Where To Find The Best Online E-Book Deals
A regular perk for fans of e-readers is the reliably low prices of e-books. For better or worse, Amazon set a precedent when it marked many major e-books as $9.99 or lower and since then cheap prices are what readers have come to expect. A great deal for less than a price of coffee feel like a real treat, but often without a common reason or pattern to these deals it can be hard to find them on your own. Luckily there are other places putting it all together so readers don’t have to do the work.
1. Amazon’s Kindle Daily Deals, formerly Goodreads Deals.
Probably one of the most popular places where people found daily e-book deals, the Goodreads Deals newsletter delivered a huge list of e-books spanning best-seller lists, genres and authors. However, Goodreads Deals has changed over to Kindle Daily Deals and now shows a few books all under $3. Even though it’s meant for Amazon Kindle users, the price cut usually covers all e-book stores, so Nook and Kobo users can still sign up for Daily Deals and then check the other online stores for the same price.
2. Book Bub’s website and daily newsletters.
Book Bub is probably the best option for readers on any device because each store is listed for Kindle, Nook, Apple, Google or Kobo. There’s a daily email option for tailored recommendations, or people can check the Book Bub website for all deals they have available. Book Bub’s offerings are also very diverse, including many indie titles not seen on the Amazon/ Goodreads list.
3. Follow Book Riot for their daily recommendation.
Book Riot is one of the coolest outlets for book news, recommendations, reviews, podcasts and more. They also post a daily list of Kindle deals including some past deals that are still active. Again Nook, Kobo and other readers can check out what Book Riot found and then head to their own stores to see if it's available.
4. Sign up for the company’s emails and reward programs.
This is mostly for Amazon and Kobo users because unfortunately the Barnes and Noble membership program doesn’t work with Nook e-books. Amazon has various Kindle benefits like Prime Reading and Kindle Unlimited that go with an Amazon Prime subscription, and Kobo offers a paid VIP membership for customers to earn more points and get exclusive discounts. For either place it’s a few more emails in your inbox, but going with the company as the e-reader maker helps earn buyer points and builds better recommendations.
Regards
Mr. Pralhad Jadhav
Research Scholar (IGNOU)
Senior Manager @ Knowledge Repository
Khaitan & Co
Mobile @ 9665911593
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