E-book sales grew by 54% in 2011

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The rise of the Kindle and other e-book readers has affected sales of printed books

Digital book sales have risen by 54% in the past year and are now worth £243m to the publishing industry.

Figures released by the Publishers' Association (PA) showed the market for e-books, downloads and online subscriptions had more than trebled since 2007, when it was worth £74m.

Digital content now accounts for 8% of the total value of book sales in 2011 - it made up 5% in 2010.

However, total book sales fell by 2%, with the market worth £3.2bn.

Physical book sales dropped 5% to £3bn, according to the PA Statistical Yearbook.

"The story of the year is a decline in physical sales almost being compensated for by a strong performance in digital," said chief executive Richard Mollett.

"That said, physical books remain the format of choice for the vast majority of British readers, underlining the continued importance of the high street sector," he added.

However, the report noted, the number of high street book stores had almost halved in the last six years - with roughly 2,000 shops closing since 2006.

Best-sellers

David Nicholls' One Day was the number one print title for 2011 overall, selling nearly one million copies.

Dawn French's first novel, A Tiny Bit Marvellous, was the second best-selling fiction paperback, with 459,000 copies purchased; followed by Emma Donoghue's Room on 418,00.

In the non-fiction category, Jamie Oliver's 30 Minute Meals was the best-seller for the second year in a row, with more than half a million copies sold.

The yearbook also noted that sales of children's books had fallen by 19% since 2007, when the final Harry Potter novel was published.

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