Tilfældige bøger fra cpgs bibliotek
Story Teller in Zion af Orson Scott Card
The Seduction of Hillary Rodham af David Brock
The gospel kingdom: Selections from the writings and discourses of John Taylor, third president of the Church of Jesus C af John Taylor
Night of the Mary Kay Commandos Featuring Smell O-Toons af Berke Breathed
Practical Numerical Algorithms for Chaotic Systems af Thomas S. Parker
Saint Paul Returns to the Movies: Triumph over Shame af Robert Jewett
The Far Side Gallery af Gary Larson
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venner: knjiski
Medlem: cpg
Bibliotek1,339 bøger — se bibliotek
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Skyertag-sky, forfatter-sky
TagsMathematics (311), Reading (229), C. S. Lewis (75), Philosophy (56), Classics (55), General Religion (52), Humor (48), War (45), General Authority (42) — se alle tags
GrupperNone
YndlingsforfattereJane Austen, Charles Dickens, Fyodor Dostoevsky, C. S. Lewis, George MacDonald (Fælles favoritter)
StedSalem, UT
Kontotypeoffentlig, livstid
ForbindelserForbindelser
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http://www.librarything.com/profile/cpg (profil)
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/cpg (bibliotek)
Medlem sidenSep 1, 2006








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As to binding: I'm no expert either, but I think we might both be surprised at how few paperbacks are sewn -- even ones that appear to have visible signatures. A couple of years ago, a hundred-page chunk came out of a Cambridge University Press paperback that I've been using since the early nineties as a working and teaching copy. It appears to have signatures, though it's also obviously glued to the paper cover. I took it to the preservation department in our library, and was told, to my surprise, that it's not sewn at all -- it's a "notched double-fan adhesive" binding, which is apparently very, very common. So the signatures are real, but there's nothing but the notching process and the strip of glue holding the signatures to each other.
This also means I can't just find a local hand bookbinder to repair it: I'd have to send it to a shop with the right machine, and they'd charge me an arm and a leg....
skrevet af markell kl. 2:38 pm (EST) den Jun 17, 2008
There are actually a couple of different versions of digital printing, as I understand it. There are the "print-on-demand" books, often digital scans of traditionally printed pages, which are then printed with industrial laser-printers, often on bright white stock, and bound with cheaper cardstock than traditional books. These are the worst, from my point of view: ugly and hard to read. The presses will respond -- rightly -- that this is a better alternative than letting these books fall completely out of print. (They'll often use this technique with books that sell a very small but steady number of copies per year, on the grounds that they can't afford to print and warehouse a fifty-year supply of such books, but want to keep them available.) Less offensive but also more insidious are books that are printed digitally in their first release. These will typically have all the same materials as traditional books, so the paper and binding will be indistinguishable. Editors have argued to me that the type is perfectly clear in these books, but I've found that it varies from acceptable to crummy. They then insist that it will improve with the technology, and they're probably right. (I don't think the technology is the problem; the problem is the people buying and using the technology, who sometimes do and sometimes don't care about the quality of the objects they're making.)
And you're absolutely right: there MUST be a clear way of signaling the difference between the original versions of books and their digital replacements. I don't know whether a new ISBN is necessary, but some statement on the copyright page, at least, seems warranted. Some presses already do this; Cambridge, I think, says "Converted to digital printing 2005" or something like that. But at the very least, I want to be able to email a used bookseller to ask whether the copy they're offering for sale is digitally printed or not, and now the only reliable way I have to do that is to say: "does it look like it was printed by a fax machine?"
What's to be done? I'm not sure. Keep complaining. Complain to your editor, if you have one. Let presses know that it's worth your time and money to seek out a secondhand copy from an old printing rather than buy the cheap reproductions they're offering for sale...
skrevet af markell kl. 9:19 am (EST) den Jun 17, 2008
Have a good day!
skrevet af chellerystick kl. 10:37 pm (EST) den Jan 19, 2008