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Mass Market Paperbacks

bdub76

Fleet Captain
Fleet Captain
It looks like these are going away next year.

Now, it does look like the market has shrunk considerably, but when I was kid in school, these were my go to. I'd only get paperbacks or hardcovers when I was buying at a used book store.

The price point for mass market paperbacks is really affordable.

I also see a lot of TV adaptations as mass market paperbacks. And there are books that have only ever been published as mass market paperbacks.

Any idea as to the impact? What books will disappear forever?


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eBooks have pretty much replaced mass-market paperbacks in the book-buying ecosphere.
 
eBooks have pretty much replaced mass-market paperbacks in the book-buying ecosphere.
Hopefully this means we'll see publishers stop pegging eBook prices to their cheapest print counterpart - i.e. even if there's no MMPB, they'll eventually lower the ebook price to what it would have been if the MMPB existed, instead of keeping it tied to the TPB/hardcover price indefinitely.

But I don't have my hopes up.
 
Hopefully this means we'll see publishers stop pegging eBook prices to their cheapest print counterpart - i.e. even if there's no MMPB, they'll eventually lower the ebook price to what it would have been if the MMPB existed, instead of keeping it tied to the TPB/hardcover price indefinitely.

But I don't have my hopes up.
This is my concern.

I have also noticed that my library wait times for eBooks has increased over the last year by a lot. A couple of my holds exceed 6 months. I'm guessing library funding is being reduced now too.
 
I used to be able to request any number of book purchases and interlibrary loans. Now it's down to three per person per month, and if they have the e-book, they won't buy/borrow the hard copy.
 
Sadly, this has been coming for a long time. Not only are ebooks taking over the niche previous occupied by mass-market paperbacks, but the "mass-market" outlets they were designed for -- drug stores, supermarkets, bus stations, newsstands, convenience stories, etc -- are no longer carrying books in a big way.

When was the last time you saw a paperback spin rack at a 7-Eleven?
 
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