans for enhanced titles. Enhanced apps make use of a wide range of tablet and smartphone technology with additional features such as audio, video, images, and other added functionality not possible on e-ink readers.

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HT Image

On March 16, Hachette Book Group announced that it would release an "enriched e-book version" of thriller writer David Baldacci's Deliver Us From Evil, due out April 20. The Writer's Cut E-Book will include an audio Q&A, a video of the author's office, photos of the creative process, and discarded scenes and title. Baldacci explained the reasoning behind the enhanced version to publishing blog GalleyCat: "An eBook by itself is not enthralling; what's on it is. And we have the technology that allows us to do all of this. So why not use it?"

Hachette told AOL's DailyFinance about plans for more enhanced apps, including a synchronized text/audio edition of Michael Connelly's crime novel Echo Park and a stand-alone app of David Foster Wallace's thousand-page novel Infinite Jest that would allow readers to easily jump between the novel's text and its numerous footnotes.

On March 3, Penguin revealed its own plans for a series of forthcoming apps designed specifically for the iPad's interactive capacities. Among them: an app for the young adult series Vampire Academy that allows for live chat between readers and a Paris travel guide that switches to a GPS street view when placed flat on a table.

Skeptics of enhanced e-books question whether readers are willing to pay slightly more - Baldacci's enhanced app will go for $15.99 whereas the regular e-book will start at $14.99 and then go down to $12.99 - for what are sometimes simply marketing materials. However, with the tablet market imminent and smartphone e-reading on the rise, apps that make the most of the newest e-reading technology are likely to continue their upswing.

 
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