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Neil Gaiman Book "American Gods" Free Online
Posted by
kdawson
on Fri Feb 29, 2008 11:52 AM
from the everybody-rtfb dept.
from the everybody-rtfb dept.
Denial93 writes "Geek favorite author Neil Gaiman has just made his multi-award-winning bestselling novel 'American Gods' available online for free. It's a trial by the publisher, and runs for one month. Gaiman writes in his blog: 'If it works, and people read it, then a) we may be able to put up another book and b) sooner or later they'll simply let us give away the book in electronic form....' It's an excellent book and much deserving of the many prestigious awards it has been getting."
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Online Ebooks are good, but... (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm glad to see that publishers are trying this out. Tor has a promotion running, in which they email you non-drm'd books (usually book 1 of a series) every week.
And, ever since I bought my prs-500, it has been difficult to stay legit - I have a hard time buying a book online for the same (or very similar) price to a real, dead tree paper book. Sure, I could feel good about saving the environment, but why does it cost the same to deliver an electronic book as it does to sell a hard copy? I thought shipping and handling, stocking and middle men markups had something to do with the high price of the written word... *sigh*
Greed.+ buzzword bingo (Score:2)
"If we can disintermediate effectively, the synergies of offering electronic downloads with rights management that preserves our revenue stream and allow us to leverage the long tail yadda yadda yadda ..."
Of course, there's nothing to stop the AUTHORS "disintermediating" the publishers ...
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You've finished all of Project Gutenberg? Impressive!
I got "American Gods" in hardcover back when... (Score:3, Insightful)
While most of reading "American Gods" was fun, I could see many references going over my head, and it was kind of like low-level overflights by a jet fighter. Whooooooosh!
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I laughed my ass off when Wednesday introduced himself as Wednesday, as I was already suspecting him to be at least related to who he was.
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While most of reading "American Gods" was fun, I could see many references going over my head
There was a passage where I was amazed to find the imagery exactly compatible with the "mythology" of the White Wolf role playing games: To avoid a technocratic roadblock they move to the penumbra spirit world across the veil and see a giant biotechnological pattern-spider where the men in black were in the physical realm.
At first I figured they had both drawn inspiration from the same source, but he described, spot on, so many of the elements the games had defined that it couldn't be mere coincidence.
So n
It's a hell of a book (Score:5, Interesting)
I would also highly recommend Good Omens, a collaboration between himself and Terry Pratchett. How to describe it? "Imagine if Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett wrote their version of the Omen and Rosemary's Baby, the Christian Apocalypse before Left Behind became so cheesy-popular. Yes, it's exactly like that. Go read it."
Re:It's a hell of a book (Score:4, Insightful)
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I wish he made the sequel: _The Neighbor Of The Beast_.
Somebody beat him to it. [www.last.fm]
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As for what they are testing... The idea goes like this.. if more people are aware of an authors work.. more people will in turn buy that authors work. The reason for this is because while a lot of people may not buy Unknown Author A's book, they are more than willing to take it for free to see if they like it and then buy more by that author if they did. Unfortunately, choosing someone like Niel Gaiman for the test case sorta fouls the
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I think it's a hilarious book, but I do wonder how much of it translates well to a non-British reader. A lot of my favourite parts, even the tone of voice and regional dialect in some cases, seem to depend on being familiar with the UK. Slashdot-relevant quote:
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I've never seen the appeal (Score:2)
of reading entire novels online. I mean, lets be honest here, American Gods isn't exactly a slim book, that's a lot of text to scroll through, using a reader or not.
I know there are a lot of people out there that seem to prefer the format, but for me part of the enjoyment of reading is getting away from everything else, including the computer.
Excitement followed by disappointment (Score:5, Informative)
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Releasing a book online as a bunch of over compressed JPEG files is just stupid. JPEG and text just do not go together, unless you have quality=100%. It would have been much better if they had used png, gif, or svg.
It is just a tiny bit better than using a photograph of each page, but only slightly.
What is wrong with pdf, or even
This has FAIL written all over it, in the bleeding edges of the text.
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I believe it's called a Library.
Re:Excitement followed by disappointment (Score:4, Informative)
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I've been meaning to read this book for a while, but keep forgetting to pick it up at the library or bookstore. I've already read its follow up, "Anansi Boys", an excellent book, and I expect no less from this one. I, for one, much prefer
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I could not agree more. The headline should read: Neil Gaiman Book "American Gods" Locked Up Online.
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The scratched music CDs are another matter. You would think the Library would be within fair use regulation
This book earned me a smack (Score:2)
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Full disclosure: I am indian by blood, and yes, a pagan.
Seems to be missing the point... (Score:2)
If someone with an iPhone or equivalent could comment on how readable it is on the small screen I'd be interested in knowing how far off the mark I am.
American Gods and Neverwhere (Score:4, Interesting)
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Funny enough... (Score:2)
That said, I am still pleased that Gaiman is doing this. As a writer myself, I am all for people getting used to the idea that you can actually find books and stories to read online. Maybe if they like it (most will bitch
I will never be able to forget (Score:2)
SUMMARY (Score:4, Interesting)
The book is available online for reading online only - not for download - and the online version looks like a series of highly compressed JPEG images given the "noise" surrounding the text. You would have to be fairly frugal to read the entire book on that site...and that is most likely by design. Read a chapter or two and then buy the book if you like it...and like your eyes.
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I thought the book was ok, for what it was. Unfortunately I didn't know what it was when I bought it, and deist mythology is best left in the past, in my opinion. What makes mythology interesting is not just the stories themselves, but their context. A modern novel is hardly the same as the basis of an entire civilization and as such doesn't hold nearly the s
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To see how to do on-line free books RIGHT, so that they're easy to read and help to pay the mortgage, look here [baen.com].
Online = good, but done horribly (Score:3, Informative)
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Isn't that the entire point of what the publisher is trying to do?
Give you a taste of the book, to entice you to buy it?
Can't download (Score:3, Interesting)
I have to say, I find it hard to see how he ever gets any books written - he's one of the more prolific bloggers I've come across
This sucks (Score:2)
If anyone can actually read the book with all that crap going on, they'll be delighted to learn that it isn't possible to save your spot, so you either have to read it all in one go, or randomly poke around to attempt to find your place through their insanely cra
Re:slashdot users. (Score:5, Funny)
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i read when I can't surf. If I can't surf, I can't read this. Dumb.
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If you're persistent, you could probably set your web browser to go through a logging proxy and then record all its GetPageImage requests to get the
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http://software.newsstand.com/bookrdr/live/Reader.swf?pguid=6527212571398720&isbn=9780060558123 [newsstand.com]
I was looking for a PDF I could download but this is as far as I could get.
Enjoy!
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Re:Read this book. (Score:5, Funny)
Spoiler: Shadow kills Snape.
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