From what I gather, e-books are a pretty major part of the market now. I think that part of the reason mass-market paperbacks are a dying format is that e-books have pretty much taken their place.
Another, more blasty-from-the-pasty idea is to bring back the anthologies and novella collections, packing multiple shorter installments from the Cinderella series into one book ("Tales From the 24th Century," with a DS9, VOY, and novel-original story in each book, for instance. Maybe RotF, Seekers, and a Kelvin series (the ship, not the timeline) for a 22nd/23rd century equivalent). If they're being published as trades anyway, after all...
On the other hand, I assume there's a business reason the novella and short story anthologies stopped, and it wasn't just a whim.
Yeah, my impression is they're more work but often not as profitable as novels. Was Shattered Light the last one?They do take a really long time to edit, and there's less editing time to go around now.
I'm pretty sure we'll probably be getting more novels than the ones that have been announced so far. With the last couple announcements we now have a book everything month from April through August, and I'm thinking if that was all we were going to get they would have spread them out a bit more.As I understand it, the belief has to do with the fact that there are so many new Trek shows in development. If we look at what we know of this year's current lineup, we have two Disco novels, two TOS and a TNG one in the lineup with possibly another TNG one by year's end. That's currently six novels. If following years follow the model of six to eight novels (likely if they're all trade paperbacks now) Then as years go on and new shows go in development, the novel lineup will likely be filled in with tie-in novels for the other shows. Indeed, the 2020 lineup could easily consist entirely of tie-in novels for Disco, the Picard show and the Section 31/Emperor Georgiou show.
I still don't see any reason to think we've seen the end of the DS9, Voy, and Ent books. If they could continue to sustain themselves this long after the TV series ended, I don't see any reason to think they'd stop now. Even when we do get books for all of the new series, as long as we don't end up with more than 12 series altogether there is still a chance we could just get one book in each series a year. Even if we do end up with 13 or more series altogether, one or two series could just take a year off, and then just rotate back around the year after that. I'm going to continue to be optimistic until we actually hear something from Pocket or one of the writers.If you suggest it I'll back you up
Seriously though, I do think there'd be enough of a market for that, and the pricing seems a bit more flexible on e-books, I guess depending on the size and I suppose other factors.
It was interesting what they did with the last New Frontier story "The Return". Basically if you take the 3 parts you have a full size novel (or close to full size). They could do something like that with other series too. Take a full size Enterprise novel and break it up in 2 or 3 parts---or I guess there's nothing really stopping them from 1 full size E-book as well. I guess it all depends on what you guys and the publisher/editors would want to achieve.
I mean, I'm actually surprised they haven't planned any E-books in the near future. It seemed for a while E-books was becoming the new thing but it seems to have dissipated a bit. I don't read other fiction all that much, are E-books still the future, or has it shifted back to print?
I'm only expecting two more novels to be announced for this year, David Mack's Control follow-up (well, a release date for that one) and a tie-in for the Picard Show.I'm pretty sure we'll probably be getting more novels than the ones that have been announced so far. With the last couple announcements we now have a book everything month from April through August, and I'm thinking if that was all we were going to get they would have spread them out a bit more.
*Inserts semi regular request for a new Peter David novel*
As you were.
Trade paperbacks are what many publishers are going to, because unlike with mass-market paperbacks, booksellers buy them outright and can discount them as they please. Which is possible, because the stores’ own discounts on trade paperbacks are much better than for mass-market paperbacks, which are returnable and which the profit margins are terrible for.
The disposable mass-market book was for an age of newsstands, when publishers would print far more copies than they ever hoped to sell; Waldenbooks was really the last chain that tried to make a go of them. Trades result in much less waste (print runs are smaller, and unsold books aren’t destroyed) — but they do cost more, to price in the added discount and higher-quality paper.
An alternative some publishers do these days is the “tall boy” paperbacks you see in grocery stores — these are regular paperbacks, about an inch taller. I’ve had both published, and generally prefer the trade paperbacks.
It's going to mess up my collectionI have all these nice MMPB's on my bookshelves (I'm close to having every Star Trek novel produced) and they look all nice and lined up. Because of my obsessiveness I even have them arranged by series and in order (though that is a challenge for crossover series---but I found a system for that as well) and now the bigger trades are going to mess that all up
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