Thanks, guys.
Travis, you may want to go look up a mystery/thriller writer named J.K. Konrath who's been experimenting with putting his old, out of print, backlists on the Kindle himself. He's found that if he puts them at a really low price ($1.99) in his case, he's been getting tons of sales from the Kindle impulse purchasers. He's been pulling down $12k a month off of Amazon. He'd be in the same boat as you, but his primary advantage would be showing up on more lists since he's got like 28 books out.
For me, the electronic and print rights belong to Baen. I get a higher percentage on e-book sales than I do on paperbacks. The paperbacks it is all a percentage of coverprice, so it doesn't really matter if it sells through Amazon or B&N or an indy. Though I did steer my preorders for signed copies to Uncle Hugos, a big indy, because they report to the different bestseller lists.