(My A to Z Blog Challenge theme this year is Bittersweetness & Light, my new collection of hope-filled, joy-inducing fantasy and sci fi short stories, poems, and art. I’ll be sharing lots of excerpts from the book, and I’ll also be sharing some of the background on why we urgently need joyful stories. If you like fantastical creatures, magical worlds, and being reminded of the good to be found in the world, come along with me! And if you’d like to see what my fellow A to Z bloggers are up to, check out the Master List.)
The meat of Bittersweetness & Light is poems, short stories, and art, but there’s other content in there, as well. There’s a Preface laying out the theme, and there are Notes at the End. They’re not scholarly End Notes with citations, but instead they’re the stories behind the stories: background and process and other tidbits. Lots of people don’t care about this stuff, and they are certainly welcome to ignore the notes. The contents stand on their own and don’t need any explanations. But some people are curious and enjoy a little glimpse behind the scenes. For example, a couple of the pieces are based on true stories, even though they’ve become speculative fiction in my book. Some of the pieces have a surprisingly long history of creative process - I’ll be sharing one of those stories at R.
The End Notes are not, I hope, utterly dry. They’re illustrated with sketches, photographs, and other bits and bobs of art that shed a little light on the background of various other pieces. I didn’t want more than a page to go by in this book without something fun to look at, even in the End Notes! So today’s picture is a little collage of some of the images that appear in the End Notes. I tried to make sure that even this minor part of the book contributes to the sense of joy.
Marketing Moral: Do you prefer Ebooks? Ebooks simply cannot reproduce the formatting of paper pages, and in a book like Bittersweetness & Light, which includes art elements on almost every page, the ebook just isn’t the same experience. That’s why I don’t currently have the ebook available on Amazon. However, an ebook version does exist if that’s your thing, and if you’re interested you can contact me to purchase.
Proper Moral: Still waters run deep; don’t forget that behind every story there are always more stories.
How do you feel about end notes, footnotes, acknowledgements, and all those little extras in books? Do you like the supplemental information, or do you ignore it all completely?
[Picture: Assorted illustrations by AEGNydam from Bittersweetness & Light, 2025 (See NydamPrints.com).]
I prefer actual books, but I find ebooks easier to read these days with my eyes not as good as they were, because I can enlarge the type as much as I need to.
ReplyDeleteThat's a fair point. So far I'm okay with reading glasses, but I'd certainly appreciate being to enlarge the type if necessary.
DeleteI love end notes (bonus points for illustrations!) and other extra bits. It's a delight when such things lead me further down rabbit holes or into other universes, or simply expand on a story in some way.
ReplyDeleteYeah, obviously I love this stuff, as well. Adding the notes in my own books is me being self-indulgent. =)
DeleteAbsolutely NO eBooks for me! The only time I ever read a book on my computer it was to fill in a square on the library's book bingo! I think of an eBook for a book with illustrations to be like reading Abarat in an edition without illustrations! Why even publish that?
ReplyDeleteYeah, mostly the only time I read ebooks was during covid when the physical library was closed and only ebooks were available to borrow. But I admit they make a lot of sense for travel.
DeleteI love end notes like that! I always include those in my folktale collections as well. Not just for sources, but also comments and memories and interesting bits. And your book looks lovely! It's on my TBR now :)
ReplyDeleteThe Multicolored Diary
Thanks, Zalka. I know your TBR must be enormous with all the reading you do, but I hope you get to my book eventually! =D
DeleteI do mostly read ebooks and audiobooks, mostly for storage and accessibility. I can make that font, light, and speed anything I wish and I don't have to figure out where to keep them! But I agree that sometimes the experience is better on paper. @samanthabwriter from
ReplyDeleteBalancing Act
I love physical books but when I read in bed at night, I prefer e-books because I don't need a lamp and the e-reader doesn't hurt as much if I fall asleep and drop it on my face, haha!
ReplyDelete- Allison
https://lightningflashwriting.blogspot.com/