dianeduane (
dianeduane) wrote2011-02-19 05:00 pm
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FYI; the International ebook edition of DEEP WIZARDRY is out
Since Harcourt only controls the North American rights to their editions of the YW ebooks and these can't be sold outside the US, we've started bringing out international editions that can be purchased by everybody else. So You Want to Be a Wizard, Wizard's Holiday and A Wizard of Mars are out already: and now Deep Wizardry is ready to go. (The books are coming online out of order because some of the origin files have been easier to convert than others.)
Deep Wizardry costs USD $5.35 and is available in Kindle / .mobi and Nook / iPad / .epub formats. More info at DianeDuane.com, or you can click here to go to the Deep WIzardry page at the DD.com shop.(Just a note: if you've heard the scuttlebutt about a revised/updated edition of DW, be advised that this isn't it. That'll be coming out later in the year. This version matches the text of the US editions.)
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I like the idea of updating them for the times. Just please, on the cover and in the notes, let it be known that they are updated editions? I'm going to want complete sets of both, for my children to be able to see the difference.
I can't wait for the Foreign language editions either....please add Dutch to your list! I'd love if the other language editions were easily available in the US. I learn my reading skills in other languages by reading books I know by heart in English, and it is very hard to get the other language editions in the US!
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Re the other-language formats, I have no problem with having all languages be available internationally. Increasingly, territorial limitations are looking more and more useless, and since I'm not a big company, there's just no point in them. Why make it harder for your readership to get what they want?
...Dutch is a good idea, definitely, and one of my target languages (the first four books came out some years back in Dutch anyway, from Luitjens (sic?), though I think they're out of print now). I would have to buy rights to the translation from the publisher, but there probably wouldn't be too much of a stink about that.)
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(If it's the former, like it should be, then they'll probably reissue new ebooks and all will be well. If they're naughty and just update the text under the same ISBN, I doubt that they'll ever actually update the ebooks with the new text...)
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They'll have to put new ISBNs on them. That's what kept Deep Wizardry from going straight to its new edition this last month or so after we resolved the permissions problems with the quoted material in the book. I was going to do the revisions and get those in early next month, but Harcourt didn't have the staff/time/resources/money to spend on the issue right now. But it's no biggie: the situation will keep for the time being, and I can go ahead with the release in the US, and those who want the new version immediately can have it.
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I'm sure I will enjoy the updated ones, but as someone else said I'll want copies of both (I'm not quite a completist, because there are some of your early work I haven't found, but I'm close). Which of course is more money for you, especially if you do your own publishing *g*.
In the meantime, I gather that the next Omnitopia book is due out fairly soon (well, August, but this year is going fast)...