I'm working on the world, revised, improved edition, featuring fun for fools blues for brooders, combs for bald pates, tricks for old dogs.
In English-speaking countries, the connection between heresy and homosexuality is expressed through the use of a single word to denote both concepts: buggery. . . . Webster's Unabridged Dictionary (Third Edition) defines "buggery" as "heresy, sodomy.
Australian SF book publishing has undergone a boom recently, and sometimes it's easier for new writers to sell a book to a local publisher first, which then makes a US edition more likely.
As we said in the preface to the first edition, C "wears well as one's experience with it grows. " With a decade more experience, we still feel that way.
It's so wrong when I pick up a new edition of Huckleberry Finn and I look at the last page and it doesn't say, Yours truly, at the end.
Imagine a revised edition of Shakespeare. . . a big, thick book with an elegant cover. . . You open it and find that there are no pages, just an empty box of space. On the back wall of the box is a small mirror. You look into it, see yourself, and now you know all you need to know about Shakespeare.
If life had a second edition, how I would correct the proofs.
A weekday edition of The New York Times contains more information than the average person was likely to come across in a lifetime in seventeenth-century England
I never put out a vanilla edition of a DVD.
Someone told me that there's a connection to Superman, that in an early edition of the Green Lantern comics, Tomar Re was the envoy to Krypton. That was fascinating to me.