R.I.P., Fictionwise and eReader

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This has been a long time coming, but Barnes and Noble is finally putting Fictionwise and eReader out to pasture. They purchased the sites three years ago, and from that purchase the NOOK was born. But now that the NOOK clearly outshines its older siblings, Barnes and Noble apparently feels there isn’t a benefit to maintaining the prior brands. Even though I’ve said for years this makes more sense, it’s still sad to see Fictionwise and eReader disappear. They go back to the days of Palm OS and Peanut Press, and they were truly pioneers of eBook reading.

The first thing I did when I bought my Palm Zire 71 back in the day was install eReader and buy a book. For the record, all my friends thought it was completely insane that I would want to read a book in electronic form! Today, most of those skeptics own Kindles.

And that outcome (where most people have Kindles or NOOKs) is what has been slowly killing eReader and Fictionwise for years. Barnes and Noble’s NOOK store had a deeper catalog, more actively developed applications, and it was a one stop shop with the NOOK. New customers weren’t bothering with Fictionwise because it didn’t offer much of an incentive, and even existing customers were no doubt being drawn into the NOOK fold. Once you took your eReader or Fictionwise library and loaded up on your NOOK via your computer, you had two choices: keep side loading, or take advantage of the fast, easy, integrated NOOKstore over WiFi. I can’t imagine anyone besides the most devoted loyalists choosing Fictionwise over the much more convenient NOOKstore.

According to the letter to authors that Teleread found, there will be a migration plan for anyone who has a library at Fictionwise:

This letter is to notify you that Fictionwise will wind down its operations on December 4, 2012. The Fictionwise sites (including Fictionwise.com, eReader.com and eBookwise.com) will end sales on December 4, 2012 and U.S. Fictionwise customers will cease to have access to their Fictionwise Bookshelf through the site after December 21, 2012. Customers outside the U.S. will cease to have access to their Fictionwise Bookshelf through the site after January 31, 2013. Fictionwise customers will be notified of this and U.S. and U.K. customers will be given an opportunity to move their customer accounts, including their eBooks purchased at the Fictionwise websites, to a Barnes & Noble NOOK Library.

Fictionwise’s website isn’t reflecting anything yet, but just in case-if you have any Fictionwise Buywise program credits or other outstanding credits, use them before December 4th! Presumably an email will go out to anyone registered in the eReader/Fictionwise system with instructions on how to migrate your library. In addition, this might be a good time to back up your whole library on a hard drive or flash drive, just to be on the safe side.

We haven’t really seen a major eBook retailer disappear completely yet, and while this is close, even here it’s an orderly transition to an existing market player. But this transition is worth watching even if you don’t have any ebooks through these stores; if, someday, the ebookstore of your choice gets absorbed by another company, knowing how that handoff was executed, and how to protect your content, is going to be extremely valuable.

Will you miss Fictionwise and eReader? Let us know in the comments!

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About the Author

Zek
Zek has been a gadget fiend for a long time, going back to their first PDA (a Palm M100). They quickly went from researching what PDA to buy to following tech news closely and keeping up with the latest and greatest stuff. They love writing about ebooks because they combine their two favorite activities; reading anything and everything, and talking about fun new tech toys. What could be better?

6 Comments on "R.I.P., Fictionwise and eReader"

  1. Definitely long-time coming … I thought it happened last year.

  2. I think–and have thought for a long time–that the Fictionwise eReader app (and its B&N successor) is the superior to the Nook, Kindle, and iBook apps. B&N nicely productized the reader, and I’ve honestly never understood why they created a whole new app, rather than just doing some tweaking to the existing eReader app. I haven’t used it in a while, but I will be sorry to see it go. Hopefully someday one of The Big Three will incorporate some of its innovations (like the nice progress bar at the bottom with chapter tic marks), instead of spending development time on things like animated page turns. One can but hope.

    • My guess is that they wanted an app built from the ground up around the NOOK platform. There are enough differences (between commerce platforms, formats used, etc) that they didn’t want to be troubleshooting legacy ereader issues while trying to break NOOK into the mainstream.
      Remember, ereader was the lesser known company that was purchased. That usually means they don’t get to stick around forever, and that they get pillaged for their best ideas and then tossed aside. It happens in every industry.

  3. This saddens me. I bought my first ebook (The Sword of Shannara) from Peanut Press to read on my Palm Vx. They were pioneers in the ebook field.

  4. Starman_Andromeda | December 2, 2012 at 6:54 am |

    Nice post!

    One issue for me is that the Nook reader is atrocious, with a very poor interface, especially the book list and no ability to categorize them.

    As to the site here, could you all lose the floating toolbar on the side–or give it a “go away” click x? It’s annoying, distracting having this right-hand side thing moving as we scroll through a story or column!

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