E.J. Xavier
asked
Lois McMaster Bujold:
Have you considered (or more to the point would you consider offering an ebook boxed set/s of the Vorkosiverse? I read many but not all of them years ago, and find myself wishing I could fill in the blanks. After finishing your latest (fantastic btw) I realized I'd love to just reread the series. I'd be very interested in an ebook box set or two with those spiffy new covers you showed recently.
Lois McMaster Bujold
No such plans at this time.
I'm not sure I actually see the point of e-boxed sets, when all the e-titles of a series are equally and simultaneously e-available. For paper books, boxed sets circumvent book vendors' maddening habit of not having all the books, or the earlier books, available on the shelves simultaneously, so that anyone's attention that is caught, say, by Book #4 is thwarted from starting at the beginning and so doesn't start at all. E-vendors, with their infinite virtual shelf space, don't have that problem in the first place, thankfully.
So any reader can fill in the blanks any time, in any order, a la carte.
E-boxed sets, which are in effect e-omnibuses, have the opposite problem of readers complaining that they'd bought such-and-such a title previously, and why should they have to pay for it twice, or the worse one of mistaking the omnibus for a new title, ditto. I think it's safer just to put all the books out as coherently as possible (hence the new e-cover treatments), and let readers choose for themselves.
For reading order and the Did-I-get-them-all? questions, there's this:
https://www.goodreads.com/story/show/...
Everyone please feel free to pass this link along.
Ta, L.
No such plans at this time.
I'm not sure I actually see the point of e-boxed sets, when all the e-titles of a series are equally and simultaneously e-available. For paper books, boxed sets circumvent book vendors' maddening habit of not having all the books, or the earlier books, available on the shelves simultaneously, so that anyone's attention that is caught, say, by Book #4 is thwarted from starting at the beginning and so doesn't start at all. E-vendors, with their infinite virtual shelf space, don't have that problem in the first place, thankfully.
So any reader can fill in the blanks any time, in any order, a la carte.
E-boxed sets, which are in effect e-omnibuses, have the opposite problem of readers complaining that they'd bought such-and-such a title previously, and why should they have to pay for it twice, or the worse one of mistaking the omnibus for a new title, ditto. I think it's safer just to put all the books out as coherently as possible (hence the new e-cover treatments), and let readers choose for themselves.
For reading order and the Did-I-get-them-all? questions, there's this:
https://www.goodreads.com/story/show/...
Everyone please feel free to pass this link along.
Ta, L.
More Answered Questions
Pamela Eng
asked
Lois McMaster Bujold:
I just wanted to tell you how much I enjoyed your recent novella "Knife Children". The entire story just made me happy. I'm now re-reading the Sharing Knife books, and enjoying them all over again. Are you planning anything else with the Lakewalkers? Thanks so much for all your work!
Catherine Nemeth
asked
Lois McMaster Bujold:
This question contains spoilers…
(view spoiler)[
When Pen dies, could he and/or Desdemona petition the White God to have her taken up with him, or is that not possible?
(hide spoiler)]
Seantheaussie
asked
Lois McMaster Bujold:
Since the debut of the ebook have you "punched up" the "kindle sample" beginnings of your books, because they are now effectively part of the marketing? I think books used to be like movies, which could start slowly because people had already paid (sunk cost fallacy). They are now like TV shows, that have to grab and hold flighty viewers.
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