This far in advance, the schedule can't be assumed to be carved in stone. New things could still be added.
*crosses fingers for a USS Kelvin novel*
This far in advance, the schedule can't be assumed to be carved in stone. New things could still be added.
They print a book in TP only to release it again as an MM. Guess Pocket likes pissing money away.
They are for different sections on the market, different demographics. Some SF readers and libraries only buy trades/hardcovers. Some ST collectors only buy MMPBs.
Why did Pocket start doing hardcovers in the first place? Because "Spock's World" created quite a bit of excitement that ST tie-in fiction had finally moved upmarket. Had "come of age". It was a really exciting time. "Spock's World" was bought and read by people who'd never picked up a ST novel before. Some libraries refuse to stock MMPBs. Some people buying books as gifts prefer the size/weight of a hardcover or trade. As I said, they are for different sections on the market, and different demographics.why not just print in mass the first time around. It's most probably cheaper to do anyway.
Honestly? I have the hunch that Pocket couldn't afford Peter David for an original mass-market (I recall John Ordover saying as much a decade ago when Restoration came out and New Frontier shifted to hardcovers), but the economics are different enough on trades that, even though the book would sell less in trade, they could pay him more.If the market for mass market is larger then the trade market, why not just print in mass the first time around. It's most probably cheaper to do anyway.
Honestly? I have the hunch that Pocket couldn't afford Peter David for an original mass-market (I recall John Ordover saying as much a decade ago when Restoration came out and New Frontier shifted to hardcovers), but the economics are different enough on trades that, even though the book would sell less in trade, they could pay him more.If the market for mass market is larger then the trade market, why not just print in mass the first time around. It's most probably cheaper to do anyway.
But if you notice, there hasn't been a hardcover Trek in quite some time.
Ian, some of this is nonsense.Of course I noticed. TPBs have become more economical for the publishers. The trend towards TPBs was happening in the wider SF market long before ST went that way. ST TPBs have essentially replaced ST hardcovers.But if you notice, there hasn't been a hardcover Trek in quite some time.
It may be abnormal, but I have seen it other places; Baen and Del Rey have reprinted some of their omnibuses originally released in trades as mass-market volumes. Tor's also done this with their Halo novels.One oddity with Pocket is the reprinting of trades in mass-market. That's abnormal.
It may be abnormal, but I have seen it other places; Baen and Del Rey have reprinted some of their omnibuses originally released in trades as mass-market volumes. Tor's also done this with their Halo novels.One oddity with Pocket is the reprinting of trades in mass-market. That's abnormal.
Tor's also done this with their Halo novels.
Heck, Tor sometimes releases the trade paperback and the mass-market simultaneously. Different audiences, different markets, different distribution channels. And we'll often do a small hardcover run as well, just for the libraries.
One oddity with Pocket is the reprinting of trades in mass-market. That's abnormal.
Fine. I'll concede that my observations are wrong. Maybe I need to get out of the non-fiction sections of the bookstores, where books almost never reach mass-market.Not in my experience.One oddity with Pocket is the reprinting of trades in mass-market. That's abnormal.
It may be abnormal, but I have seen it other places; Baen and Del Rey have reprinted some of their omnibuses originally released in trades as mass-market volumes. Tor's also done this with their Halo novels.One oddity with Pocket is the reprinting of trades in mass-market. That's abnormal.
But if you notice, there hasn't been a hardcover Trek in quite some time.
I hope that, someday, Pocket will take another shot at the hardcover market.
If I recall, Pocket still does Hardcover just not for Star Trek.
Acid-free paper, so the book stays the same color over the years.There is nothing good at all to recommend trade vs. MM.
February
As we know, many fans refuse to buy trade sized (or hardcover) books. So this will be new for many.
- Pocket ENT mass-market reprint, Beneath the Raptor's Wing.
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