>Last night I attended a dinner honoring a new author, Catherine Murdock, whose first YA novel, Dairy Queen, is being published by Houghton Mifflin next month.
>Last night I attended a dinner honoring a new author, Catherine Murdock, whose first YA novel,
Dairy Queen, is being published by Houghton Mifflin next month. Chatting with Murdock's editor Margaret Raymo, I mentioned that we had received yet another door-stopper (I refer only to size) of a review copy yesterday, a new Aidan Chambers novel clocking in at 808 pages. Says Margaret, "well, long is the new black."
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Jeff Kozlowski
>808 pages....Wow, I wonder how long that took to write?I wrote a novel back in 1999 which was made up of 384 pages of pure adrenaline and I thought it was going to be the death of me. 808 pages, I'll pass.
Posted : Apr 18, 2006 03:14
rindambyers
>Oooh! Big, thick lumpy, poorly edited books that sell well being used as weapons of mass brain destruction....?Posted : Apr 17, 2006 11:40
Melinda
>But if somebody's bothering you, you can always take a big book and whack them with it, and they'll go away. Though they might bring a cop back with them.Seems like I do a lot of skimming with those big volumes, though. There's lots of stuff in lots of these books that adds nothing to the story.
Posted : Apr 16, 2006 03:10
rindambyers
>Actually, I'll confess, I don't really like series unless I like the series in the first place and can have ALL of the books in front of me at once....it makes me feel in control! But big fat books are just too heavy to carry around to favorite SSR spots like the coffeeshops, etc., anymore...Posted : Apr 15, 2006 11:38
Roger Sutton
>Reviewing (or not) "Volume One" is a complete minefield.Posted : Apr 15, 2006 05:35