A plea for the eBook technology.

In fact, this may already exist, but I’ll proceed anyways.

Some exposition…

I’m halfway finished with the 9th book in the absolutely massive Malazan Book of the Fallen decalogy by Steven Erikson. It literally has a cast of hundreds, with the central plots swirling around some 50-odd characters. Given my admittedly slow reading pace and the little time I allot myself per week to read, it’s taken me over two years to arrive where I am in the series.

The series itself is presented in such a way that the narrative follows perhaps 3 of the 6 major groupings of characters per book, so that you spend 1200 pages with half the characters, and don’t hear from them again for another 1200 pages. In the intervening pages, Erikson advances the other half of the story, introducing new subsets of characters you’re to blindly follow along with until their purpose in the overall story arcs is revealed.

To his credit, Erikson has to this point pulled it off. The series is packed with action and plot points that drive the stories forward, and each book has built to logical and usually surprising conclusion that leaves me eager for the next. I would LOVE to see the big wall somewhere where Erikson has everything mapped out. It’s truly astounding.

Anyways, to my point:

Over this vast number of pages, and long duration, and given Erikson’s huge cast of characters, places, and cultures, I’ve forgotten a lot. I’d love to see an integrated, hyperlinked, intelligent glossary in the eBooks. I’m currently reading the Kindle version of the book 9, and while it includes the same glossary as the print book, it’s a pain to access in both formats. If each character, place, and cultural name was hyperlinked to a succinct definition that provided what we know about that thing to that point in the story, I might spend less time mentally trying to piece things together from the surrounding context.

This probably isn’t the only work that could benefit from a tighter integration of the glossary. I’m almost positive the technology exists to enable it, and it would be one advantage of the format over the printed book.

Joe Abercrombie’s new fantasy novel, The Heroes, is releasing as an “Enhanced E-book” and will include:

  • Full Text of The Heroes
  • Unabridged Audiobook of The Heroes
  • Introduction by the author
  • Afterword by the editor
  • In depth behind-the-scenes interview with the author (in text, audio, and possibly video)
  • Five maps showing the battlefield, and unit positions at the start of each day of the battle
  • A dramatis personae
  • A 20,000 word planning document, with rough early plans, character sketches, and more detailed plans for each part
  • Several chapters presented at varying stages of revision, annotated by the author to illustrate the editing process
  • Cover file – all the briefs, sketches, and rough versions of the different elements of the cover, and of the combined cover, hopefully with some commentary from the award-winning artists and designer
  • Author biography
  • Links to other interviews and relevant websites and blogs
  • Archive of all blog posts during the writing and editing period

His blog entrysays they’re considering releasing a cheaper edition without the audiobook.

The above list is really more than I would want, but the dramatis personae and maps would be great.