greyhorse
swinging to the tunes
- Joined
- May 30, 2003
- Messages
- 96
Have you noticed how common these things are getting? Somewhere in size between a regular paperback and a hard cover, these overweight paperbacks are permeating our bookstore shelves.
The first time these came to my attention was when I went to a book store to buy for a friend, a copy of Neal Stephenson's "The Diamond Age". I figured I’d buy another one because my copy was becoming too tattered to share. So there I was, slowly working my way along the familiar shelves when there it was; a blown up version of the book I was looking for. Like some re-creation made by a larger, alien species, the book was wrong on some fundamental level. Dumbstruck, I turned the object over in my hands, opening it to find the text too small in proportion to the oversized pages. What was most alarming about it was the price, set at almost twice the price of a regular paperback. Disappointed, and hoping to find a regular paperback at another store, I wandered the streets of downtown Toronto to no avail. Everywhere I went I was faced with this mockery of the compact beauty that was “The Diamond Ageâ€.
Over a year has passed since that day, and now a new trade paperback release of “The Diamond Age†is to be found in the stores. This one has a different, more upscale, artsy look to it, which I suppose is meant to justify the added cost of the book. They’ve got the text size right too, and the whole package is stylish and well balanced. Somehow I still can’t bring myself to buy it however. I’ve still yet to come to terms with having to pay twice what I previously paid, for what to me, is a cumbersome revision of a book I still cherish.
Several weeks ago I heard William Gibson’s “Pattern Recognition†had come out in paperback. I made the time therefore, to head downtown again, to buy it. I was more disappointed than surprised this time when I saw that trade paper backs are being released not only for bestsellers, but for a huge number of new releases, and by many different publishers. It seems that the trade paperback will be the format of the future, and for this I am saddened. If the public is not buying books now, I just can’t see it paying twice for the same privilege.
I did end up buying “Pattern Recognition†that day, which was also a tradepaperback, and was doubly disappointed because of the content, which I found neither particularly well written nor interesting. While in the past, this might have not been a great loss, this time I now have a shelf space eating block for which I had to pay close to twice the cost I was used to paying. Not good.
I talked this over with my sister who is currently studying to become a librarian, and she thinks trade paperbacks might be targeted for an aging reading population in need of larger print. While this could be partly true, it still doesn’t explain the increasing use of trade paperbacks in SF&F, which has a larger teenage reading population. What do you people think of trade paperbacks? Will they replace standard paperbacks, or will they die out?
The first time these came to my attention was when I went to a book store to buy for a friend, a copy of Neal Stephenson's "The Diamond Age". I figured I’d buy another one because my copy was becoming too tattered to share. So there I was, slowly working my way along the familiar shelves when there it was; a blown up version of the book I was looking for. Like some re-creation made by a larger, alien species, the book was wrong on some fundamental level. Dumbstruck, I turned the object over in my hands, opening it to find the text too small in proportion to the oversized pages. What was most alarming about it was the price, set at almost twice the price of a regular paperback. Disappointed, and hoping to find a regular paperback at another store, I wandered the streets of downtown Toronto to no avail. Everywhere I went I was faced with this mockery of the compact beauty that was “The Diamond Ageâ€.
Over a year has passed since that day, and now a new trade paperback release of “The Diamond Age†is to be found in the stores. This one has a different, more upscale, artsy look to it, which I suppose is meant to justify the added cost of the book. They’ve got the text size right too, and the whole package is stylish and well balanced. Somehow I still can’t bring myself to buy it however. I’ve still yet to come to terms with having to pay twice what I previously paid, for what to me, is a cumbersome revision of a book I still cherish.
Several weeks ago I heard William Gibson’s “Pattern Recognition†had come out in paperback. I made the time therefore, to head downtown again, to buy it. I was more disappointed than surprised this time when I saw that trade paper backs are being released not only for bestsellers, but for a huge number of new releases, and by many different publishers. It seems that the trade paperback will be the format of the future, and for this I am saddened. If the public is not buying books now, I just can’t see it paying twice for the same privilege.
I did end up buying “Pattern Recognition†that day, which was also a tradepaperback, and was doubly disappointed because of the content, which I found neither particularly well written nor interesting. While in the past, this might have not been a great loss, this time I now have a shelf space eating block for which I had to pay close to twice the cost I was used to paying. Not good.
I talked this over with my sister who is currently studying to become a librarian, and she thinks trade paperbacks might be targeted for an aging reading population in need of larger print. While this could be partly true, it still doesn’t explain the increasing use of trade paperbacks in SF&F, which has a larger teenage reading population. What do you people think of trade paperbacks? Will they replace standard paperbacks, or will they die out?