Because you can't do all THIS digitally. The Thorn and the Blossom, a Two Sided Love Story, by the lovely and talented Theodora Goss, published by Quirk books. Read the accordion-style book one way, you get one side of star-crossed love from one character's perspective, flip it over and read the other point of view. A work of art in storytelling.
It's breathtaking!
And I'm giving this new copy away to one of you fine folk who comment below, with hopes that you will show off this book and its awesomeness and continue to support print books. While I appreciate digital publishing, there's just something magical about opening a book. And there's nothing quite so magical as a book that's also a work of art!
(Also stay tuned, I'll be making an announcement about an anthology that Ms. Goss and I will be in that I'm very excited about.)
Giveaway instructions: (USA only)
Leave a comment on something to do with print books and how you feel about them.
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(Please note your +1s in your comment to keep track)
Winner will be picked via Random.Org a week from now: Jan 20th
Cheers and blessings and happy reading!
gooodluck all
ReplyDeleteI love print books and I don't read ebooks at all. I just love the feel of holding a book and turning the pages. Plus I love my shelves of books!
ReplyDeletethanks for the contest!
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I've always preferred print books to e-books. There's something about the weight of the book in your hand and the smell of brand new book that seems to make the magic more alive. E-books can't create that level of magic.
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I love holding books, flipping the pages, the smell of them... Ebooks doesn't have that and I don't read book electronically.
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I feel that, as a writer, digital books aren't good. As a reader, I like to have books on my shelf and I like to hold the book and smell the newness of it. As a writer, I feel that if I wanted to see my writing on a screen, I could do that on my computer or transfer the file to an iPad or Kindle.
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i love the touch feel &smell of real books.Old new books bookstores real books make my day.FB1 &twitter1
ReplyDeleteI enjoy ebooks but they can never take the place of print. There is nothing more exciting than ordering a book and anticipating its delivery. When that book arrives you rip into the packaging and remove your new piece of art. The crack of opening your book for the first time, the smell of fresh print, and the feel of the paper between your fingers. No ebook could ever provide that type connection.
ReplyDeleteThat book looks like a work of art! I love reading ebooks, but I think print books are wonderful, too! We live a long distance from the nearest bookstores, so sometimes ebooks allow us the chance to get books when new books by favorite authors come out. I don't need to kill a tree every time I want to read a story, but I also think that there are some stories that are so special that they need to be read in print instead of electronically.
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Wow, that book is gorgeous! I think there will always be a place for print books. I don't have enough shelf space to buy hard copies of everything, but I love having my favorite books in print-- especially because it's easier to lend them out to friends and get them hooked too! :)
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I'm a huge lover of digital but I make it a point to buy those books that I know are worthy of my limited shelf space.
ReplyDeleteSuch as books with awesome covers. Or those with colored print and even the ones with the frayed edges!
Publishers that make that extra effort to make a book worthy are cool in my book!
Love the book you're featuring. How cool!
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Thanks!
I adore print books more than anything, yet I can't help but love the convenience and ease of ebooks! But if all books were as beautiful as that one, I'd definitely swear off ebooks. :) Some books are just too beautiful to not own.
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Since I own another book written is this manner, I know how neat it really is (one side is about divorce, ), I know first hand how important print books are. Neither story would be the same if it were written in 2 books, or even one half one way, with the rest following. But to me the most important thing about print books is while you may loan a book out to someone and never get it back, it is easily enough replaced with another copy. We've all lost things from our computers which we've NEVER been able to replace (and seriously if you haven't, please tell me how!), and it has killed us. Granted, replacing an e-book would be fairly simple also, but still....
ReplyDeleteThe other thing is I LOVE the smell of books; old books, new books, books which have been damaged in some way, books given to me by others usually have their smell on them to so when I pick that book up, I am reminded, again, of the fact they thought enough of me to gove me a book in the first place. My sil reads all the time also, but she will only read new books, she doesn't care for the musty smells or smells from previous owners. To me the smell reminds me a bit of my grandmother's perfume, a smell which brings back warm, loving memories of someone I love with my entire being. How can anyone "love" something as impersonal as a computer?
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There are few things in life that I treasure. By "things" I mean tangible, inanimate objects. Books are one of those things. I'm kind of a book hoarder. I can't remember when I began my love affair with books. Maybe it's because I was always rather odd and awkward around other kids, but I found books to be far more faithful as friends. From my earliest meetings with Dick and Jane and Laura Ingalls, to Mary Lennox, Alice, Black Beauty, Bridget Jones, the Ya-yas, Hamlet, Emma, Perrin Aybara, Frodo, Aslan, and countless others have drifted from printed pages to settle into the very fiber of my being. Nights huddled under my covers with a flashlight hours past bedtime. Summer afternoons under (or in) shady trees. There's just something about the FEEL of a book. The quiet crackling of the spine as it's opened. The whisper of the turning pages. The smell of old books, in particular is incomparable. One of my favorite books is a well-worn copy of "The Stranger Star" by Allen Crafton. It belonged to my grandmother as a child. I love imagining her as a little girl, curled up on an easy chair or couch reading that very same book. It's almost as if it holds memories of her. Some essence of who she is. I now have the joy of sharing it with my own children. I can't imagine reading fairy stories to my kids from an e-reader, let alone passing one down as an heirloom. No, for me, REAL books are the only way to read. To put them in electronic format is to strip them of their character and seems a disservice to the story itself. The design of a book adds too much to the overall appeal to be disposed of. "A Series of Unfortunate Events" would not have the same impact in mass market paperback as it does in hardcover with deckle-edged pages. I love my laptop and my smart phone, but you can keep your e-readers!
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ReplyDeleteAmazing book. I haven't taken the leap to digital books yet, although e-book sales of my books far outweigh sales of printed books.
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