Has anybody bought S. by JJ Abrams and Doug Dorst yet? My copy arrived yesterday, and of course, the first thing I did as soon as I took it out of the slipcase was drop it on the floor.
All of the stuck-between-the-pages materials stayed between the pages — except for one thing: a cardboard wheel with a slot in it that rotates around another cardboard wheel. Both have numbers around the perimeter. If I had to guess, I’d say it was some sort of decoding device.
Anyway, does anyone know which two pages this thing is supposed to be between? Does anybody know if it matters which two pages this thing is between?
You can search for ‘S.’ on Amazon. But here’s a link.
For those of you who have it - any ideas on how to read it? I read the first chapter, going back and forth between the text and the writing in the margins, and it drove me nuts. I’m thinking of reading through all the text first, then going back for everything else, unless someone has a better idea.
Edit: Here’s an article about the book. The videos are worth checking out.
I love my Kindle, but I absolutely wouldn’t get it the Kindle version of this book. It was designed to be held, and smelled, and fiddled with. I’m not sure how they did it, but the paper looks and feels like a really old book. Half the fun of it is how cool it is physically.
I didn’t read the article but the Amazon link went to the Kindle edition and a few of the comments said things like “after you finish, go back and read the orange and green notes” or “I read the first chapter then reread just the margin notes” and I’m wondering how this would work with a Kindle.
I’ve seen books that have “margin notes” but it’s a mess and I wouldn’t want to read an entire book with it. And colored notes really wouldn’t work unless you had a Kindle Fire.
I wonder if, instead of the book being ‘typed’ into the Kindle it’s scanned in so that you can at least see a difference in the handwriting?
I actually don’t think there’s a version on the Kindle; you might want to go back and check. I was reading yesterday that the only electronic version they made was an iPad app.
Regardless, I think you’d miss a lot of the point of the book reading it electronically. If there was ever a book meant to be read as a printed book, it’s this one. And I’m a die-hard Kindle reader.
Just wanted to bump this thread because I was gifted with a copy for Xmas. I spent twenty minutes just leafing through it and being gosh-wallowed by the artistry of the production.
In the main text of the Ship of Theseus story, the protagonist gets abducted and taken across a sea for days and then ends up in a Czech town. But the Czech republic is landlocked. What’s going on?