Waterstones

Latest

  • Brent Stirton/Getty Images

    UK bookstores found selling banned US bomb-making handbooks

    by 
    Andrew Tarantola
    Andrew Tarantola
    11.11.2016

    Three major online retailers in the UK have been listing a number of bomb-making manuals on their websites, according to The Guardian.

  • adambowie/Flickr

    Waterstones is done selling e-books

    by 
    Jamie Rigg
    Jamie Rigg
    05.23.2016

    Waterstones is well and truly getting back to basics today, as it has dropped e-books and audiobooks from its online store. The digital libraries of Waterstones customers will remain accessible until June 13th, with Kobo taking over the following day. Those affected will be emailed instructions of how they can migrate their e-book collection over to Kobo's platform, where their purchases will live on. Audiobook libraries will also disappear mid-June, but there's no fallback service, so make sure you download the MP3s associated with your Waterstones account before it's too late.

  • Waterstones stops selling Amazon Kindles over 'pitiful' sales

    by 
    Matt Brian
    Matt Brian
    10.07.2015

    Waterstones, the UK's largest book retailer, surprised many when it put plans for its own e-reader on ice to start selling Amazon's range of Kindle readers. It's been more than three years since it began making extra space in stores for one of its biggest rivals, but it won't for much longer. The Bookseller reports that the company will remove Amazon's e-ink Kindles from most of its locations as sales "continue to be pitiful."

  • UK bookseller Waterstones to start selling Kindles

    by 
    Mat Smith
    Mat Smith
    05.21.2012

    The UK's biggest bookstore chain has announced that it will start selling Kindles alongside other digital services from Amazon. Waterstones stores will let Kindle owners digitally browse books in-store and link up with special offers, tying into the chain's plans for substantial renovations that would also include dedicated digital book areas and free WiFi. The move follows on flies in the opposite direction of Target, who has started phasing out its Kindle sales in the US. We assume any plans for the bookseller's very own e-reader will remain the back-burner for now.

  • UK book seller Waterstone's to enter the e-reader race

    by 
    Terrence O'Brien
    Terrence O'Brien
    09.10.2011

    Waterstone's isn't exactly the biggest name in book sales (at least not stateside), but it knows that to survive in this market it's gonna have to get on the e-book train. The British company's managing director, James Daunt, told Radio 4 that it planned to enter the market with both an electronic book store and an actual reader by spring of 2012. Mr. Daunt claimed he was inspired by the success of the Nook, and the challenge it posed to Amazon's Kindle, to finally take a stab at ushering the UK chain into the 21st century. Of course, while we hate to harsh his buzz, Waterstone's has already been offering e-books and e-readers since 2008 through a partnership with Sony with only minimal market impact. And we've already seen one major book seller (one twice the size of Waterstone's) fall flat on its face as it tried to enter the digital age. But still, we wish Daunt and his company the best of luck. [Image credit: Chrisloader]

  • Elder Scrolls novel listing mentions next game, set 200 years after Oblivion

    by 
    Griffin McElroy
    Griffin McElroy
    10.24.2009

    Though Bethesda's bigwigs have gone back and forth on the existence of another installment in the Elder Scrolls franchise, an excerpt from online book retailer Waterstone's product listing for Elder Scrolls: The Infernal City seems fairly certain of the series' continuance. The listing -- which was recently edited to remove the following savory quote -- mentions that the novel takes place 45 years after Oblivion, adding that "it partly bridges the gap for the next game, which is set 200 years after the Oblivion crisis." As promising as this sounds, we find a major flaw with this claim -- see, we've already clocked over 200 years of playtime into Oblivion (and still haven't beaten it!), meaning we're technically playing the sequel right now. We've contacted Bethesda to ask them about the book listing, and to see if 200 years of technological progress will bring about unimaginable advances in equestrian fortification.