The Literary Life

From the staff of BookSwim.com

Category: Newspaper (Online)

NJIT: “Want to Rent Books or Apartments Online? Meet George Burke and Shamoon Siddiqui, two Recent Grads with Start-up Companies” by Robert Florida

Read the article at NJIT.edu

After they graduated from NJIT, George Burke and Shamoon Siddiqui used to hang out in East Brunswick at the Barnes and Noble bookstore. They’d read a lot of books off the shelves that they didn’t buy. Or they’d sit at the store’s café, drinking coffee and commiserating about their jobs. Both then had corporate jobs they hated.

George and Shamoon both also possessed entrepreneurial spirit. While students at the Honors College, they had talked in the college lounge about starting a business. Back then, though, they didn’t have a good start-up idea.

The Idea: Netflix for Books

Then suddenly one day, hanging at the Barnes and Noble, an entrepreneurial idea struck them: Why not start a Web-based book rental business – a mail service through which readers, for a monthly fee, could receive and return books? In essence, why not start a Netflix for books?

And so they did. In the spring of 2007, they quit their day jobs, dipped into their personal savings and launched BookSwim. They worked out of Shamoon’s basement with donated books, a few interns and sundry sleepless nights.

When you love your job, you smile widely and wear a book on your head. George Burke, one of the two recent NJIT grads to found BookSwim, a successful start-up, is pictured above with book hat and smile.

Now, four years later, BookSwim has grown into a full-fledged business, with an office in NJIT’s business incubator, seven bright young employees and a warehouse brimming with thousands of books. Since its first year, George says, BookSwim has grown 350 percent.

“I love running a start-up business,” explains George, who graduated in 2004 with degree in information technology. “I love the autonomy and the relaxed atmosphere. When BookSwim first started I wore sweats to work. Now I dress up,” he quips. “I wear jeans and t-shirts.”

Starting a Second Company

Shamoon recently left BookSwim – he sold his share to Burke and the two remain close — to launch another start-up called MetroFlats. It’s a website where urban travelers can rent people’s apartments. Renting someone’s apartment, Shamoon says, is cheaper than a hotel and a lot bigger. MetroFlats has an office in Cedar Grove with five employees. MetroFlats, though in its incipient phase, has a chance to prosper, says Shamoon.

An Urge to Create

Shamoon is an engineer – he has both a bachelor’s (2004) and a master’s (2005) in computer engineering – with an unbridled urge to innovate and create. While working on his master’s, he led a student team, known as DARPA, which designed a robotic vehicle. Directing that project helped to turn him into a problem solver, an innovator and a leader.

“Starting a business comes down to creation, or having an urge to create,” says Shamoon. “George and I both have that urge, that creative itch and we both needed to scratch it.”

Read the article at NJIT.edu

Summit Daily: “Summit Up 12-9-10: Where Canada steals all our snow”

Read the full article at SummitDaily.com

So, how’s the Christmas shopping going? We have a last-minute suggestion if you find yourself in a jam before the big day and need to buy something for a book over. Check out www.bookswim.com — it’s like Netflix for books, where you pay a monthly fee and get books in the mail. Keep them as long as you want and then mail them back with a prepaid thingy. It works great. You can get three books at a time for $24/month — about what you’d pay for one hardcover new at the store. They’ve got a free trial deal going on now, too, so give it a spin.

Read the full article at SummitDaily.com

Hartford Courant: “Do A Good Deed Get Rewarded at ActBolder.com” by Korky Vann

Read the article at Courant.com

Call it Groupon for do-gooders. A new website, ActBolder.com, teams up with businesses and suggests positive actions you can take to make the world a better place. Complete a task and you’ll receive a reward. Past challenges have included saying no to plastic bags at checkout and using your bike instead of your car. This week, donate five books to your local library and get a free month of book rentals at BookSwim.com

Read the article at Courant.com

Examiner.com: “Renting books is a convenient and cost-effective alternative” by Laura Frazin Steele

Have you ever considered renting a book in the same way that you would rent a DVD? Book rentals are an interesting alternative to buying and owning books or borrowing them from the library.

Buying books on a regular basis can be expensive, and people with full bookshelves often give their books away after reading them. Renting a book can be more cost effective than buying it, and when you’re done with the book, you merely send it back. From an ecological perspective, renting books is also nice way of sharing printed media and saving paper.

Renting books also provides an alternative to borrowing books at public and school libraries. Sadly, public libraries nationwide, including Los Angeles, have faced shortened hours due to severe budget cuts. Equally distressing are projected cuts to school libraries across the nation.

BookSwim is a company that will conveniently deliver bestselling books to your door. BookSwim allows you to read books at your own pace without a due date. When you are finished with the book, you send it back to BookSwim in a pre-paid mailer. BookSwim offers different pricing plans depending on the number of books you want to read in a given month. Click here to browse the wide category of books offered by BookSwim…….

Publishing Perspectives: “BookSwim.com Aims for Sweet Spot of American Readers”

BookSwim.com Aims for Sweet Spot of American Readers

• BookSwim’s proprietary data shows that 80% of it’s users are library users and high income suburban women who read between 40 and 50 books per year — and buy as many as 30.

• An analysis of reading habits reveals that BookSwim’s subscribers don’t tend to read in isolated silos. Instead, readers are just as likely to sample numerous types of books rather than merely stick to their personal preference.

By Edward Nawotka

NEWARK, NJ: BookSwim.com, the three year-old book rental company that is known to many as the “Netflix of books,” has over the past six months compiled statistical data that offers a glimpse into the reading habits of a swath of two important subsets American readers: high-income suburban women and library users.

The Readers

“Eighty percent of our users are female, soccer mom types, with a high income and socioeconomic strata, who frequent non-profit events, read 40 to 50 books per year, and buy as many as 30,” says Nick Ruffilo R, BookSwim’s CIO and CTO. They come primarily from suburban neighborhoods “and like having the convenience of having books delivered to their door,” says Ruffilo, or they’re from communities where library services have been cut or they are finding long waiting lists for hot bestsellers that they’re anxious to read.

It is, in short, BookSwim’s group of readers represent a true “sweet spot” for publishers.

The company, which remains privately held and funded, would not reveal the total number of subscribers to the site, but CEO/CFO Jevan Padiyar did say that the company has had “significant year to year growth since its inception.”

The Data

BookSwim’s researched revealed that voracious readers don’t always stay within their comfort zone.

“What we did was look at reader trends amongst category-based readers,” says Ruffilo. “For example we looked at romance readers and calculated the percentage of those readers that also rented books in other categories. The percentages are reflected in the chart. Many books fall into 2+ categories (you can have sci-fi romance, mystery romance, mystery sci-fi, etc, which is how you can have a readers with multiple preference). A reader was considered a genre reader when 60+ % of the books they read fell within a given high-level category.”

Among the surprises in the data was the news that those most catholic in their tastes appear to be comics and graphic novel readers, who read broadly across the spectrum, with fully 87.5% reading sci-fi and fantasy novels — the highest degree of crossover on the chart, and another 72.02% also reading children’s books.

Romance readers, proved avid fans of mysteries as well, with 86.72% clocking in the occasional who-done-it, but less than half included science fiction and fantasy, non-fiction, or childrens books into their mix.

Mystery/thrillers were by far the most popular genre for crossover readers — a statistic that likely reflects the ephemeral “use once” character of the genre, which might attract such readers to BookSwim’s type of service which doesn’t commit them to owning the book.

“The core of our business is in bestsellers, not backlist,” noted Jeevan Padiyar, BookSwim’s CEO/CFO, “so yes, the numbers reflect that, but it’s also a good way for the industry to note that high volume readers tend to be very eclectic in their taste.”

Inventory Control and E-book Subscription Models

The company itself operates in such a way that it limits its own ordering to just-in-time purchases and deliveries, a process that is aided by the fact that customers maintain a queue of titles they are waiting for, thus allowing BookSwim to accurately assess demand. When titles that are most in demand lose desirability, such as when they fall off the bestseller lists, BookSwim then sells any excess inventory onto the secondary market.

The ideal form of inventory control would be to eliminate the need to ship physical books out altogether and to merely “rent” readers a digital edition. On this point Padiyar is circumspect, admitting that the company is developing an e-book strategy and has had numerous conversations with publishers about how this might work. But, he admits, “its still not a workable model.”

Subscription models are increasingly popular among publishers, but they tend to work best in niches. Small-scale indie publishers, like Open Letter Press which focuses on translation or military history publishers like Osprey, operate successful subscription services, though in reality, these operate much the same way the old book club model did, with individuals self-selecting/identifying themselves with a particular type of book.

Exporting the subscription model into the e-book world offers a chance to break this model open, since readers have a risk-free method of consuming bestselling titles on-demand. It has been done, to varying degrees of success, in the library market already. Taking it commercial is the next logical step, but one that has become more and not less complicated by the introduction in the past year of the agency model, as well as numerous new formats and devices.

Still, says Padiyar, though “e-books for many represent a kind of holy grail, BookSwim is primarily about convenience and saving money over time,” adding “Whether that remains in the form of physical books or digital ones, we intend to offer our customers superior value for money — no matter what kind of book they read or how they want to read it.”

Bookswim’s Top 20 Rented Titles (July 8 )

#1 – The Search
#2 – The Island: A Novel
#3 – The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
#4 – The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest
#5 – Still Missing
#6 – Sizzling Sixteen (Stephanie Plum)
#7 – Undead and Unfinished (Queen Betsy, Book 9)
#8 – The Girl Who Played with Fire
#9 – Sh*t My Dad Says
#10 – The Help
#11 – Private
#12 – The Passage
#13 – Broken: A Novel (Grant County)
#14 – Sliding Into Home
#15 – One Day (Vintage Contemporaries Original)
#16 – The Overton Window
#17 – 61 Hours: A Reacher Novel (Jack Reacher Novels)
#18 – The 9th Judgment (The Women’s Murder Club)
#19 – Best Friends Forever: A Novel
#20 – Medium Raw: A Bloody Valentine to the World of Food and the People Who Cook

BookSwim.com Aims for Sweet Spot of American Readers

Washington Examiner: “Book publishers working to go green” by Jenny Rough

Read the full article at WashingtonExaminer.com

Print is dead.

So said the media folks at a recent writers’ conference I attended in New York City. Today it’s all about digital magazines, electronic reading devices and 140-character Twitter updates. I concede I’ve lost count of the number of print publications that have folded since starting my writing career in 2005.

But I love print. And my wallet, which is full of book receipts from Barnes & Noble, tells me print is not dead … yet. There’s nothing like snuggling up at night and losing myself among black and white letters crafted into prose, listening to the authentic flip of crisp pages and running my hands along the smooth cover of a tactile book. Author Ariel Gore says, “Folks have been saying print is dead for decades with the advent of radio, movies, TV and the Internet, but you don’t sit on the toilet with an e-zine.”

My sentiments exactly.

Yet as a consumer striving to be green, it’s disheartening to know most of the books in my collection are printed on 100 percent virgin paper. According to Raz Godelnik of Eco-Libris, a company striving to make the book industry greener, there are 4.15 billion books produced in the United States each year, yet only 5 percent to 10 percent of the paper in those books comes from recycled materials. Even books that cover green topics, such as eco-friendly gift wrapping or green home-improvement projects, aren’t necessarily being printed in sustainable ways.

“Books need paper, paper needs trees, and cutting down trees to make paper is tough to sell as conservation, even if it’s for a book about conservation,” says Clint Greenleaf of Greenleaf Book Group, an independent book publisher.

But take heart, bookworm. There are some positive changes happening in the industry:

Book publishers are pledging to go green

Chronicle Books has raised the bar with its corporate sustainable practices. It’s free indoor bike parking encourages green commuting. You won’t find any plastic or foam cups in its kitchen — only real plates and cups, containers for recycling and even composting bins. In addition to the many book printed on recycled paper, Chronicle recycles its press sheets into file folders.

Penguin is experimenting with different paper choices, claiming that more than 64.7 percent of its papers are derived from fiber certified under various organizations, such as the Forest Stewardship Council or Sustainable Forest Initiative. Random House and Simon & Schuster have announced goals of increasing the proportion of recycled paper it uses to manufacture books.

The Green Book Festival

The Green Book Festival is an annual event in California that honors books that “contribute to greater understanding, respect and positive action on the changing worldwide environment.” Visit greenbookfestival.com to view the winners of its 2010 competitions, which covered 22 categories of books, ranging from how-to guides to poetry to graphic novels.

Eco-Libris is on a mission

In addition to retaining bloggers who review green books and dedicating its time convincing publishers to adopt greener practices, Eco-Libris has partnered with three nonprofit organizations working in developing countries, Central America and Africa, where deforestation is a crucial problem. To offset your book purchases, you can donate money and its partners will plant a tree. Visit ecolibris.net.

Rent a book through BookSwim.com

A Netflixlike service for book lovers, BookSwim believes that renting books, rather than buying them, will help reduce the number of trees cut down for virgin paper. Unlike typical book shipments (think boxes with air packets and foam peanuts), BookSwim uses recycled and recyclable polymailers for shipping. Plus, it plants a tree for every new membership.

Read the full article at WashingtonExaminer.com

Fayetteville Observer: “Don’t forget to accessorize before you head to the beach” by Jessica De Vault

Read the full article at FayObserver.com

It’s officially hot enough to fry eggs on a concrete sidewalk, which means it’s time to cool off at the nearest source of water, preferably the beach.

Before you hightail it to the nearest coastal town, be sure to pack some of these seaside essentials……..

A Good Beach Read

Nothing says relaxing like catching up on some seaside reading. If you’re the type to speed through a book in one afternoon, sign up for BookSwim, a program that allows you to rent books and return them when you’ve finished reading them. This “Netflix for books” concept beats purchasing all of your books or being placed on a waiting list for a bestseller at your local library. Bookswim.com. Prices start at $9.99 per month, plus shipping………

Read the full article at FayObserver.com

New York Examiner: “BookSwim offers book rentals for $9.95 per month” by Peggy Hazelwood

Read the article at Examiner.com

BookSwim offers book rentals for all types of books, including textbooks. The books are rented in a similar arrangement as movie rentals from Netflix.

From their Web site, the company states: “BookSwim is the first online book rental library service lending you paperbacks, hardcovers and now college textbooks Netflix®-style directly to your house, without the need to purchase! We stock all the latest bestsellers, new releases, and classics! Read your books as long as you want – no late fees! Even choose to purchase and keep the books you love! We are now also your gateway for textbook rental.”

The ways BookSwim is similar to Netflix is the books can be returned postage paid and kept for as long as the reader wants. The number of books that can be rented each month varies from one to five, depending on the plan. There is also an unlimited plan available that doesn’t limit the number of books that can be rented each month.

Referrals are encouraged at BookSwim. The BookSwim member who refers a friend gets a $10 BookSwim credit. The friend gets 50 percent off the price of creating a new account.

Read the article at Examiner.com

Chicago Sun-Times: “Financial problems don’t have to impact reading habits”

Read the full article at SunTimes.com


Can’t turn away the latest best-selling novel even on a budget? Check out five Web sites to help you save and continue your reading habits:

• PaperBackSwap.com — Post books you’re willing to swap and earn credits when other readers take yours. You cash in the credits to grab someone else’s book offer.

• BookSwim.com — This service, similar to Netflix, lets you rent books at different levels of membership. The devout reader might check out the 11-at-a-time $60 plan.

• LibriVox.org — Download free audiobooks.

• ChiPubLib.org — Download e-books and digital books. Must be a member of the Chicago Public Library. Enter your library card number and ZIP code for downloads.

Read the full article at SunTimes.com

Newark Examiner: “Use Bookswim subscription book rental for savings on bestsellers and college textbooks” by Katie Roy

Read the full article at Examiner.com

If you are a book novice and book trading isn’t your style, you’re in luck!

BookSwim offers an online book rental service, similar to Netflix, with plans that allow you to rent books starting at $10 per month. While free book swapping services don’t always have new releases or bestsellers available, BookSwim guarantees that if you request a book they don’t have, they will buy it and mail it out to you as part of your service!

College students can cash in on huge savings with BookSwim, and rent textbooks at a savings of about 60% per semester.

Additional perks include free shipping both ways, and the option to purchase books you don’t want to return. If you read 4 or more books per month, BookSwim estimates that you will save more than $200 per year over list price!

Read the full article at Examiner.com

UAH.edu: “How to Save Money on Textbooks” by Julie Ramhold

Read the full article at Explorer.UAH.edu

……..Bookswim.com is another renting site…… users have to pay monthly. The site runs much like Netflix, but for books. Users choose the plan that fits their finances and their membership is billed automatically every month. The cheapest plan is $9.95 a month for one book, and $3.99 shipping and handling. Some plans offer free shipping……..

Read the full article at Explorer.UAH.edu

Examiner: “Valentine’s Day Be-A-Stud Guide: Top five gifts and wooing with roses” by Anna DeSouza

Read the full article at Examiner.com

Every man has gone through the anguish of finding the right gift. Many have also felt the pain of giving the wrong gift. While the biggest trick is to make sure that there is thought behind the gift, you need not stumble in the darkness trying to find meaning behind a thoughtful gift.

Throughout history, flowers have always been a wonderful gift and they certainly remain so. Keep in mind that presentation of the gift is a large part of the gift. Think about unwrapping a gift – the surprise is part of the present. Here is a guide to roses, recommendations for delivery methods, as well as other Valentine’s Day ideas. Keep in mind, beyond the cost of the flowers, most of these are relatively inexpensive — or even free (although may require some practice, learning and time).

The Rose Rules:
As with all things in romance, giving a rose is an art. With art, there are extremely powerful ways to break the rules, but, for the mainstream, following rules is the best way to achieve.

1) Never give an even amount of roses. If you get a dozen, give your partner 11 and the last one should be artfully delivered (see Uses for Roses below)
2) One perfect rose is worth one million wilting roses.
3) Thorns are natures protection, they have their time and place, be mindful of their presence in your delivery.
4) If you wish to deliver a colored rose, know its meaning. You never want to get caught in a lie, or, have nothing at all to say.
5) Never give a rose in the same way twice to the same girl. Romance is an art.

Uses of Roses:
The Story: Women are a wonderously imaginative creatures. Pick out an assortment of rose colors and slowly go through why you have picked them. A history of your relationship, the feelings you had while on a date, make your story as vivid as the color in the roses to achieve the greatest effect. Keep in mind the rose color meanings with your story. Also – if you do not have a photographic memory, feel free to use note-cards – it isn’t cheating.

The Infinite Softness of a Rose:
Beyond the beauty of a rose, there is one more often overlooked quality – they are amazingly soft. The smoothness of a fresh rose petal rivals that of high quality silk and is softer than the softest human skin. For this reason, it is highly erotic and pleasurable to be stroked with the petals of a rose. By placing a rose petal between your index/middle finger and pinky/ring finger, you make a perfect surface for exploring your lover. If you have bigger fingers, you can put a petal around each of your fingers. While in full daylight this looks awkward, in the dimness of night and during a passionate moment it will be greatly forgiven.

This softness can heighten a massage and create a pleasurable yet soft atmosphere. Looking for some quick romantic ideas that you can do for your partner? Life is filled with simple joys and moments where, if you seize them properly, you can spark great romance.

Five Gifts Guaranteed to Get Ger Going:

1. Flowers: It’s obvious but still powerful. Try to note which flowers are her favorite. Roses are a great fallback but if she loves daisies or sunflowers – go there first. 1800flowers.com has some great arrangements for those on a budget, or stay local and try Big Apple Florist.
2. Massage: While you may not be a trained masseuse, that doesn’t mean she can’t get a real massage! You can easily find reputable spas via Citysearch — or check out our favorite, Great Jones Spa which has an amazing water lounge, so she can enjoy herself post-treatment for as long as she’d like.
3. Dinner & Movie: While taking your woman out on Valentine’s Day is sweet, it can be costly and difficult to get reservations at a nice restaurant. Instead, you can get a reservation for the future, and pre-buy movie tickets and let her pick out the movie. It’s economical and still sweet. Try Fandango.com for advanced tickets, get some popcorn and sweets on the fly!
4. Books: Women like books as much as men like video games and sports. There’s a service – BookSwim.com which is the Netflix for books. Instead of trying to figure out what books she wants, let her choose!
5. Chocolate: Chocolate is one of women’s major food groups. Try to find out if she likes dark or milk chocolate and try not to get the cheap off-brand chocolate either, quality matters. Stay classy and give La Maison du Chocolat. Have a funky side? Opt for Chocolate Bar NYC.

Read the full article at Examiner.com

Salt Lake Tribune: “Butters: Heartfelt Gifts in a Hurry” by MaryJane Butters

Read the full article at SLTrib.com

With each passing year, I find myself reaching deeper into my heart for holiday gifts that impart genuine love and appreciation rather than feelings of obligation or hefty price tags.

For me, it’s a natural impulse, but it seems to heighten in response to the commercial clamor that wages on until the very brink of Christmas. Even as I write, the media is frantically reminding us that we are again facing those dreaded “last shopping days” of the season. With the clock ticking, there’s no doubt that many a generous spirit is now feeling frenzied rather than festive.

Maybe you’ve forgotten a special person on your gift list, or maybe you haven’t found the perfect present for someone you love. Like me, you yearn to give from your heart, but now you’re down to the wire. Take a deep breath and let me lighten your load with five simple solutions for finding uniquely useful last-minute gifts that won’t cost a bundle or create a ton of waste. Best of all, they have “heartfelt” written all over them.

Five Last-Minute Gifts from the Heart:

Surprise Them with a Service » With so much concern these days over consumption and waste, an ideal gift this year is a media rental service. Services don’t just accumulate on a shelf; they keep right on giving for weeks or months to follow, and they’re easy to purchase in a flash. Most of us are familiar with movie rentals from Netflix (www.netflix.com), but now there are also online book-rental services — think virtual libraries. BookSwim (www.bookswim.com) lends paperbacks, hardcover books and college textbooks, while services like Simply Audiobooks (www.simplyaudiobooks.com) and AudioBookWorm (www.audiobookworm.com) offer audiobooks on CD or via computer download…………..

Read the full article at SLTrib.com

The Xavier Newswire: “Book Buying” by John Schroeck

Read the full article at Xavier.edu

Over the past three decades ,the cost of college textbooks has increased at twice the rate of inflation. Considering the current economic climate, the Xavier Senate hopes to provide direction for students who would like to find the best prices available…….

There are also websites that rent out textbooks. BookSwim.com….. Netflix-style service that deliver books right to your door.

The Xavier Book eXchange Board in the Gallagher Student Center is also a viable solution to expensive textbooks.

Senate further suggests that students make sure that they find out what books they will need by e-mailing their professors long before classes start so they have time to shop around to find the best prices.

Older editions of books are typically much more inexpensive, so asking professors if the current edition of a certain textbook is needed can go a long way.

Getting a book’s ISBN number, typically found on the back right corner of a book, can also be quite useful in making quick price comparisons.

Read the full article at Xavier.edu

Washington Post: “The Web Hostess: The Best of the Internet in Only an Hour” by Monica Hesse

Read the full article at WashingtonPost.com

……..Washington, D.C.: Somebody asked this question last week:

“Other than Amazon, is there a one-stop “Web Library” — on the Netflix model? Where I can borrow a book and return it in two weeks?” You were unsure. Does anyone else have an answer. Thanks.

washingtonpost.com: There’s BookSwim and, while it’s a different model, BookCrossing might interest you.

Monica Hesse: Thanks Paul — A friendly chatter sent me a link to BookSwim last week. I checked it out; it pretty much is the paper equivalent of Netflix, with a solid library of titles for 9.95 a month.

It still bemuses me……….

Read the full article at WashingtonPost.com