Goodreads Librarians Group discussion
Policies & Practices
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Use Kindle Locations as Page Numbers?
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However, the problem is that some of the newer Kindle editions do have actual page numbers assigned (based on a print edition of the book, I think?), so it might be confusing since there's no way to tell whether the number means page or location. (I know location numbers tend to be much higher than page numbers, but it's not unheard of to have a series or set of books put out as one giant Kindle book, so it wouldn't be impossible for page numbers to be large enough to look like location numbers.)


Well, mine doesn't, but apparently it's been added to new Kindle readers (and some newer published editions).


They do a pretty good job of estimating page Count on books with no print equivalent

In the meantime, the style manuals schools use are catching up to how to cite the ebook locations/percentages in acceptable formats.
The file size of any ebook or kindle edition would be pretty useless to enter (although sometimes shown on amazon and sites downloading from) because almost always would include extraneous pages (not normally included in a book's page count) like a ton of samples of authors other works, table of contents (usually numbered "i, ii, ..." types of pages), the kindle blurbs to share that you've finished, click for more by this author, etc.--not usually a part of the hardcopy or regular page numbering scheme.
The chapter metadata being tested should help at least the book discussions here on goodreads follow along regardless of edition/format of book.
My thought here is that this would provide a meaningful way of comparing book sizes (at least against other kindle versions). Sure, it's not an exact science, but then neither is comparing page numbers for physical editions :)
I know I'd much prefer entering /something/ in to that page number field than leaving it blank when I'm adding new books