The Literary Life

From the staff of BookSwim.com

Month: December, 2007

BookSwim Saves Christmas Through Online Book Rental

MONROE, NJ December 18, 2007 – BookSwim.com, America’s only hardcover & paperback online book rental service, has introduced e-gift cards to relieve holiday stress and reduce post-holiday clutter. With online book rental, done Netflix-style, BookSwim delivers an all-you-can-read buffet of books, while planting evergreen trees to help offset those cut down this holiday season, as well as those cut down, year round, for new book production.

With Christmas banging on our door like an angry downstairs neighbor, we’re all feeling the pressure to get to the store, fight the crowds (metaphorically, we hope), and find gifts that show we care. After waiting on just one line at the local bookstore (and feeling the pain of the sub-total), shoppers are wishing there was a better way. Luckily, BookSwim.com has the holiday blues in its crosshairs.

BookSwim.com’s book rental service gift cards provides gift-givers with the comfort of shopping from home, while ensuring that the subscription they give will never be re-gifted and certainly won’t become moot by December 26th.

A monthly plan, with free shipping, both ways, is cheaper than a new hardcover and subscribers manage their own online book rental pool, so they’ll always get books they want. Like Netflix, when the subscriber is finished with a batch of books, they simply put them in the mail and new books from the customized online pool get shipped. BookSwim offers nearly 200,000 titles, unlimited books per month, no due dates and no late fees, ever.

BookSwim.com even plants evergreens for every gift card sold this holiday season, through a partnership with EcoLibris.net, so it really is the gift that keeps on giving for those of us dreaming of a “Green Christmas”. Contributing to reforestation efforts throughout Central America and Africa, Eco-Libris aims to balance out virgin paper used in book printing production. Encouraging renting rather than buying, BookSwim co-founder, Shamoon Siddiqui, touts the book service as “a great way for subscribers to limit their carbon footprint”, while co-founder, George Burke, adds, “It’s both good conscience and good business to take care of the earth.”

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ABOUT BOOKSWIM CORPORATION
BookSwim (www.bookswim.com), launched in May, 2007, is the first and only online paperback and hardcover book rental library club allowing subscribers to rent books, with free home shipping, both ways, no due dates or late fees. BookSwim provides book rental service nationwide, from hardcover new releases, to paperback classics, bestsellers and children’s books. Founded by college friends, Shamoon Siddiqui and George Burke, BookSwim subscription plans start at under $15 per month and allow as many as 11 books borrowed at a time. Members can even buy books they fall in love with.

ReadWriteWeb.com: “BookSwim is Netflix for Books” by Josh Catone

Read Article at ReadWriteWeb.com
“I’m all for anything that gets people to read more. Though I count myself a connoisseur of good film and television, I’m always reading a book (right now it’s “Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell” by Susanna Clarke). I admit, though, I don’t quite grasp the concept of BookSwim, which is essentially a Netflix-like rental by mail program for books. Oh, I get how it works: you sign up, choose the books you want, they get mailed, you send them back when you’re done and get the next book on your list. But I’m having trouble grasping what makes the service useful to the average reader. It may be, however, that the service isn’t useful to the average reader.

New Jersey-based, BookSwim, which sent out its first book last March (“The Richest Man in Babylon” by George S. Clason), has plans starting at $14.99/month, which allow you to take out two books at once. Assuming your library is often out of the books you’re into, you’d need to read about three books (trade paperbacks cost about $6-7 each) per month, or at least one higher priced new release hardcover book to justify that cost. How many people actually do that each month? My guess is, sadly, not many — either for lack of time or lack of interest.

Indeed, BookSwim concedes that the service is not for everybody. BookSwim’s Eric Ginsberg told me by email that only about 12% of Americans read one or more books per month — that means there is likely a relatively small pool of avid readers for whom the library doesn’t cut it who might be interested in the BookSwim service. (Ginsberg mentioned that the 12% figure puts their potential customer pool at about 36 million Americans, but if that stat figures in people who read a single book each month — and I’d guess that would account for a large portion of those 36 million — then the number of readers who would benefit from the service is actually bound to be lower.)

Ginsberg defended BookSwim by saying that anyone who buys one average price new release hardcover book per month could save month by using the service’s 2-book at a time plan (true, but can’t you wait a few months for the paperback?), and by saying that unlike the library, BookSwim doesn’t impose late fees and lets you keep books as long as you want (true again, but my library lets me keep books for two weeks, and if I have to read two books in a month to break even, that’s how long I have with BookSwim, too). He also noted that renting books is better for the environment than constantly purchasing them (certainly true!).

I also asked Ginsberg about wear and tear, since books generally wear out more quickly then DVDs. “Our subscribers value our quality service,” he told me. “Along the lines of ‘Do unto others…’, no one wants to get a damaged book in the mail, so we rarely if ever have a problem.”

That’s not to say there won’t be people who will find utility BookSwim’s service and catalog of over 185,000 titles. Judging from the user feedback they have printed all over their site, they already have a good number of satisfied customers. There are certainly avid readers out there that would benefit from BookSwim. It seems especially well suited to fast-based book discussion groups (the type that meet weekly or bi-weekly to discuss a new book). Suggestion: add some social features to allow people to form book discussion groups and talk about titles online.

What do you think? Would a Netflix for books be a useful addition to your life?”

MSN.com Money Central: “20 easy gifts — that aren’t gift cards” by Liz Pulliam Weston

Read Full Article at MSN.com

…Under $15
If your recipient is a big reader, consider introducing her to one of the “Netflix for books” book rental services. A month’s subscription to BookSwim is $14.99 and allows her to select and read two best-sellers…