Kindle Lending Club

Now here’s an interesting idea – a sort of library for Kindle books.

A small company called Kindle Lending Club is connecting people who are willing to lend e-books to strangers who want to borrow them.

The five-person start-up was founded by a 40-year-old Canadian mother of three. She began with  a Facebook page which proved so popular, that she hired two web developers to expand her idea into a bonafide business. So far, the Kindle Lending Club is said to have facilitated the lending of more than 1,000 books among strangers.

Amazon announced its own Kindle lending program late last year but that seems to facilitate e-book lending only among friends, not on a potentially global scale like the Kindle Lending Club.

I would never want authors to lose out on their just profits. But an e-book library seems like a natural progression. We have libraries for tree-books, why not e-books? If anything, I buy more books from authors whose work I first discovered at the library.

It will be fascinating to see how this concept  progresses.

Nora Roberts Joins the Million Kindle Club

Nora Roberts

Amazon announced last week that Nora Roberts has sold more than one million Kindle books to become only the third member of the “Kindle Million Club.”

Roberts has sold 1,170,539 Kindle books under her name and her pseudonym, J.D. Robb. The Kindle Million Club recognizes authors whose books have sold over 1 million paid copies in the Kindle Store. 

Other members of the elite club include the late Stieg Larsson, author of the Millennium Trilogy, (The Girl with the Dragon Tatoo, The Girl Who Played with Fire and The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest) who was the first author to hit the million mark. James Patterson  was the second author to join the Kindle Million Club.

Roberts was the first author to be inducted into the Romance Writers of America Hall of Fame. The New Yorker recently called her “America’s favorite novelist.”

And don’t forget…

Voting continues in the Writing with the Stars contest.

I am one of FOUR remaining finalists in Kensington/RT’s contest. The person who wins the most online votes is awarded a book contract. Please take a moment to check it out HERE.

I’d appreciate your vote!  

Getting Frozen Out By My Kindle

I hate to say it, but my new Kindle has been letting me down lately. In the last week, it has frozen three times. Yep. It just sits there and won’t respond. Sometimes I’m treated to a blank page, on other occasions the screen saver stares back at me. This is especially frustrating when I am at a good point in the book and the darn page won’t turn.

I googled the problem and it seems as though I am not the only reader who has been frozen out by my Kindle. One of Amazon’s suggestions is to plug it into its charger for a moment. That won’t do me much good when I am on the bus with a frozen Kindle – looking forward to an hour’s ride home with nothing to read.

Other advice is to depress the , , and at the same time. This worked great the first time, although the second two times it took several minutes for the Kindle to reboot. There’s also a hard restart that involves removing the back cover and pushing the restart button.

Reading has always been one of life’s simple pleasures. I love being transported into another world. But it’s hard to leave reality behind when you are constantly wondering whether you’ll be able to turn the page. That latent anxiety takes some of the magic out of reading.

And it’s not as though Kindles and e-books are inexpensive.

Sure, I still love my Kindle. It’s still a cool way to read. But I have to say tree-books never let me down this way.