

Moderator: I'm Murrin
The pace quickens by the beginning of book 2; Donaldson had a lot of groundwork to do first, though.Murrin wrote:Halfway through the Mirror of Her Dreams - can anyone tell me why Mordant's Need was published as two books? Yes, so put together they'd be a little long in pagecount, but at the pace this first book is going, I can't help feeling it would have worked better in one volume (plus, the pace means I'm not taking much longer to read this book than I did to read Ring, a book half the length of tMoHD).
It's probably more a manufacturing thing than anything else, Murrin. If they were smooshed into one book, it'd probably physically fall apart. Unless you're reading the new trade editions (big paperbacks) rather than the mass markets (little paperbacks), in which case they'd definitely fall apart.Murrin wrote:This one reads quick enough that I feel it would have been better to have book 2 right on the end of it instead of seperate.
There is also the fact, sad but true, that some people are intimidated by the commitment a 1200-pager requires, and are more likely to purchase a slightly smaller book. Plus, smaller books fit better in coat pockets.Roland of Gilead wrote:More than a manufacturing thing or reading thing, it's a financial thing. Donaldson turns in a 1200 plus page manuscript - publisher says, "We can split this in half and sell two books for double the money."
It's worth mentioning that in the 1980s, Del Rey's manufacturing was seriously below standard. One of my friends eagerly devoured books from every other publisher in the SF field, but was very reluctant to buy Del Rey paperbacks because they tended to fall apart during the first reading.Myste wrote:It's probably more a manufacturing thing than anything else, Murrin. If they were smooshed into one book, it'd probably physically fall apart. Unless you're reading the new trade editions (big paperbacks) rather than the mass markets (little paperbacks), in which case they'd definitely fall apart.Murrin wrote:This one reads quick enough that I feel it would have been better to have book 2 right on the end of it instead of seperate.
Unfortunately, I don't know which for SRD's books are still available in hardcover. However, my Bantam hardcovers of The Gap are all slim (for their page count), elegant, and excellently bound. And I have no complaint about my TC hardcovers. Mordant's Need seemed to fall right at the low point in the quality curve.dANdeLION wrote:Interesting stuff, VS. Are there any newer versions of the Donaldson hardbacks that are better constructed? I for one would like to replace several of my hardbacks due to their aging.