hannah: (Library stacks - fooish_icons)
hannah ([personal profile] hannah) wrote2021-06-16 11:24 pm

Fill up the bookshelf.

I went to Barnes & Noble today to get a sense of what the newly formatted Dresden Files paperbacks would feel like in my hands. I say "newly" because I read the first two quite some time ago, and they were published with a different set of physical dimensions back when I was in college - shorter, thicker, in the format of the pulps and paperbacks of the twentieth century. These were thinner, taller, with nicer paper and what felt like a slightly larger font. Way off kilter from the old back-pocket paperback format.

Thin, tidy, with clean letters...but they didn't feel right in my hands.

I feel like if I can't read these novels as God intended, the least I can do is buy them used and capture some spirit of the old paperbacks that way.

As God intended.

(Incidentally, if anyone knows when this publishing format shift happened, I'd be delighted to know some hard dates and figures.)
ruuger: My hand with the nails painted red and black resting on the keyboard of my laptop (Default)

[personal profile] ruuger 2021-06-17 06:04 pm (UTC)(link)
If by the olf format you mean the ones that were single color with a 'label' and some relevant item on the cover, then Turn Coat was the last one available in that format. I remember being so annoyed when the paperback for Changes looked so different :D

(in fact, I'm pretty sure I have an LJ/DW post complaining about it when I realised you couldn't get the old covers anymore)