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The Dresden Files: Ghost Story (Book 13) has arrived!

Isn't out for the Kindle until tomorrow so I'll be downloading it and reading it tomorrow. Got all 12 main novels and Side Jobs anthology read so I'm ready for the new one. Feels weird though, roughly halfway through the series leading up to 21-24 apocolypse trilogy ending.

The Big Apocalyptical Trilogy might not be 21-24. Changes was Supposed to be 10, so the series might be a few books longer than originally planned.

Jim did reveal that Changes was meant to be book 10 of 20, the 18-19-20 being the trilogy, so its been put back by at least two or three books, the official Dresden Wiki lists them tentatively as 21) "Hell's Bells" 22) "Stars and Stones" and 23) "Empty Night".

Actually, There's a Word of Jim (WoJ) archived by Serack over on the Butcher Boards which roughly says that originally there were going to be around 20 casebooks/casefiles and THEN a Big Apocalyptic Trilogy (B.A.T.) to top it all off, but it took him longer to get to the midpoint Changes which in turn pushed back his plans a bit. If anything, he's having trouble getting everything he's already planned out into their originally allotted books.

So at minimum we're getting 23+ books. More if his kid decides to go to Grad/Med School.
(His words, when I met him at DragonCon last year)
 
Still waitin' for Side Jobs to come out in paperback...no way I'm payin' $25 for a collection of previously published short stories.

Plus one previously unpublished story that takes place right after Changes.

Doesn't change the fact that the price tag is too high for what's bein' offered.

Unless you've read the shorts already I'd disagree, you're getting a full novel's worth of stories, some that can be difficult to get hold of in their anthology and novelette form, and you'd pay a hell of a lot more for all the anthologies. But I guess if you're only collecting paperbacks anyway you wouldn't want it in hardback whatever the price.
 
Still waitin' for Side Jobs to come out in paperback...no way I'm payin' $25 for a collection of previously published short stories.

Plus one previously unpublished story that takes place right after Changes.

Doesn't change the fact that the price tag is too high for what's bein' offered.

Wasn't meant to. Just thought it was worth pointing out that it's not all recycled content, but you can make of that information what you will.

I'll just point out, though, that aside from Backup and the couple of short stories available on Butcher's website, most of the content of Side Trips was material I'd never had the opportunity to read before. So previously published or not, most of it was brand-new to me, and no doubt to a lot of other people.

Which, really, is the whole point of a story collection, isn't it?
 
Yeah, Side Jobs was well worth the $16 I paid on Amazon.

Not only did it collect most of the short stories (published thus far at the time) it also contained the novellas Backup (a previous limited release from Thomas Raith's perspective), Aftermath (a new release from Karrin Murphy's perspective) and at the time another short Love Hurts which had yet to be published in it's requisite anthology.

Of course there's still (possibly) the original comic story Welcome to the Jungle, the RPG's short story AAAA Wizardry and of course the short Jim couldn't get the rights back for in time to make press, Even Hand (featuring the first person perspective of one Gentleman John Marcone) for the next anthology release.

As well as the Bigfoot trilogy of shorts he just finished working on recently.

and the unpublished WWII story featuring Klaus The Toymaker versus Nazi Demon S.S.
 
Oh shoot, I forgot the one about the Cubs Curse too... um Curses.

It's a great story that features the fae court of the Tylwyth Teg.
 
Yes he did. The Billy Goat Curse.

It's in the Anthology Naked City.

But it's been out for a while (far as I know.)
 
I haven't heard about the Klaus or Bigfoot ones either, though I now look forward to them a great deal.

I started reading tuesday morning after getting home from work, fell asleep about 2/3rds through, and woke up and finished. I'll avoid spoilers, but... damn. Goooooood book.
 
The WWII story featuring "Klaus the Toymaker" is as yet, "Unpublished".

Jim has made mention of Klaus in the series proper, and also let some details of his methods of magic slip out in interviews, but no one is certain if that story will ever be released officially. (Klaus uses the toys he makes as magical foci for his spells and such.) Jim said there was just something uniquely satisfying about a man taking down several Nazi summoned demon S.S. with just a small wind-up wooden duck.

Gotta love it.
 
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