When you read a book on your Kindle, Amazon knows how fast you’re reading, where you got bored, and what you underlined. And publishers are using that data to try to write snappier books.


We talked to WSJ reporter Alexandra Alter about how this works and whether it’s going to make every book more like the Da Vinci Code.

(via onthemedia)

378 notesShowHide

  1. theopensea reblogged this from alighterwithlove
  2. ladygriffen reblogged this from alighterwithlove
  3. impureunchristianentertainment reblogged this from khealywu
  4. thematthewbriancohen reblogged this from khealywu
  5. frakintosh reblogged this from khealywu and added:
    I hate to break it to you guys, but the fact that garbage like Twilight (and it’s fan fiction spawn) sells fajillions of...
  6. i-contain-multitudes reblogged this from onehundreddollars
  7. khealywu reblogged this from onehundreddollars
  8. quantumstarlight reblogged this from bonedust
  9. bonedust reblogged this from discoverynews
  10. scoticus reblogged this from theredearth
  11. pocketforstupidcomments reblogged this from iwasaprisonerinyourskull
  12. iwasaprisonerinyourskull reblogged this from thebutcherandhisprose
  13. thebutcherandhisprose reblogged this from slaughterhousefive
  14. companioncube76 reblogged this from howstuffworks
  15. lothi reblogged this from giomanach
  16. hyde-from reblogged this from fandamned
  17. fandamned reblogged this from totallyspocked
  18. fragmentsshoredagainstmyruin reblogged this from giomanach
  19. giomanach reblogged this from discoverynews
  20. buttersprinkle reblogged this from discoverynews
  21. spiderbass reblogged this from discoverynews
  22. dear-laughing-doubters reblogged this from esendoran
  23. chokelit reblogged this from discoverynews