Authors have banded together to get an anti-Amazon ad on the NY Times

TECHi's Author Brian Molidor
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Brian Molidor
Brian Molidor
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There’s no sign that Amazon and Hachette are close to burying their e-book hatchet, which has prompted the authors caught in the middle to speak up. One of those affected, Douglas Preston, penned an open letter to Jeff Bezos, requesting that he stopped singling out individual Hachette authors for “selective retaliation.” After it was published, however, nearly a thousand other writers, including Stephen King, Malcolm Gladwell and Jeffrey Deaver co-signed the letter — which has prompted the group Authors United to pay for the letter to be printed as a full-page advert in Sunday’s New York Times. Apparently the Kindle Team’s most recent letter fell upon deaf ears.

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The simmering dispute between Amazon and the book publisher Hachette over the pricing of electronic books will spill over onto the printed pages of the New York Times on Sunday in a full-page advertisement, the paper reported today. The ad, which will take the form of an open letter signed by 900-plus authors, calls on Amazon to settle its dispute with Hachette and asks readers to send email messages to Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos at his Amazon email address, which is printed in the letter. “He says he genuinely welcomes hearing from his customers and claims to read all emails at that account,” the letter reads. “We hope that, writers and readers together, we will be able to change his mind.” The ad, which is being paid for by some of the authors, will mark the boldest salvo to date from the group organizing under the name Authors United. Penned by Hachette thriller author Douglas Preston, the letter is backed by many other big-name writers, including Stephen King and John Grisham. The letter says the authors are not choosing sides, but urges Amazon to stop “hurting authors” as part of the negotiations. The contract dispute first became public in May when Hachette spoke out against Amazon’s negotiating tactics, which have involved delaying shipments of current books published by Hachette authors and not offering preorders of soon-to-be-published Hachette books.

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