T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
287.1 | | DRZEUS::WALL | | Thu Nov 21 1985 12:08 | 10 |
| I assume by "the first three" you mean Dune, Dune Messiah, and Children of
Dune. God Emperor of Dune has been offered through the SFBC -- that's
where I got my copy, anyhow. Neither Heretics of Dune nor
ChapterHouse: Dune has ever been offered, possibly because they're still
selling well enough (I don't think Doubleday is the publisher) that
the Club hasn't gotten the opportunity yet.
Anyone know anything more?
Dave Wall
|
287.2 | | PENNSY::ASANKAR | | Thu Nov 21 1985 21:16 | 8 |
| All I know is that someone is treading on dangerous ground there:
What on earth do you mean by waiting for the other 3? Subject for
another note. Ummm. Oh, yes. Those books were (are) originally
published by someone else-Putnam I believe, so SFBC won't have
them for a while at least. If you are really wanting, go to the
library-some of us have to do it for everything we read.
sam(15)
|
287.3 | | AKOV75::BOYAJIAN | | Fri Nov 22 1985 05:03 | 15 |
| It's true that the books are originally published by Putnam, but that's
neither here nor there. The SFBC almost always publishes a new book within
a month or so of the trade edition (and sometimes *before* it --- there
are not a few books whose first editions are SFBC editions, not even counting
the omnibus volumes that the SFBC likes to put out).
However, the SFBC has to buy rights to the books, just like any publisher
does, and if the author's agent asks for too much, the sale does not take
place. The Literary Guild might well have picked them up, though. It's my
guess that Herbert's agent wanted too much for the last two books, and so
the SFBC didn't buy them. Remember, the SFBC offers their selections at
relatively cheap prices --- much cheaper than any other book club. And so,
generally has a lower budget for buying publication rights.
--- jerry
|
287.4 | Can I join? | ELIS::BUREMA | Metam properamus ad unam | Fri Feb 22 1991 09:14 | 10 |
| As far as I know the Science Fiction Book Club is American based. I am
Dutch, and would like to join it. As far as I know however, membership
is only accepted from the USA or Canada.
Is this true? If not, could someone provide me with an subscribtion form?
If it is true, is there some Science Fiction Book Club operating in Europe
(or elsewhere) accepting European (i.e. Dutch) members?
Thanks, Wildrik. 8-)
|
287.5 | | RUBY::BOYAJIAN | One of the Happy Generations | Tue Feb 26 1991 01:22 | 11 |
| I don't know if the Science Fiction Book Club restricts its membership
to the USA and Canada, but it wouldn't surprise me if it did. Since
books have different publishers in different countries, for a book
club to be able to clear international publication, distribution, and
sale rights would be nothing short of a major headache to accomplish.
As for book clubs in other countries, I know that there *used* to
be a Science Fiction Book Club in the UK, but I don't know if they
are still operating, or whether they accept non-UK memberships.
--- jerry
|
287.6 | | NOTIBM::MCGHIE | Thank Heaven for small Murphys ! | Tue Feb 26 1991 21:02 | 7 |
| Well I saw an ad for the SF Bookclub in an issue of Omni recently
and the fine print said only available to residents in the U.S.
and Canada.
Too bad for me too, here way Downunder.
Mike
|
287.7 | | ZENDIA::REITH | Jim Reith DTN 226-6102 - LTN2-1/F02 | Wed Feb 27 1991 16:02 | 4 |
| I too noticed the fine print in the ad. This leads me to suggest
getting a local magazine and checking out ITS advertisers. I would
think that advertisers in a local magazine (if there are any) would be
specific for your market.
|
287.8 | Just a suggestion | SELECT::RIVERS | I...wanna fall in love. | Thu Mar 07 1991 13:37 | 10 |
| re .6
I suppose you could strike up a deal with someone in a particularly
friendly mood here in the U.S. or Canada to sign up for you, get the
books, send you the monthly literature and ship the books to you (being
reimburse for postage). Dunno if this would be cost/time effective,
tho.
---kim
|
287.9 | I was a member once, but that was about 25 year ago | RAGS::GINGRAS | | Mon Aug 10 1992 14:11 | 16 |
| This was the first note I ran across that was labelled 'science fiction
book club', so I figured it would be the right place for some
questions.
I'd like to know, 1) is the science fiction book club worth joining?,
2) do they offer only new books, or throw in hard covers of older
books (for example, as noted earlier, would they still offer books from
the Dune series?), 3) What's their typical price these days? 4) Do
they offer incentives to present members to get new members to join?
- by that I mean can a member get a book or 2 free, and the applying
member get 2 or 3 free while agreeing to buy 3 more.
I stick almost exclusively to paperbacks, but there are a few authors
whose titles I'd love to have in hardback.
Thanks for the information.
_Marty
|
287.10 | The long answer | DPDMAI::MILLERR | I have a cunning plan... | Mon Aug 10 1992 14:58 | 62 |
| RE: last
Marty,
I've been a member for a while now.
- Yes, they do offer a couple of free books to current members who
bring in new recruits. If you have a friend who's a member maybe you
can split the freebies.
Look in genre related magazines, such as OMNI, for their offers.
Usually it's 4 or 5 books free, and you have to buy 3 more in the next
year.
They have very few special offers for members. Just a few clearance
sales on books they couldn't get anybody to buy (in my opinion).
- Cost is usually between $5 and $8. Plus s/h which is about $2 - $3.
- Quality. This is a big issue with me. I want my books to last. I
prefer publisher's editions, since they are full sized and printed on
nice thick paper. The SF Book Club prints their own editions, They
are smaller than publisher editions and are on much thinner paper (I
can sometimes read the next page through). Think of them as trade
paperbacks with hard covers.
- Yes, they do have older books such as the Dune series. But only ones
which they have contracts with the original publishers on. You may not
be able to get some author's works through them. Example: they carry
some Heinlein books, but only 6 or 7 of them. I keep seeing the same
works offered over and over through the years. They also have a
tendency to put a series of books together into one anthology edition.
These are kind of nice.
- Future Value: if you ever try to re-sell one to a used book store,
don't count on getting more than a dollar or two for them. The value
is just barely above paperbacks as far as they are concerned.
For this reason I would recommend looking around used bookstores. You
will probably see TONS of book club editions for 2 or 3 bucks. You can
probably find the ones you want there. Identify them by the "Book Club
Edition" stamped inside the front dust jacket. (Some stores cut that
part of the jacket off!)
If you are a bit of a scavenger, try to find the PUBLISHERS editions
in the used bookstores. They are MUCH more valuable, better made, and
will add value to your home collection. ANd it's FUN to find them! I
have several _first_ editions that I got for $5 - $8 - less than I would
pay at SF Book Club!
To conclude, I'm thinking of quitting the club. I have found more
interesting and valuable books at garage sales and used book stores.
I've gotten the bug to own first editions. So I guess it depends on
what you really want - a cheap book you can read over and over without
worrying about, or a publisher's edition that will be more valuable to
you.
Have Fun!
- Russ
|
287.11 | | TECRUS::REDFORD | | Mon Aug 10 1992 17:51 | 18 |
| Second the opinion on the quality of the books. It's
intermediate between regular hardbacks and paperbacks, which is
not surprising considering that the price is also intermediate.
The page edges are often left rough, and the bindings are not sturdy.
Still, they are an improvement over paperbacks. They occupy more
volume, though, which can be a problem as your collection gets large.
Speaking of this trade-off, I read about another interesting
angle on this in a column by Don Lancaster. This was about
one-off publishing by laser printer. The source material is all
kept in Postscript. When an order comes in, it gets printed and
bound on the spot. He apparently does this with
his own books. It's not quite the quality of hardbacks (you
don't get a sewn binding, for instance, and 300 dpi isn't quite
enough), but it's way cheaper for low-run technical books. I
would love to upgrade my old paperbacks to acid-free paper this way.
/jlr
|
287.12 | another opinion | BICYCL::RYER | | Tue Aug 11 1992 11:30 | 22 |
| I've just recently re-joined the SFBC, after having cancelled a couple of years
ago. I received an offer in the mail where I could get six books free for
joining and could purchase a seventh for $3.98, or something like that. Well,
when I got the final bill for the seven books, it was $12.73. The flyer said
the SFBC prints on acid-free paper, and I found that the quality of the books
was much improved over what I remember. The finish on the paper was smooth,
and the page edges of every book were cut smooth. Sure, they're probably not
as nice as the publisher's editions, but I am quite pleased. The prices for
additional books looks to be $7 to $10, plus shipping, and I have to buy three
more books in the next three years. Actually, I joined because _The Dragon
Reborn_, by Robert Jordan, was one of the offered selections, and I just wasn't
interested in waiting any longer to read it and didn't want to spring for the
hardback bookstore edition. In order to fufill my obligation, I figure
it'll cost me somewhere around $45 - $50 total, which translates to $5 or less
per book. Not too bad. Of course, if you continue to buy books, it becomes
quite a bit more expensive than purchasing paperbacks. I like the feel of
hardback books, but that's a personal preference. Anyway, I'm glad I joined.
I've got a ton (well, maybe half a ton) of new reading material that I can't
wait to get into. I've almost finished _TDR_, and can't really decide which
one to read next.
-Patrick
|
287.13 | Worth a try if I can get some of my favorites in the free offer | RAGS::GINGRAS | | Thu Aug 13 1992 09:41 | 12 |
| Ok, I'm willing to give the SFBC a try. There are only a few used
book stores in the Manchester/Nashua area and its rare to find hard
cover SciFi books - almost impossible to find the ones I want.
Does anyone in the Spit Brook facility have either the membership
application that comes with the club flyers; or a copy of Omni magazine
in which they wouldn't mind if I clipped the application?
I want to see what I can get for free selections because that would
determine whether I bother to join.
Thanks.
_Marty
|
287.14 | Other possibilities. | VERGA::H_JONES | | Tue Aug 25 1992 16:34 | 4 |
| You can also usually find an application in the front of
ANALOG or Fantasy and Science Fiction Magazine.
helen
|