Back before I worked long in publishing I was going through a werewolf phase.No, I am not a lycanthrope, but I was reading about werewolves.I knew one of the main sources of folklore was Sabine Baring-Gould’s The Book of Were-Wolves.Being strapped for cash (some things never change), I bought a copy published by Forgotten Books.They’re rather prevalent on Amazon.Although the content is free online, some of us prefer to have a book in our hands and leave the devices aside.I soon discovered why my Forgotten Books version was so inexpensive.It is simply a printout of the scanned book, apparently with optical letter recognition software utilized.No serious formatting or proofreading required, a book is produced, covered, and sold.It is a disorienting experience reading such a book.
Readers look for landmarks just as surely as a hiker or traveler of any sort.Old books have layout and typesetting to help the reader navigate.My copy has “Error! Bookmark Not Defined” instead of notes.First editions of Baring-Gould, it turns out, sell for upwards of $6000.So I continued reading.A lack of italics and the occasional optically misread word make me wonder just how much of Baring-Gould I’m really ingesting.Any book that begins with a disclaimer regarding possible errors should’ve been assigned a copyeditor.SBG likes to use lots of foreign words.They may be spelled correctly or not.I have no notes to check.Caveat emptor, n’est-ce pas?The technology that allows scanned, unread by human eyes products to be sold as books makes me wonder.No, I haven’t forgotten books.