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Little Book Series 3
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I'm almost done with Ed Gorman's LITTLE ORANGE BOOK OF ORNERY STORIES, and, man.....I always forget just how GOOD Gorman was. Each story has been outstanding.
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Originally posted by Dan Hocker View PostI'm just guessing here. My guess is the binding changed when they were forced to change printers. From experience weird trim sizes can be a major problem. For instance on Brian's new children's book we had to find a completely new (to us printer) because none of our current printers could handle the trim size. We've also had trouble in the past with the signature series books because of the trim size. If I'm remembering correctly the last little book Borderlands did with their last printer they had to have half the run (or more) reprinted because the printer chewed the books up, basically forcing Borderlands to switch. So I'm guessing the new printer can't do that trim size in exactly the same way.
I will say there's really nothing wrong with them being glued on a book this small. It only really makes a different (durability wise) when you get into bigger books. For example I have a TPB of The Hobbit that has probably been read 100 times in it's life time that's perfectly fine, but about half of my TPB's of The Wheel of Time series started disintegrating after their 3 read (those books are almost all 1,000 pages plus).
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I'm just guessing here. My guess is the binding changed when they were forced to change printers. From experience weird trim sizes can be a major problem. For instance on Brian's new children's book we had to find a completely new (to us printer) because none of our current printers could handle the trim size. We've also had trouble in the past with the signature series books because of the trim size. If I'm remembering correctly the last little book Borderlands did with their last printer they had to have half the run (or more) reprinted because the printer chewed the books up, basically forcing Borderlands to switch. So I'm guessing the new printer can't do that trim size in exactly the same way.
I will say there's really nothing wrong with them being glued on a book this small. It only really makes a different (durability wise) when you get into bigger books. For example I have a TPB of The Hobbit that has probably been read 100 times in it's life time that's perfectly fine, but about half of my TPB's of The Wheel of Time series started disintegrating after their 3 read (those books are almost all 1,000 pages plus).
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The Mort Castle little book appears to be the last one with sewn signatures.
So: the foil stamp is off center, Madonna (Maddona!!) is misspelled in the table of contents, and the book itself is essentially a perfect-bound POD paperback with boards on it. What next?
Some have stated that $30 isn't an extravagant sum, and it isn't really. However, the most recent CD Novella, Mystery Road, is the same price as the little books (physically, CD's book is a pretty flawless and nice to look at), so I'm not sure I buy the argument that thirty dollars just won't get you a quality product. No doubt there are economies of scale operating here, since CD is a much larger operation, but honestly BP can do better. They could certainly go back to a stitched binding.
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So I had not noticed that. The current series is glued and the older books are sewn,
Little Book Binding.JPG
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I haven't really paid attention to the newer books until this one, but the older ones that I've read recently, such as the Garton, Morrell, and Barron books, are all sewn.
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Originally posted by dannyboy121070 View PostMy Magenta book arrived today. Man, is the cover off-center!
I'm reading older LITTLE books, and they all have a sewn binding, and I can't really remember what the McCammon had, but this one has a glued binding, which is incredibly annoying, because as I read the Garton, Barron, and Morrell books, I kept telling myself "Yeah, they're packed with typos and production errors, but at least they're sewn." Now we don't even get that? This is basically lower than print-on-demand quality, at this point.
BINDING.jpg
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Originally posted by dannyboy121070 View PostMy Magenta book arrived today. Man, is the cover off-center!
I'm reading older LITTLE books, and they all have a sewn binding, and I can't really remember what the McCammon had, but this one has a glued binding, which is incredibly annoying, because as I read the Garton, Barron, and Morrell books, I kept telling myself "Yeah, they're packed with typos and production errors, but at least they're sewn." Now we don't even get that? This is basically lower than print-on-demand quality, at this point.
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My Magenta book arrived today. Man, is the cover off-center!
I'm reading older LITTLE books, and they all have a sewn binding, and I can't really remember what the McCammon had, but this one has a glued binding, which is incredibly annoying, because as I read the Garton, Barron, and Morrell books, I kept telling myself "Yeah, they're packed with typos and production errors, but at least they're sewn." Now we don't even get that? This is basically lower than print-on-demand quality, at this point.
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Originally posted by lweron View PostLooks like we are back leather bound for A Little Magenta Book of Malevolence. I wonder why it was switched back.
Edit: Also generally speaking there's usually only so many color options in a given material selection. So if the series has more books in it than a material has color options, there's no choice but to switch materials.Last edited by Dan Hocker; 07-28-2020, 01:56 PM.
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Looks like we are back leather bound for A Little Magenta Book of Malevolence. I wonder why it was switched back.
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Originally posted by Marmaduke Grigsby View PostI received my copy of the Sarah Pinborough book in the mail today. I already spotted a typo on the contents page. Sigh.
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