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Kindle Unlimited In Canada? Sorry, 'Netflix For Books' Not Yet Available Here

'Netflix For Books' Arrives .. Just Not For Canadians

Online bookseller Amazon has launched a “Netflix for books” — an all-you-can-read service that allows you to download books for the price of a monthly fee.

The move could upend the bookselling industry, which is already struggling with store closures and bankruptcies as ebooks and online sales replace brick-and-mortar bookstores.

But for the time being, the service is not available in Canada.

Typically, Amazon’s unique products and services take a few years to reach north of the border. That was the case with the Kindle e-reader, as well as Amazon’s online e-reader bookstore and its “Prime” two-day delivery service.

Amazon subscribers in the U.S. will be able to purchase access to Kindle Unlimited, as the service is called, for $9.99 U.S. per month. The service will offer some 600,000 titles, including bestsellers like “The Hunger Games” and “Diary of a Wimpy Kid.” Subscribers will have unlimited access.

Not every publisher has signed up the arrangement. HarperCollins and Simon and Schuster confirmed to AP they are not part of the service, while Penguin Random House didn’t comment. Neither did Hachette, the publishing house with which Amazonin a public dispute over royalties.

Besides potentially challenging publishers’ business models, Amazon’s move puts pressure on existing paid e-book subscription services such as Oyster and Scribd.

With files from the Associated Press

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'Redeployment' by Phil Klay(03 of10)
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The strength of Klay’s stories, all about the Iraq War or its aftermath, lies in his unflinching, un-PC point of view, even for the soldiers he so clearly identifies with and admires. These stories are at least partly autobiographical, and yet, for all their verisimilitude, they’re also shaped by an undefinable thing called art.
'Euphoria' by Lily King(04 of10)
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'No Place to Hide: Edward Snowden, the NSA, and the U.S. Surveillance State' by Glenn Greenwald(05 of10)
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In the early 1830s, the Grimké sisters were the most infamous women in America for speaking out in favor of liberty and equality and for African American slaves and women. Monk Kidd brings Hetty and Sara to life in a powerful novel that spans decades, vividly imagining the Grimké sisters’ courageous trials and personal transformations.
'Red Rising' by Pierce Brown(08 of10)
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'Savage Harvest: A Tale of Cannibals, Colonialism, and Michael Rockefeller's Tragic Quest for Primitive Art' by Carl Hoffman(09 of10)
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Was the scion of an American billionaire eaten by cannibals in New Guinea? Award-winning journalist Hoffman steps into Michael Rockefeller’s boots to investigate his 1961 disappearance, and succeeds in both solving the puzzle and spinning an engrossing tale of adventure.
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