How to judge a book
- jts
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How to judge a book
How does that proverb go... a book and its cover are soon parted? Oh well.
I've been hunting around trying to decide what potential Christmas presents to drop hints about, and in the process I've been struck, not for the first time, by how astonishingly ugly Slate & Shell's books are.
In the first place, it baffles me. Does everyone else in the Go community find these covers attractive? Do they look much better in person? Does the publisher use his books as craft projects for his children? Kiseido has shown that you can produce attractive books for a niche market without spending too much on graphic design... or, indeed, even knowing much about these "color" things and whether they "clash". It's curious. Does anyone know what's at the bottom of this mystery? Do I just have idiosyncratic taste?
Okay, but furthermore. Evil in promise is turpe; I have trouble believing that a company that publishes so many unattractive books would put much care into paper, or binding, or proofreading, or even into verifying the quality of their books. (It's like when someone links you to a "really interesting website" that is liberally littered with multi-color fonts, CAPS, and low-resolution images. Ctrl-W.) Are S&S's customers satisfied with the books?
I've been hunting around trying to decide what potential Christmas presents to drop hints about, and in the process I've been struck, not for the first time, by how astonishingly ugly Slate & Shell's books are.
In the first place, it baffles me. Does everyone else in the Go community find these covers attractive? Do they look much better in person? Does the publisher use his books as craft projects for his children? Kiseido has shown that you can produce attractive books for a niche market without spending too much on graphic design... or, indeed, even knowing much about these "color" things and whether they "clash". It's curious. Does anyone know what's at the bottom of this mystery? Do I just have idiosyncratic taste?
Okay, but furthermore. Evil in promise is turpe; I have trouble believing that a company that publishes so many unattractive books would put much care into paper, or binding, or proofreading, or even into verifying the quality of their books. (It's like when someone links you to a "really interesting website" that is liberally littered with multi-color fonts, CAPS, and low-resolution images. Ctrl-W.) Are S&S's customers satisfied with the books?
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p2501
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Re: How to judge a book
All S&S books I have a very good in quality (speaking of the content and the book it self).
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imabuddha
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Re: How to judge a book
The content in all of the S&S books I have is very good. I can't say I'm a fan of the covers, but they aren't indicative of the quality overall.
The only binding that I feel is below par is in the hardcover version of Fundamental Principles of Go. It's not falling apart, but it's the same as a paperback only > 2x the price. :/
The only binding that I feel is below par is in the hardcover version of Fundamental Principles of Go. It's not falling apart, but it's the same as a paperback only > 2x the price. :/
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RobertJasiek
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Re: How to judge a book
Different publishers use different production philosophies, sometimes different from book to book. Slate&Shell often seems to have the policy "No cover design but 1-colour printing to minimise production costs and, dependening on the book, minimise the endconsumer price". Kiseido uses the policy "Pay royalty for an art print, integrate it in standard cover design, pay for cover paper protection, we are big enough to keep endconsumer prices low nevertheless". I use the policy "Naive art is beautiful, cover paper protection would yet further increase the endconsumer price".
The cover says exactly nothing about quality of contents, paper, proofreading etc. To judge the contents, judge the contents instead of juding the cover!
How to judge a book's contents is another topic. E.g., while I think it should be judged in relation to the price (esp. because quality of contents can vary by 1:1,000 from book to book), some others first choose a maximal price they want to spend on any book and then look only among those books they want to afford. Other aspects include what or which teaching style a reader wants to find in a book, amount of contents, amount / scope of theory, accuracy, suitability for improvement and ranks of readers, objective quality of contents (also in comparison to other books or verbal teachers) etc.
The cover says exactly nothing about quality of contents, paper, proofreading etc. To judge the contents, judge the contents instead of juding the cover!
How to judge a book's contents is another topic. E.g., while I think it should be judged in relation to the price (esp. because quality of contents can vary by 1:1,000 from book to book), some others first choose a maximal price they want to spend on any book and then look only among those books they want to afford. Other aspects include what or which teaching style a reader wants to find in a book, amount of contents, amount / scope of theory, accuracy, suitability for improvement and ranks of readers, objective quality of contents (also in comparison to other books or verbal teachers) etc.
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RobertJasiek
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Re: How to judge a book
p2501 wrote:All S&S books I have a very good in quality (speaking of the content
imabuddha wrote:The content in all of the S&S books I have is very good.
S&S books vary greatly in quality of contents. So it matters which one has:) When you say "very good", which measure or degree are you referring to? I tend to refer to very high standards; e.g., my ISBN Rating Lists
http://home.snafu.de/jasiek/isbn.html
refers to all 9p knowledge when assessing a book's topical coverage. The best S&S book in this respect, Counting Liberties and Winning Capturing Races, gets just an average rating for that; this is far from "very good". If one sets a different perspective, percentage of all books with better rating, then maybe it belongs already to the top 10% and my average rating could be perceived as "very good" (but not: "belonging to the best") on a relative scale. Even so, I would hesitate to issue a relative "very good" for a book with sincere mistakes.
So I remain curious: Which S&S books, by which measure, do you call "very good"?
- RBerenguel
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Re: How to judge a book
Very interesting list Robert. Although I've been disappointed with the fact that you review your two books on joseki :/
Geek of all trades, master of none: the motto for my blog mostlymaths.net
- daal
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Re: How to judge a book
RBerenguel wrote:Very interesting list Robert. Although I've been disappointed with the fact that you review your two books on joseki :/
I can understand being disappointed that not so many other people have reviewed the books yet (though John Fairbairn gave an nice review of one of them), but I really don't see any reason to be disappointed that Robert has offered us far more information about the content of his books than we would otherwise have ascertained.
Patience, grasshopper.
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hyperpape
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Re: How to judge a book
Robert's auto reviews are more or less like a précis than a true review. So with a vocabulary change, he could stop annoying you 
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imabuddha
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Re: How to judge a book
RobertJasiek wrote:imabuddha wrote:The content in all of the S&S books I have is very good.
S&S books vary greatly in quality of contents. So it matters which one has:) When you say "very good", which measure or degree are you referring to?
My own personal opinion.
For me a go book is very good when I enjoy reading it a lot, or when it significantly improves my playing ability.
RobertJasiek wrote:So I remain curious: Which S&S books, by which measure, do you call "very good"?
The S&S books I own are all of those by Fairbairn, Basic Tesuji 1 & 2, and the previously mentioned Fundamental Principles of Go. If you don't find the content of these books to be "very good" then that's your loss.
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Re: How to judge a book
To the OP- I received 5 S&S books just a few days ago (I purchased two of the bundles currently for sale). I really like the S&S books that I have, although I probably only have about a dozen of their books, which is a small sampling of their entire selection.
As for the covers, the only ones I think are "ugly" are Yang's Workshop Lectures but I'd recommend them without hesitation due to high quality content.
If you're thinking of buying any books, Yuan Zhou is my favorite go author and Yang is great too.
As for the covers, the only ones I think are "ugly" are Yang's Workshop Lectures but I'd recommend them without hesitation due to high quality content.
If you're thinking of buying any books, Yuan Zhou is my favorite go author and Yang is great too.
- SoDesuNe
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Re: How to judge a book
When I randomly search for a book, I judge it by its title and cover. If the title or the cover isn't catchy or doesn't transport some sort of topic or mystery I like to reveal (<- mostly concerns fictional books) it won't get a closer look. I'm that simple. (Therefor applies to almost all Slate&Shell books.)
Second step is to check out the blurb (do you really call it 'blurb' in English? ^^). If the blurb is badly writing, I assume the book is badly written, too. Same thing applies to uninteresting blurbs.
Then I look for the price tag.
But thanks to the internet, when it comes to Go books (or non-fictional books in general), I read reviews. When they convince me that a book is good, I'll buy it when it also interests me - as I did with all the four volumes of Dictionary of Basic Tesujis from Slate&Shell.
So about this Slate&Shell book I can say, the content is very good but the book itself gets worn out very fast. The cover already looks like I had the book for years.
Second step is to check out the blurb (do you really call it 'blurb' in English? ^^). If the blurb is badly writing, I assume the book is badly written, too. Same thing applies to uninteresting blurbs.
Then I look for the price tag.
But thanks to the internet, when it comes to Go books (or non-fictional books in general), I read reviews. When they convince me that a book is good, I'll buy it when it also interests me - as I did with all the four volumes of Dictionary of Basic Tesujis from Slate&Shell.
So about this Slate&Shell book I can say, the content is very good but the book itself gets worn out very fast. The cover already looks like I had the book for years.
- oren
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Re: How to judge a book
I've been very happy with all the content and physical quality of the books I've received from slate and shell. The worst I've seen for binding is Yutopian I think. I've had some books from there that the binding was pretty weak, but I love the books anyway.
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imabuddha
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Re: How to judge a book
oren wrote:The worst I've seen for binding is Yutopian I think. I've had some books from there that the binding was pretty weak, but I love the books anyway.
Some of the Hinoki Press books' bindings are much worse than Yutopian unfortunately.
- jts
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Re: How to judge a book
Thanks for all the feedback so far.
Yes we do!
Good to know. The tesuji dictionaries are actually what interest me most right now.
SoDesuNe wrote:(do you really call it 'blurb' in English? ^^).
Yes we do!
imabuddha wrote: The S&S books I own are all of those by Fairbairn, Basic Tesuji 1 & 2, and the previously mentioned Fundamental Principles of Go. If you don't find the content of these books to be "very good" then that's your loss.
SoDesuNe wrote: as I did with all the four volumes of Dictionary of Basic Tesujis from Slate&Shell.
So about this Slate&Shell book I can say, the content is very good but the book itself gets worn out very fast. The cover already looks like I had the book for years.
Good to know. The tesuji dictionaries are actually what interest me most right now.