I just sent the following to Simon and Schuster. I thought I'd share it here.
I was an early adopter of e-ink technology, having purchased the first Sony e-ink device released in the United States, and moved on to the Amazon Kindle series a couple of years ago. I was initially very reluctant when it came to purchasing ebooks, opting to purchase paper books and use my reader for public domain texts. I've recently taken the plunge, and am in the process of culling my paperback collection and replacing them with ebooks.
I enjoy reading Star Trek novels, and these seemed a prime candidate for creating shelf space and a digital collection. However, pricing and policies have kept me from doing this to the extent that I otherwise would. I thought I'd provide the following example, which has kept me from selling my paperbacks (many of which I purchased used or as remainders) and replacing them with ebooks.
I have become a big fan of the Corps of Engineers series of Star Trek stories. These were originally released as ebook shorts of around 100 pages for a couple of dollars. I started reading them in paperback omnibus format and collected the entire series in this form. I would very much like to sell these off and replace them with ebooks, but I find that the individual eshorts are now priced as if they are full-length novels. This is prohibitively expensive for me, and I (along with many others, judging by comments on amazon and around the internet) find the pricing unreasonable.
The situation is somewhat mitigated by the fact that most of the paperback collections are also available in ebook format, however the last two of the paperback collections have been out for more than two years (I purchased both of them as remainders), and it seems that the decision was made not to offer these omnibi in ebook format! If I can't get _all_ of the series in omnibus format, I would rather have the individual ebooks. But the individual ebooks are something like four times as expensive as buying the collections! If the last two collections made it to ebooks I would buy all of them. If the individual stories were two or maybe three dollars apiece, I would buy all of them. But neither of these is the case, so instead I stick with the bargain priced paperbacks on my shelf, and Simon and Schuster doesn't get my money.
I am sure that I am not the only one in a similar situation, so I thought I'd share my story in hopes that Simon and Schuster might rethink their ebook pricing and/or policy.