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Booksellers involve superheroes in e-book battle

Amazon's deal with DC Comics for the exclusive digital rights to a hundred popular graphic novels--and Barnes & Noble's response--sparks fans' ire.

Steven Musil Night Editor / News
Steven Musil is the night news editor at CNET News. He's been hooked on tech since learning BASIC in the late '70s. When not cleaning up after his daughter and son, Steven can be found pedaling around the San Francisco Bay Area. Before joining CNET in 2000, Steven spent 10 years at various Bay Area newspapers.
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Steven Musil
2 min read
Green Lantern is part of DC Comics' exclusive content deal with Amazon. Amazon

Holy e-comic clash, Batman!

Amazon, apparently in an effort to add muscle to its recently unmasked Kindle Fire tablet, sparked a real-world fight over superhero comic books when it inked a deal with DC Comics for the exclusive digital rights to a hundred popular graphic novels, including Superman, Batman, Green Lantern, the Sandman, and Watchmen.

That arrangement apparently did not sit too well with rival bookseller Barnes & Noble, which has an e-book reader it would like to see flourish. In response to DC's deal, Barnes & Noble removed the physical copies of the titles from its store shelves, saying that it would not sell books it did not also have digital rights to. Books-a-Million, another large bookseller, took the same action for the same reason.

Comic book fans paint all the players in this tale as villains: They accuse Amazon of turning its back on the graphic novel community, label DC Comics as greedy, and characterize Barnes & Noble as similarly uncaring and childish.

One commenter on the ComicBookResources.com discussion boards needled DC Comics for excluding Apple's tablet with its Amazon deal:

Oh Woe is me? What will me and my poor iPad do? I'm so sorry DC! Because it is not like I can download all those comics for free, oh wait yes I can, and now I guess I will and maybe I will download every comic DC produces while I am at it! Nice move Dc...

DC urges patience, saying the comics will eventually be available for reading on other e-readers via Amazon's Kindle app but won't say when.

As readers increasingly turn to digital devices for their leisure reading, keeping the attention of young consumers will be a key battle.

"It looks like content providers and online purveyors have a few more rounds to go before the Wild West is tamed," Lorraine Shanley, a publishing consultant, told the New York Times.