On a forum, this is the format. But an eBook doesn't have to be that format. I find the space between the paragraphs to be a problem. The lack of indents too. I find it off-putting enough to want to fix it. If I received a printed book that was formatted that way, I'd be returning to the shop I bought it from.
The italics in the first sample are just the letters slanted. This is what happens when you take a non-italic font and make it italics on the fly. The second sample has italics that are true italics. Some of the letters in the true italics are different then the non-italic version and they look nicer. The first sample's italics just don't look right.
Well, clearly you're very, very picky about these things, but not everyone is going to react the same way. Most other people in this thread don't seem to be as upset about these matters as you are. You can't expect a publisher to bend over backward to accommodate you and you alone. Maybe you just need to learn to be less sensitive, to focus less on the way the letters are shaped and more on the actual story. Frankly I don't give a flying fig if the italics are "true" italics, whatever that means, or just slanted letters. Hell, I didn't even know there was a difference. Either way, it's recognizable which words are being emphasized. The
meaning gets across, and that's what matters.
Do you really want S&S making errors in your name?
Of course not, but typos are an inescapable fact of publishing. Even with dozens of eyes going over a text over and over again, there are always going to be some errors that get through, and some new errors that are added with each new iteration of the process. And you have yet to show me that these eBooks actually do have a disproportionate number of
actual errors compared to what a print book would have. You seem to be more upset about simple variations in font and formatting, things that aren't actually mistakes at all. What you denounce as laziness or incompetence seems to be mostly a difference in style between print and electronic formats. So frankly you're coming off as the J Who Cried Wolf, without a lot of credibility to your accusations of gross negligence. At this point I have no reason to believe that the eBook compilers are practicing less diligence than the typesetters and proofreaders for the physical books, since you haven't actually shown any evidence of that yet. (And please, if you do post any more screencaps, shrink them down so they don't stretch out the thread, or just post links.)
Would it hurt anyone/anything if the authors mentioned the state of the eBooks to say the editor?
As you've been told over and over again, the editor has no more control over that stage of the process than the writer does. You should know this by now. So why are you still asking this question?