Maybe Black Library does care about paperbacks after all… (January 2017)

Two days ago I wrote an article asking why Black Library don’t tend to put much support behind their books when they’re released in paperback. Yesterday I followed up with another article to clarify what I was talking about, using the example of Aaron Dembski-Bowden’s The Talon of Horus. The point, as I saw it, was that all of these great books are being released in paperback after having already had hardback editions, but they’re appearing without any advertising or promotion from Black Library. Well, what do you suppose happened today…?

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Continuing the Black Library paperback debate

Yesterday I put up a post talking about Black Library’s approach to marketing their paperback releases, which I was prompted to write after realising just how many paperback editions of existing books have been released recently with barely any acknowledgement from Black Library. Various people chimed in with thoughts and comments, which were all really interesting to read – it’s always interesting to get this sort of response and discussion.

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Why Doesn’t Black Library Love Paperbacks? (January 2017)

“All releases in all formats” is a catchphrase that’s bandied about a lot in regards to the Horus Heresy series, referring to Black Library’s commitment to a) release all of the audio stories in prose format, and b) make all of the main-range books available in the three different physical formats – hardback, large format paperback, and small (mass market, or legacy) paperback. What’s most interesting about that phrase is the very fact that it exists at all, given that multiple formats is a pretty new concept for Black Library. You only have to go back a few years, to 2012’s release of Angel Exterminatus, to find the first of the main-range Horus Heresy books to be released in hardback; before that it was only the occasional book such as the Sabbat Worlds anthology that came out in hardback.

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New Age of Sigmar!

There’s been a lot of talk online of late that since Black Library have started talking about upcoming releases it’s been all 40k and Horus Heresy, but there’s not been any new Age of Sigmar books mentioned. I wrote a quick blog post a couple of months ago about the two upcoming Age of Sigmar novels that were discussed at Black Library Live, but there hasn’t been any word on what else might be coming up in the Mortal Realms.

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2016 In Summary

I often try to do things a little differently here on Track of Words, but sometimes it’s worth just jumping on the bandwagon and going for it – like with blog posts looking back at the year that was. Last year I wrote a 2015 In Summary blog post, and I’m doing the same this year – taking a look at how 2016 was for me as a reader and a blogger (let’s not talk about what it’s been like in the rest of the world…*shudders*). I’ll try not to ramble too much, so let’s start off with a few numbers…

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QUICK REVIEW: A Trick of the Light – Josh Reynolds

The first new Black Library e-short of 2017, Josh Reynolds’ A Trick of the Light is his second story featuring Lukas the Trickster after the audio drama The Art of Provocation. This time we go right back to Lukas’ induction into the Space Wolves and another event that’s enshrined in his backstory – his battle with the doppelgangrel. Abandoned in the harsh wilderness of Fenris, Lukas must battle all manner of dangers if he’s to return to the Fang and become one of the Sky Warriors, not least this most lethal of predators. He has a score to settle first, however…

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Black Library Weekly – W/C 26/12/16

Hello and welcome to the first instalment of Black Library Weekly in 2017 – Happy New Year! As usual, I’m going to be taking a look at the Black Library-related news from the week just gone, which this time round involved a new campaign of special offers as well as a small but interesting handful of new releases.

As with the last couple of weeks I’m going to look at things in a slightly different order to usual – once we’re back in the usual swing of things I’ll revert back to the Monday/Midweek/Weekend format again.

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Black Library Advent Calendar 2016 – Recap

As usual Black Library closed off 2016 with an Advent Calendar series, which gave us 24 short stories or audio dramas from across the range of settings – 40k, Horus Heresy, Age of Sigmar and even Blood Bowl. As I did for the last couple of years, I read the stories as they came available and posted reviews of each one, but now it’s all over I want to take a moment to look back at the Advent Calendar as a whole.

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Warhammer 40,000 Legends Issue Four – Fifteen Hours by Mitchel Scanlon

For Issue Four of Hachette’s Warhammer 40,000 Legends Collection the action turns away from Space Marines and Inquisitors to the Imperial Guard, and a humble guardsman. Fifteen Hours by Mitchel Scanlon was first published waaaay back in 2005 and is one of those books that hasn’t quite made it to be an all-out Black Library classic, but is nonetheless held as something of an Imperial Guard must-read. A quick look on Goodreads shows it to be rated at 3.7 out of 5, which is pretty good, while on Amazon (UK) it’s got nine 5 star reviews and one 4 star review! Sounds like it’s worth a read, right?

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Warhammer 40,000 Legends – Overview

On the off chance that you haven’t heard (perhaps your head’s been in the sand for the last few months), Hachette and Black Library have teamed up to create a partwork series of Black Library 40k novels called the Warhammer 40,000 Legends Collection. Every fortnight a new book is released, and over time you can build up an awesome collection of 40k novels in lovely hardback format, complete with spine artwork that fits together to create (eventually) an original piece of art featuring all manner of famous 40k characters.
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