dianeduane: (Default)
[personal profile] dianeduane
Art-less cover for SYW New Millennium edition

This is just a quick heads-up for those of you who're interested, regarding a release that's been hanging fire for a good long while but is now almost ready to happen. (There'll be a longer post about this next week, when we reveal the cover. )

The first Young Wizards novel, So You Want to Be a Wizard, has been in print pretty much constantly, on one or both sides of the Atlantic and in various non-English speaking countries here and there, for thirty years now. Over the last ten years or so -- and particularly over the last five -- I've become increasingly aware of how some aspects of the book have been dating...which is to say, not very well. And newer young readers have been telling me with increasing frequency that though they love the book, the early-1980's feel of it put some of them off it to the point where it was a tossup whether they were ever going to read it at all.

To say that I felt their pain would be an understatement. While SYWTBAW suffers from this problem, other installments in the series suffer from it far more severely (High Wizardry probably the most). The difficulty isn't just the difference between when they were written and now, but (in a way) the temporal distance or lack of it between the 80's "then" of SYW and the now of 2012.  If the difference were greater, or less, the books might be able to pass either as time capsules of a sort, or be able to slide in "under the wire" with the tech differences not being so glaring. But for the present key audience, the disconnect is really getting in the way. So updating the first four books in particular has been something I've been wanting to get handled for a while.

And now it's getting handled.

I've taken a while about this (originally it was going to happen last year) because, especially as regarded the first book, I wanted to take care not to fix what wasn't broken. These new editions are emphatically not rewrites. However, they do involve:

  • The most important bit: adjustment of technology and background in the book(s) to reflect what's routinely been part of young readers' lives, starting around 2008
  • Some minor editing of material that struck me while revising as clumsy or ineffective
  • Some additional material (not a whole lot)
  • Repair and reconstruction of what has for a long time been a very broken, inconsistent and frankly dysfunctional timeline

The third aspect is going to be most noticeable in So You Want to Be a Wizard. Some of you will have heard that the book has had several near-misses with film production over the last ten years. One of these resulted in a screenplay which, while not perfect, threw up some interesting additional scenes. A few of these were fun enough, or drove the plot in such a manner, that I decided to add them to the revision of the book. These are not massive passages or life-changing sequences: they're just in there now along with the rest of the tidying and updating.

The fourth aspect, timeline repair and rationalization, will start becoming more obvious when Deep Wizardry and the books that follow come out later in the year. Because of the instability involved in the series starting at one publisher (Dell), being thrown overboard when the company was restructured, and then finding its way to a new home (Harcourt, now Houghton Mifflin Harcourt), the uncertainty involved with not being sure when or where the next book was coming out often resulted in editorial (not to mention auctiorial) uncertainty about how to handle character ages and the dating of events. The new editions, therefore, are starting with the events of SYW... being placed in 2008. The events in books that follow will be adjusted to fit as necessary, and new books in the series will follow the new timeline.

For clarity's sake, let me stress that the versions of the Young Wizards books presently in press at HMH wll remain there for the foreseeable future. The publisher is at present not in a position to reissue the New Millennium editions as the definitive ones. Though that would be my preference, it won't be happening any time soon. Yet at the same time there's a persistent demand for something newer... so I'm putting it out there, for those who want it.

Now, as to formats:  On its release next week, the book will be available in ebook format only for at least the next couple of months. We'll go to hard copy via Amazon as soon as we resolve some local production issues (like who seems to be doing POD best at the moment). The ebooks will initially be available only from the Ebooks Direct store while we sort out issues with new distributors. (The page for the New Millennium releases is here: we'll post info about both ebook and hardcopy distribution there as it becomes available. The NMEs will shortly also have their own pages at the main Young Wizards website.) As usual for us, these editions will be DRM-free and available in all the major formats.

...So there you have it. One note about all this: the 60%-off sale we've been running for the past little while --  in aid of building an electronic Maginot Line around our property so that our new kittens will not be turned into road pizza by the increasingly insane traffic on what was once a quiet country lane -- will end on Friday night Hawaiian time. If you're interested in taking advantage of the storewide discount on Stuff in General, this is the time to act, as there will be no more discount offers for a good while once the NMEs start rolling out.

More than that, until next week, deponent saith not. If you know people who're interested in the new edition of SYW, please pass this info to them: if you're interested yourself, please stop by next week for more news. And please feel free to tweet, blog, or otherwise share this post so that as many others as possible who might be interested will have a chance to see it.

Thank you!

Date: 2012-07-25 07:04 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shadrad.livejournal.com
So excited for this! I've been wanting to re-read the series for years, but decided to hold off until the Millenium editions were out. I still treasure the originals (particularly Deep Wizardry) as having a huge impact on my urban fantasy preferences and my standards for YA fiction.

Date: 2012-07-25 07:07 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] zenfrodo.livejournal.com
Ooooohhh, please tell me that the Steve Perry/"Running Alone" scene in High Wizardy won't be replaced with (shudder) Justin Bieber.

Even better, that it remains intact.

Best: that Perry's agreed to do the theme song for the movie...oh, never mind, and while I'm dreaming, I'd like a pony. ;)

Date: 2012-07-25 07:26 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dduane.livejournal.com
Replace THAT scene? Not. The. Slightest. Chance.

Date: 2012-07-25 07:09 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] oneminutemonkey.livejournal.com
Yay! I can't wait for this to come out. I've been planning to do a retrospective of the series to date as soon as one of my many evil overlords gives the okay, and this book will be vital for the full appreciation. :)

Date: 2012-07-25 07:24 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] murphys-lawyer.livejournal.com
Yayifications!

I am SO tweeting this.

Here's hoping for a seriously successful launch.

Date: 2012-07-25 07:26 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dduane.livejournal.com
Thanking you! :)

Date: 2012-07-25 07:50 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jennielf.livejournal.com
OMG you have NO IDEA how excited I am about this!!! YAY!!!!

(well, you probably do, because you have been working on it...) ;)

Date: 2012-07-25 09:42 pm (UTC)
germankitty: by snarkel (txt coffee)
From: [personal profile] germankitty
I'm in two minds about this - on the one hand, I'm all 'yay, ebooks! New scenes! Gimme!', on the other the nostalgic purist in me is gibbering in shock at 'some of my favorite books get a makeover, oh noez!'.

I'm not the target audience, never was, and old enough to remember the period SYW.. was first written in; I don't mind, in the same way I don't mind the period feel of Enid Blyton, the Sue Barton books or even older stuff, like Little Women or Anne of Green Gables. (Or, to keep it in the genre, the YA novels by Robert Heinlein -- equally 'dated', IMO.)

But I can see where you're coming from with this decision, so I'll be happily waiting in line for the ebooks. :)

Date: 2012-07-26 03:11 am (UTC)
platypus: (tay)
From: [personal profile] platypus
I figure I've still got the originals on my shelf, and they aren't going away, but it'll be fascinating to see the changes (and even some additional material!). My head-canon may consider most of it AU bonus material, but it will be nice to see Dairine's age not go backwards :).

(But will Nita's manual still be a library book? I can't imagine something that fundamental changing, but then I wonder how the transition in manual formats from book to portable computer to mp3-type device would be handled in a shorter timeline.

And do Nita's glasses go away in the first book, to avoid the awkwardness of later getting rid of them by saying she'd outgrown her astigmatism? I was terribly sad to see them go, being a bespectacled kid myself!

I get the feeling that the updates are more basic continuity and tech, but I'll be curious to see if any other details change.)

Date: 2012-07-26 03:38 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] zenfrodo.livejournal.com
I can totally see Nita's manual still being a library book. Not everyone's parents can afford a Kindle or tablet -- or *wants* to have one; given that Nita's dad's flower business has "cash flow problems"...well, library's the free option. I see plenty of kids and teens at our local library, reading real hard-copy books.



Date: 2012-07-26 03:54 am (UTC)
germankitty: by snarkel (Default)
From: [personal profile] germankitty
Yeah, something like that. :)

I can also see the challenge from a writing standpoint; there's not a LOT of difference between recording a TV show, say, to VHS or DVD, but a WORLD of difference in the sheer process of fast-forwarding on a Walkman compared to putting one's iPod on shuffle. Not something that's simply fixed by a type of "find+replace" operation, I should think.:)

(As a fanfic writer in fandoms set in the 90s, I'm usually faced with quite the opposite problem -- no cell phones, only rudimentary internet, no music downloads, heck, all of pop culture is so different ... hard enough to do it that way, and I lived through the decade!)

Date: 2012-07-26 02:31 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tortoises.livejournal.com
I'm looking forward to these, but I think I'll always prefer the originals. Even though I didn't discover the books till about 2000, I don't really find them "dated", only a product of the time they were written in. I don't feel like books need to be kept up to date, but I was brought up on a diet of (what I consider) children's classics, so I'm used to not expecting modernity.

Date: 2012-07-26 07:44 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] djinrain.livejournal.com
My precocious 8 year old niece recently got her own e-reader so I will undoubtedly be getting this for her in the near future. For me, personally, the battered and beloved rather ancient version that I fished off of the bottom shelf in a dark corner will always be *my* definitive edition :)

Date: 2012-07-26 10:08 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] irishkate.livejournal.com
So excited to hear this...

Date: 2012-07-26 10:14 am (UTC)
ext_157015: Girl Genius (Procrastination)
From: [identity profile] noirrosaleen.livejournal.com
As interested as I'll be in the modern versions...I'll still keep the old-school, on my shelves and in my eBook.

Because comparisons are both fun AND ways to teach your kids about the past. ^_^

Date: 2012-07-26 02:12 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jcfiala.livejournal.com
Now I'm picturing Nita checking in with FourSquare.

---------
The alternate New York City
You are two days from being Mayor!

There are two people here. <dragon> <kit>
---------
Edited Date: 2012-07-26 02:13 pm (UTC)

Date: 2012-07-27 02:04 am (UTC)
batyatoon: (chibi!)
From: [personal profile] batyatoon
HURRAY HURRAY HURRAY OMG.

Mind you, I fully intend to keep (and keep rereading) the original versions -- but I am really looking forward to seeing the updated ones.

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