Books

Natural Length Reading: Christianity Today Launches eBooks

The magazine is now essential in another way.

The eBook industry has recently kept The Wall Street Journal in a state of openmouthed amazement. When Internet billionaire and Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban published an eBook without the help of a traditional publisher, the Journal positively salivated over the potential revenue the social-media savvy Cuban could realize. And on Black Friday 2011, it reported, Amazon.com sold more than four times the number of Kindle e-readers that it had on the same day of 2010. There’s no danger that the Kindle will turn into a Betamax.

We, too, have noticed that the readership for eBooks is expanding enormously and that the publishing economics can be very different from those of traditional books. One growth area is the “natural length” eBook: something longer than a longish magazine article, yet significantly shorter than the typical print book. Sometimes it is the full version of a magazine article, with all the good bits restored that editors trim out because of space constraints. Sometimes it is several articles, published at various times, brought together for greater effect. The format allows you, the reader, to go deeper and learn more than you could from a magazine article, without committing the time or money demanded by a full-length book.

Shorter books like these just don’t make sense in traditional publishing. They need to be bulked up to a certain size—often padded with chapters that don’t contribute much—just to make the economics of printing, shipping, distribution, and retail sales work.

With eBook publishing, that has changed. A “natural length” book can be inexpensively produced and inexpensively priced, without regard for costs of printing, paper, and shipping.

Christianity Today is pleased to launch a new series of natural length eBooks. We call them Christianity Today Essentials. You can purchase them through CTeBooks.com or at your favorite eBook supplier. Buying them won’t break the bank—our first two titles are offered at a low introductory price.

About those two titles. The first is How to Pick a President. It wraps previous Christianity Today essays about the principles of politics around this issue’s cover story to provide a really good evening’s read when so much political talk leaves a bad taste behind. The second, Faith and the American Presidency, brings together rich but out-of-print material from our former sister publication Christian History & Biography. Many American presidents have let faith play a key role in their policy decisions, regardless of their personal beliefs and pieties.

We hope you enjoy these Essentials and many more to come.

Next month: The most effective (and least effective!) ways churches can fight global poverty, our 2011 Movie Awards, and a celebration of Francis Schaeffer’s 100th birthday.

Copyright © 2012 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Related Elsewhere:

Check out CT’s selection of eBooks at CTeBooks.com.

Background for How to Pick a President can be found in this month’s cover story, “The Cure for Election Madness.”

Check back for more from our January issue.

Also in this issue

The CT archives are a rich treasure of biblical wisdom and insight from our past. Some things we would say differently today, and some stances we've changed. But overall, we're amazed at how relevant so much of this content is. We trust that you'll find it a helpful resource.

Cover Story

The Cure for Election Madness

Calling All Callings: Amy Sherman on ‘Kingdom Calling’

News

A Crackdown on International Adoptions

Review

Strength in Weakness: The Bible, Disability, and the Church

News

Europe's Top Courts Are on a Pro-Life Roll

A Pro-Life Plea This Election Season

Jesus and the Goodness of Everything Human

How Bethany Hoang Was Wired for Justice

Is Cage Fighting Ethical for Christians?

News

Go Figure

Excerpt

J. I. Packer and Carolyn Nystrom on God's Will

Review

Girl Meets Grace: Lauren Winner's New Reflection on Her Divorce and Desolation

News

Discipling the Dragon: Christian Publishing Finds Success in China

News

Will Immigration Slowdown Prompt a Bilingual Ministry Bust?

Wilson's Bookmarks

How the Physical Form of a Bible Shapes Us

News

Counterterrorism Laws Hamper Humanitarian Aid

Editorial

Thou Shalt Not Abuse: Reconsidering Spanking

Blessed Are the Jobless: How Ministries Aid the Unemployed

Six Indie Films You Won't Want to Miss

Readers Write

News

Passages

News

Quotation Marks

News

Corporation Switches to Adult Stem-Cell Therapy, Copeland Loses Suit, and More

My Top 5 Books on Christians in Politics

Commander and Chaplain: The Faith of Presidents

News

Has the Same-Sex Marriage Debate Helped Pro-Life Advocacy?

Don't Worry, Read Happy: Alan Jacobs on The Pleasures of Reading

2012 Christianity Today Book Awards

News

Top 10 News Stories of 2011

The Annual Book and Music Awards

News

As USCIRF Faces Possible Closure, Funding Divides Religious Freedom Experts

View issue

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Against the Culture of Demonization

The problem is not when the Christian is in the conflict—it’s when the conflict is in the Christian.

Died: Daniel Bourdanné, Millipede Scientist Turned IFES Leader Who Loved Christian Books

The Chadian student ministry leader spent his final years promoting publishing in Africa.

The Squandering of ‘God’s Not Dead’

The 10-year-old franchise is right that Christians face challenges. But its latest installment, ‘In God We Trust,’ is another disappointment.

News

Kenya Greets Kirk Franklin and Maverick City Music with Excitement—and Skepticism

Kirk Franklin and Maverick City Music are popular with Kenyan Christians, but some are increasingly wary of their influence.

Review

Meet the ‘Precocious Atheist’ Still Pining for a Misplaced Faith

Donna Freitas hasn’t found Jesus on the other side of depression and trauma. But her search persists.

Being Human

‘The Bear’ Is a Master Class in Contagious Anxiety

What the TV sensation says about conflict, curiosity, and the common craving to be seen.

Public Theology Project

Will Your Presidential Vote Send You to Hell?

Decisions made on Election Day have implications for Judgment Day. But let’s not confuse one day for the other.

News

Pro-Life Voters Find Trump Disappointing—but Harris Even Worse

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