Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix in paperback....

Which one is your favorite so far. Are they getting even better as the characters develop over time?

Moderators: Nightcrawler, Mint, Simatra, Asphodel, Athena Appleton

Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix in paperback....

Postby Scellanis » Monday 2 February 2004 5:48:44pm

just incase anyone is interested I just got this from Bloomsburry....

Bloomsbury Publishing Plc is delighted to announce that HARRY POTTER AND
THE ORDER OF THE PHOENIX, the latest in the bestselling series, will be
published in paperback at £7.99 on Saturday 10th July 2004. The book will
be published simultaneously in two paperback editions, one for children
and one jacketed for the adult market.

HARRY POTTER AND THE ORDER OF THE PHOENIX became the fastest selling book
of all time when it was published in hardback on June 21st 2003, and sold
1,777,541 copies in one day in the UK, according to Nielsen BookScan.

Scholastic US will publish the American paperback edition of HARRY POTTER
AND THE ORDER OF THE PHOENIX on 10th August 2004.
User avatar
Scellanis
Hufflepuff Prefect
 
Posts: 6570
Joined: Wednesday 11 September 2002 1:25:07pm
Location: Pretending to be a sea slug with 'go faster' stripes...

Postby Jotomicron » Monday 2 February 2004 5:51:06pm

Hmm... Excuse me... but what's the difference between 'hardback' and 'paperback'?
Jotomicron
Producer of Happiness and Mysterious Metamorphmagus
 
Posts: 3384
Joined: Wednesday 10 September 2003 1:37:07am

Postby Scellanis » Monday 2 February 2004 8:07:07pm

Hardback are bigger and double the price, paperback you can put in a bag and take on a train with you without needing a whole extra suitcase to carry it in...also paperback is a cheaper way to read the book to pieces, alot of people want to save the hardbacks and keep em neat and clean....Hardback on the other hand are much more useful for throwing at people and using as a weapon.....
User avatar
Scellanis
Hufflepuff Prefect
 
Posts: 6570
Joined: Wednesday 11 September 2002 1:25:07pm
Location: Pretending to be a sea slug with 'go faster' stripes...

Postby Ferrus » Monday 2 February 2004 8:07:11pm

but what's the difference between 'hardback' and 'paperback'?


Hard back is your version of OotP, its got hard covers.
Soft back is a book thats got soft covers (like most textbooks)
User avatar
Ferrus
Fully Qualified Wizard
 
Posts: 1066
Joined: Sunday 18 January 2004 1:50:04pm
Location: Returned from the Land of Temporal Oblivion

Postby Jotomicron » Monday 2 February 2004 8:20:02pm

Thx... In Portugal, there are no hardback versions of HP... What a shame!!!
Nevertheless, OotP in Portugal (softback) is almost as expensive as the UK harback version...
Jotomicron
Producer of Happiness and Mysterious Metamorphmagus
 
Posts: 3384
Joined: Wednesday 10 September 2003 1:37:07am

Postby choki » Tuesday 3 February 2004 10:08:46am

I wonder...since OotP is so thick, it will be better to have hardback/hardcover.
User avatar
choki
Gryffindor Prefect and Silent Guardian Of Stars
 
Posts: 3165
Joined: Thursday 1 May 2003 2:10:00pm
Location: Riding a black chocobo

Postby Athena Appleton » Tuesday 3 February 2004 8:02:06pm

Sonkem: :lol: I love your definitions of hardback and softback books!!!!

Whoever: Sayin most textbooks are softbacks are misleading... in the US (at least, in the Texas part of the US), almost all textbooks are hardback.

I personally prefer reading softback books, and am frankly annoyed that they aren't issued at the same time, because now I'm going to get the softback and have this hardback lying around taking up space. And, by the way, the OotP hardback takes up a LOT of space.
User avatar
Athena Appleton
Hogwarts Librarian, Headmistress of the Little Wizards Academy and Kisser of Boo-boos
 
Posts: 2267
Joined: Sunday 25 January 2004 6:42:54am
Location: Easin' down the yellow brick road....

Postby Ferrus » Tuesday 3 February 2004 8:53:04pm

Whoever: Sayin most textbooks are softbacks are misleading... in the US (at least, in the Texas part of the US), almost all textbooks are hardback.



wierd. in Spain NO text books ard hard cover... I suppose its a sort of cultural thingy...

And, by the way, the OotP hardback takes up a LOT of space.


:-) the Soft backed OotP is still going to take up a considerable amount of space
User avatar
Ferrus
Fully Qualified Wizard
 
Posts: 1066
Joined: Sunday 18 January 2004 1:50:04pm
Location: Returned from the Land of Temporal Oblivion

Postby Scellanis » Tuesday 3 February 2004 9:04:55pm

you know, in Britain hardback is what a book is when it comes out brand new, propably because it looks more impressive and is easier to stand up for display in a shop window, they have a very stiff thick fancy cover with a paper sleeve over the top to protect the fancy hard cover within but when you read it the paper sleeve gets all messed up and bugs me like crazy. Hard backs are always huge, bigger cover, font, better paper, better quality altogether....

paperback then comes out sometime later with a thin flexible cover in the same design as the paper sleeve usually and these tend to be considerably smaller with thinner paper, smaller font and because of the flexible cover they are more suitable for travelling and are of course half the price so if you love a book its cheaper to read them paperbacks than hardbacks
User avatar
Scellanis
Hufflepuff Prefect
 
Posts: 6570
Joined: Wednesday 11 September 2002 1:25:07pm
Location: Pretending to be a sea slug with 'go faster' stripes...

Postby Athena Appleton » Tuesday 3 February 2004 9:20:35pm

Sonkem wrote:you know, in Britain hardback is what a book is when it comes out brand new, propably because it looks more impressive and is easier to stand up for display in a shop window, they have a very stiff thick fancy cover with a paper sleeve over the top to protect the fancy hard cover within but when you read it the paper sleeve gets all messed up and bugs me like crazy. Hard backs are always huge, bigger cover, font, better paper, better quality altogether....


It's the same here... this is really interesting, all these people from all these different countries being part of one intenet community... i'm learning a lot!

Sonkem wrote:paperback then comes out sometime later with a thin flexible cover in the same design as the paper sleeve usually and these tend to be considerably smaller with thinner paper, smaller font and because of the flexible cover they are more suitable for travelling and are of course half the price so if you love a book its cheaper to read them paperbacks than hardbacks


i read and reread books so many times I don't even bother with the dust jacket (what we call the sleeve you're talking about) and throw it away immediately. Drives my husband nuts. And I'm bad about breaking the binds of my favorite books from reading them so often, holding them open with one hand, and putting them facedown when my kids clamor for my attention... That's why I hate hardbacks in the first place.
User avatar
Athena Appleton
Hogwarts Librarian, Headmistress of the Little Wizards Academy and Kisser of Boo-boos
 
Posts: 2267
Joined: Sunday 25 January 2004 6:42:54am
Location: Easin' down the yellow brick road....

Postby Scellanis » Tuesday 3 February 2004 11:13:09pm

I don't through the dust jackets away, they have the pretty artwork on them...I know I'm not meant to buy books for their cover but I do sometimes...got one about frogs and the Artemis Fowl books for the cover only...actually, cover art is why I'm into Terry Brooks too...lol
User avatar
Scellanis
Hufflepuff Prefect
 
Posts: 6570
Joined: Wednesday 11 September 2002 1:25:07pm
Location: Pretending to be a sea slug with 'go faster' stripes...

Postby Gower » Thursday 19 February 2004 4:10:39pm

I prefer paperbacks because they are easier to read at the breakfast table :razz:
But no way I was waiting for the paperback version of Ootp 8)
User avatar
Gower
Gryffindor Prefect, Head of Gryffindor Security Force and Member of Hogwarts Chess Team
 
Posts: 1429
Joined: Monday 8 September 2003 11:02:54pm

Postby Nobby » Thursday 19 February 2004 4:57:18pm

I personally will get the paperback of OotP so that i have all the books in hardback and paperback!
User avatar
Nobby
Hufflepuff Prefect and The Half Blood Prince
 
Posts: 2156
Joined: Sunday 15 February 2004 2:01:34pm
Location: Having dinners with the ewoks

Postby Plep » Thursday 26 February 2004 1:16:46pm

Paperback rules!!! :grin:

It's cheaper, easier to carry with you...and best of all, after a few years it looks like you actually read it, and not like it has been standing in a bookcase all the time... :)
User avatar
Plep
Waster of Time, Proud Hufflepuffer
 
Posts: 201
Joined: Thursday 19 February 2004 11:48:04pm
Location: A mousehole in the Hufflepuff common room....don't ask....

Postby highsorcerer » Thursday 26 February 2004 7:50:03pm

Actually, there are two forms of paperbacks, trade paperback and mass market paperback. Mass market measure 10.5 cm by 17.5 cm. Trade paperbacks are 13.25 cm by 19.25 cm. In the United States, trade paperbacks contain the original artwork from the dust jacket on the cover of the books, whereas mass market paperbacks do not.
User avatar
highsorcerer
Department of Mysteries Unspeakable and Registered Animagus (Parrot)
 
Posts: 552
Joined: Monday 23 June 2003 9:28:23am
Location: Area 51 (Headquarters, US Department of Mysteries)

Next

Return to The Books

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests

cron