

The e-book format even mimics that of a real book, from page layout, structure, color, lighting and some come with audio options, so you can listen to the story instead, in case you’re tired of holding your device and just want good, old story telling. Our favorite books will be in soft copy format, same story, same ending, same cover, just in soft copy format. Technologically savvy readers have turned to e-reading, which involves reading books on our Nook or Kindle devices or even on our tabs or computers and phones. Most seasoned readers will tell you, there is nothing like the real thing, nothing like the smell of pages as you hold a book,nothing like feeling the hardcover of a book in your hands and getting lost inside it. We’ve probably read every book on our shelves at home by now, even those old hardcovers with yellowed pages from age. The Kindle app doesn't exactly make it easy, but it's a necessary evil so we found a way.However, it is difficult to buy more books at the moment, as book stores are also closed, that sucks! And waiting for a book you want to read as soon as yesterday, to be delivered also sucks. Lots of people think you can't read your own books-books you haven't bought on Kindle Direct Publishing-via the Kindle app. That way my client sees progress as we go along, and can call out design choices they're not fond off before we finalize. mobi file while we're working, with instructions on how to view the file on a device that has the Kindle app. Almost 3/4 of all eBooks sold in the US are sold via KPD. It's not hyperbole to say that Kindle Direct Publishing utterly dominates the eBook market. When I'm collaborating with an author, I think the best way for them to view their eBook is the way the majority of their audience will ultimately view it. We take an author's creation, and package it in a way that best expresses the author's vision.
