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wrote%20a%20piece%20on%20book%20pricing<%2Fa>%20called%20'Who%20Decided%20Our%20Worth%3F'%20Do%20Free%20Books%20Give%20Away%20Authors' Value%3F<%2Fem>,%20in%20which%20authors%20like%20Roz%20Morris,%20Henry%20Hyde,%20and%20others%20try%20to%20build%20the%20case%20for%20book%20prices%20that%20reflect%20an%20author's%20"value"%20and%20"worth."%20Hyde%20goes%20so%20far%20as%20to%20claim%20that%20he%20doesn't%20"want%20the%20kind%20of%20audience%20that%20expects%20free,%20or%20even%20heavily%20discounted"%20books,%20and%20that%20"the%20rise%20of%20Kindle%20is%20that%20it%20has%20given%20the%20audience%20a%20sense%20of%20entitlement%20where%20none%20should%20exist."%0D%0A%0D%0Ahttps%3A%2F%2Fwww.bookbusinessmag.com%2Faggregatedcontent%2Fwhy-book-price-doesn-t-shouldn-t-measure-value%2F" target="_blank" class="email" data-post-id="17258" type="icon_link">
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Last week, author advocate Porter Anderson wrote a piece on book pricing called 'Who Decided Our Worth?' Do Free Books Give Away Authors' Value?, in which authors like Roz Morris, Henry Hyde, and others try to build the case for book prices that reflect an author's "value" and "worth." Hyde goes so far as to claim that he doesn't "want the kind of audience that expects free, or even heavily discounted" books, and that "the rise of Kindle is that it has given the audience a sense of entitlement where none should exist."
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