Hardcover-Worthy
Sep. 19th, 2009 10:47 amSo, I spent some time thinking about my previous post about hardcovers vs. paperbacks, and decided that some authors must be good enough to warrant picking 'em up in hardcover when they come out. I went through my shelves and made a list of "living authors whose books I'm likely to pick up":
( List cut to spare your scroll bar. )
(Note that this is limited to prose fiction, and is not entirely exhaustive — it's just the result of one pass over my shelves.)
That's 31 authors. For the first pass at hardcover-worthiness, Banks, Egan, Gaiman, Miéville, and Rowling were shoo-ins. Gibson appears to be 2/3rds through another trilogy, and I got the first two in hardcover, so he gets a pass for at least the next book (if it's not a big step up from Spook Country, he may get downgraded to paperback). With some deliberation, I added Reynolds, Varley (who always entertains me to a degree I always find surprising), Vernor Vinge, and (after posting that poll) Williams.
Some authors might get stuck in paperback country because I'm partway through one of their series (in paperback), and I'd rather all the books in a series were the same size (Bujold, Hamilton). Some are too darn prolific, and I can't necessarily spare the room (Pratchett, Hamilton again). Some haven't been impressing me as much as they used to (King, Niven, Simmons). For some, I loved their early work, but they've been turning more and more to political thrillers, which are not my thing (Robinson, Sterling). Others, I just haven't yet read enough of their work to judge (Lake, Stross). Et cetera.
Anyway, I eventually winnowed down the hardcover-worthy list to:
( List cut to spare your scroll bar. )
(Note that this is limited to prose fiction, and is not entirely exhaustive — it's just the result of one pass over my shelves.)
That's 31 authors. For the first pass at hardcover-worthiness, Banks, Egan, Gaiman, Miéville, and Rowling were shoo-ins. Gibson appears to be 2/3rds through another trilogy, and I got the first two in hardcover, so he gets a pass for at least the next book (if it's not a big step up from Spook Country, he may get downgraded to paperback). With some deliberation, I added Reynolds, Varley (who always entertains me to a degree I always find surprising), Vernor Vinge, and (after posting that poll) Williams.
Some authors might get stuck in paperback country because I'm partway through one of their series (in paperback), and I'd rather all the books in a series were the same size (Bujold, Hamilton). Some are too darn prolific, and I can't necessarily spare the room (Pratchett, Hamilton again). Some haven't been impressing me as much as they used to (King, Niven, Simmons). For some, I loved their early work, but they've been turning more and more to political thrillers, which are not my thing (Robinson, Sterling). Others, I just haven't yet read enough of their work to judge (Lake, Stross). Et cetera.
Anyway, I eventually winnowed down the hardcover-worthy list to:
- Banks
- Egan
- Gaiman
- Gibson
- Miéville
- Reynolds
- Rowling
- Varley
- V. Vinge
- Williams
- . . . and one more to be chosen from
- Brin
- Hamilton
- MacLeod
- Sterling
- Stross