Difference between revisions of "Template:PublicationFields:PubType"

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* '''Pub Type''' - Identifies the type of publication.  It is a drop down menu of the following choices:
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* '''Pub Type''' - Identifies the type of publication.  On the New Publication page, this field is not editable and the value is pre-filled based on which "New ..." menu option you previously selected. On the Edit Publication page, this is a drop down menu of the following choices:
** ANTHOLOGY.  Used for anything containing fiction by more than one author.  For example, "Late Knight Edition" contains stories by both Damon Knight and Kate Wilhelm, individually; this is an anthology, not a collection.  If a book of Conan stories contains stories which are all partly or wholly by Robert E. Howard, it is a collection; if one or more of the stories is by Lin Carter or L. Sprague de Camp, not in collaboration with Howard, then the book is an anthology.
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** ANTHOLOGY.  A publication containing fiction by more than one author, not written in collaboration, should be typed as an ANTHOLOGY.  For example, "Late Knight Edition" contains stories by both Damon Knight and Kate Wilhelm, individually; this is an anthology, not a collection.  If a book of Conan stories contains stories which are all partly or wholly by Robert E. Howard, it is a collection; if one or more of the stories is by Lin Carter or L. Sprague de Camp, not in collaboration with Howard, then the book is an anthology.
** CHAPTERBOOK. This is used for anything smaller or flimsier than a standard paperbackThese are often, but not always, saddle-stapled; publications from conventions are frequently in this format.
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** CHAPBOOK. This publication type is a unique ISFDB designation for a separate publication of a single work of SHORTFICTION (q.v.), a single POEM or a single SERIAL installment of a longer work. In addition to the single SHORTFICTION, POEM or SERIAL content record, such publications may also contain one or more ESSAY and INTERIORART content recordsThis type covers all bindings and formats, including ebooks and audiobooks of less-than-novel length fiction.
** COLLECTION.  A single-author collection. See notes under ANTHOLOGY, above.  Note that the "single-author" can be a collaboration: e.g. a collection of stories by Frederik Pohl and C.M. Kornbluth would qualify as a collection.  However, if such a collection included one story by Frederik Pohl alone, it would be regarded as a single-author collection of Frederik Pohl's. If it also contained one story by Kornbluth alone, it would be an anthology.
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*** Do not use this type for publications which contain a single ESSAY without a SHORTFICTION, POEM or SERIAL content. Those publications should be entered as NONFICTION.
** MAGAZINE. It can be difficult in some cases to determine if something should be regarded as a magazine or a book.  Some magazines were published in book format; some books were published as series with letter columns and regular dates of publication.  Borderline cases should be discussed on the magazine or book wiki pages, but generally a magazine must have a common title from issue to issue, and an enumeration or dating system of some kind. This still leaves anthology series such as New Worlds Quarterly as judgement callsIn these cases, look for a consensus on the publication bibliographic wiki pageIf no discussion exists, use your best judgement and document the decision on the wiki page.
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*** Publications with more than one SHORTFICTION, POEM or SERIAL content record should be entered as ANTHOLOGY (for multiple-author publications) or COLLECTION (for single-author publications). The following types of SHORTFICTION titles are ignored when deciding whether the publication is a CHAPBOOK:
** NONFICTION.  Used for books that are predominantly or completely non-fiction.  A single story in an essay collection of Isaac Asimov's does not make it a collectionThis type supersedes the other types; if a book is non-fiction, you don't need to worry about whether it's a chapbook, or whether it is better described as a collection or an anthology.  A publication that collects both non-fiction and fiction together should be classified by whichever appears to be predominant.  Mixtures of both are more usual in magazines than in books, so the question does not arise often.
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**** Supporting and incidental material such as excerpts, synopses, and fictionalized essays
** NOVEL.  Used when the book is devoted to a single work of fiction.  The addition of a single short story makes the book an collection, not a novel.  However, sample chapters placed at the end of a book for advertising reasons do not make a novel into a collection.
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**** Up to one bonus short story, poem or short serial installment, but only if the publication's title page lists only the main title and the main title's author(s)
** OMNIBUS. A publication may be classified is an omnibus if it contains multiple works that have previously been published independently, and at least one of them is a novel.  However, generally this category should not be used unless the other categories do not seem appropriate.  For example, if a publication contains stories that have previously been published independently in pamphlet form, this should be classified as an anthology.  A collection such as Robert Heinlein's "The Past Through Tomorrow" should be categorized as a collection, although one of the works is a novel.  "Omnibus" is appropriate for such publications as the Science Fiction Book Club's collections of three independent novels by different authors under one set of covers; or for a single-volume edition of all the Amber novels by Roger Zelazny.  The distinction between "Omnibus" and the other types is somewhat subjective and may require discussion and consensus on the publication biblio wiki page.
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*** Do not merge a CHAPBOOK's title record with its identically titled content record. (The "Check for Duplicate Titles" function no longer matches such records for merging consideration.)
**''Boxed sets''.  A boxed set will typically contain books that have their own ISBNs.  In such cases the boxed set is not of interest, as it is only a form of packaging; a note can be made in note field for the books contained in the boxed set, but the boxed set itself does not need a separate entityIf a boxed set or other packaging format does not have separately identifiable publications, however, then the whole package is an omnibus, anthology, or collection, as appropriate.
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*** CHAPBOOK title records should not contain a synopsis nor be entered into a title series. Both of those should be added to the content title record.
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*** This type should not be confused with the generally accepted publishing format for pamphlets called [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chapbook chapbook] or the term used for books intended for intermediate readers called [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chapter_book chapter book].
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** COLLECTIONA publication containing two or more works of SHORTFICTION or POEMs by a single author or authors writing in collaboration should be typed as a COLLECTION. The typing of individual publications which contain works with various combinations of author credit should be discussed on the Community Portal on a case-by-case basis. The title page credit should be the major factor in determining the types of these kinds of publications. Excerpts from other works published after a NOVEL for promotional purposes do not make the publication into a COLLECTION.
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** FANZINE.  This publication type is to be used for [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fanzine non-professional or amateur-published magazines].
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** MAGAZINE.  This publication type is to be used for both professionally published magazines and newspapers. As a general rule, a magazine must have a common title from issue to issue and an enumeration (or dating) system of some kind. However, note that in some cases it can be difficult to determine if something should be entered as a magazine or as a bookFor example, some magazines were published using a physical format which made them look like books. Conversely, some series of books were published with titles which included their publication date and included letter columnsBorderline cases such as the ''New Worlds Quarterly'' anthology series should be discussed on [[ISFDB:Help desk]] or the [[Community Portal]].
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** NONFICTION.  This publication type should be used for books that are predominantly or completely non-fiction.  This includes book-length works of non-fiction or books containing essays by one or more authors.  A publication that contains both non-fiction and fiction should be typed by that which is predominant.  A single work of fiction in an Isaac Asimov essay collection does not make it a COLLECTIONA book of fiction (NOVEL, COLLECTION, or ANTHOLOGY) containing a generous, but not predominate, amount of non-fiction, such as introductions, essays, and other non-fiction works, should not be typed as NONFICTION.  Mixtures of fiction and non-fiction are more usually found in magazines than they are in books, so the question does not often arise.
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** NOVEL.  Used when the book is devoted to a single work of fiction.  The addition of multiple short stories makes the book a collection, not a novel (A single story is a judgment call, see below).  However, sample chapters placed at the end of a book for advertising reasons do not make a novel into a collection.  If a book is packaged as a single volume work, and then republished as a multi-volume work, all the publications are novels; there is no need to classify the single volume work as an omnibus.  Conversely, if a book is originally published as multiple volumes, and republished as a single volume, the latter is a novel unless the presentation within the single volume makes it clear that the works are presented as separate novels.  Sometimes a novel is bound with a single short work of fiction by the same author (an example is {{P|THMSNCHNTD2000|name=this edition of ''The Misenchanted Sword''}}). In such a case it is often preferred to class the publication as a novel with a "Bonus story" rather than a 2-item collection or omnibus. This is particularly true if the publication has the same title as the novel. It is a judgment call, however.
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** OMNIBUS. A publication may be classified as an omnibus if it contains multiple works that have previously been published independently, and at least one of them is a NOVEL, ANTHOLOGY, COLLECTION, or NONFICTION.  However, generally this category should not be used unless the other categories do not seem appropriate.  For example, if a publication contains stories that have previously been published independently in pamphlet form, this should be classified as an anthology.  A collection such as Robert Heinlein's "The Past Through Tomorrow" should be categorized as a collection, although one of the works is a novel.  "Omnibus" is appropriate for such publications as the Science Fiction Book Club's collections of three independent novels by different authors under one set of covers; or for a single-volume edition of all the Amber novels by Roger Zelazny.  If none of the contents have been published before, the inclination should be to classify the publication as an anthology, rather than an omnibus, but this does not have to be an absolute rule.  The distinction between "Omnibus" and the other types is somewhat subjective and may require discussion on [[ISFDB:Help desk]] or the [[Community Portal]].
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**''Boxed sets''.  Boxed sets which have additional data elements (ISBNs, cover art, etc) not present in the individual books that they collect should be entered as OMNIBUS publications. Boxed sets which do not have additional data elements and are merely bundlings of pre-existent books should not be entered.
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**Other Types
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***''Fixups''.  This is a single work composed primarily of several previously published works.  It should generally be typed as NOVEL.  Some fixups are less coherent, consisting of largely independent stories, formed into a whole by the addition of linking material between the stories.  In these cases, it is possible that the publication could be typed as either COLLECTION or NOVEL. The decision should be discussed with other verifiers or on a community page if there is any doubt. Factors that should be taken into consideration: table of contents page, title pages for the constituent parts, the publisher's marketing of the book, and the author's personal designation of the work.
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***''"Split"'' novels.  Occasionally a novel will be published as a single volume, and then republished (perhaps in another country) as two or more separate volumesFor example, [http://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/ea.cgi?Peter_F._Hamilton Peter Hamilton]'s "Night's Dawn" trilogy was republished as six volumes in the US.  The first book, "[http://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/title.cgi?33261 The Reality Dysfunction]", was republished as "[http://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/title.cgi?5787 The Reality Dysfunction, Part One: Emergence]", and "[http://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/title.cgi?5788 The Reality Dysfunction, Part Two: Expansion]".  The other two volumes were treated similarly.  In these situations, the books should be treated as novels, even though they form only part of a work published as a novel.  Also note that the original book is still treated as a novel; it does not become an OMNIBUS because it contains two works later republished as novels.  Situations like this should be documented in the Notes field.

Latest revision as of 16:09, 19 April 2023

  • Pub Type - Identifies the type of publication. On the New Publication page, this field is not editable and the value is pre-filled based on which "New ..." menu option you previously selected. On the Edit Publication page, this is a drop down menu of the following choices:
    • ANTHOLOGY. A publication containing fiction by more than one author, not written in collaboration, should be typed as an ANTHOLOGY. For example, "Late Knight Edition" contains stories by both Damon Knight and Kate Wilhelm, individually; this is an anthology, not a collection. If a book of Conan stories contains stories which are all partly or wholly by Robert E. Howard, it is a collection; if one or more of the stories is by Lin Carter or L. Sprague de Camp, not in collaboration with Howard, then the book is an anthology.
    • CHAPBOOK. This publication type is a unique ISFDB designation for a separate publication of a single work of SHORTFICTION (q.v.), a single POEM or a single SERIAL installment of a longer work. In addition to the single SHORTFICTION, POEM or SERIAL content record, such publications may also contain one or more ESSAY and INTERIORART content records. This type covers all bindings and formats, including ebooks and audiobooks of less-than-novel length fiction.
      • Do not use this type for publications which contain a single ESSAY without a SHORTFICTION, POEM or SERIAL content. Those publications should be entered as NONFICTION.
      • Publications with more than one SHORTFICTION, POEM or SERIAL content record should be entered as ANTHOLOGY (for multiple-author publications) or COLLECTION (for single-author publications). The following types of SHORTFICTION titles are ignored when deciding whether the publication is a CHAPBOOK:
        • Supporting and incidental material such as excerpts, synopses, and fictionalized essays
        • Up to one bonus short story, poem or short serial installment, but only if the publication's title page lists only the main title and the main title's author(s)
      • Do not merge a CHAPBOOK's title record with its identically titled content record. (The "Check for Duplicate Titles" function no longer matches such records for merging consideration.)
      • CHAPBOOK title records should not contain a synopsis nor be entered into a title series. Both of those should be added to the content title record.
      • This type should not be confused with the generally accepted publishing format for pamphlets called chapbook or the term used for books intended for intermediate readers called chapter book.
    • COLLECTION. A publication containing two or more works of SHORTFICTION or POEMs by a single author or authors writing in collaboration should be typed as a COLLECTION. The typing of individual publications which contain works with various combinations of author credit should be discussed on the Community Portal on a case-by-case basis. The title page credit should be the major factor in determining the types of these kinds of publications. Excerpts from other works published after a NOVEL for promotional purposes do not make the publication into a COLLECTION.
    • FANZINE. This publication type is to be used for non-professional or amateur-published magazines.
    • MAGAZINE. This publication type is to be used for both professionally published magazines and newspapers. As a general rule, a magazine must have a common title from issue to issue and an enumeration (or dating) system of some kind. However, note that in some cases it can be difficult to determine if something should be entered as a magazine or as a book. For example, some magazines were published using a physical format which made them look like books. Conversely, some series of books were published with titles which included their publication date and included letter columns. Borderline cases such as the New Worlds Quarterly anthology series should be discussed on ISFDB:Help desk or the Community Portal.
    • NONFICTION. This publication type should be used for books that are predominantly or completely non-fiction. This includes book-length works of non-fiction or books containing essays by one or more authors. A publication that contains both non-fiction and fiction should be typed by that which is predominant. A single work of fiction in an Isaac Asimov essay collection does not make it a COLLECTION. A book of fiction (NOVEL, COLLECTION, or ANTHOLOGY) containing a generous, but not predominate, amount of non-fiction, such as introductions, essays, and other non-fiction works, should not be typed as NONFICTION. Mixtures of fiction and non-fiction are more usually found in magazines than they are in books, so the question does not often arise.
    • NOVEL. Used when the book is devoted to a single work of fiction. The addition of multiple short stories makes the book a collection, not a novel (A single story is a judgment call, see below). However, sample chapters placed at the end of a book for advertising reasons do not make a novel into a collection. If a book is packaged as a single volume work, and then republished as a multi-volume work, all the publications are novels; there is no need to classify the single volume work as an omnibus. Conversely, if a book is originally published as multiple volumes, and republished as a single volume, the latter is a novel unless the presentation within the single volume makes it clear that the works are presented as separate novels. Sometimes a novel is bound with a single short work of fiction by the same author (an example is this edition of The Misenchanted Sword). In such a case it is often preferred to class the publication as a novel with a "Bonus story" rather than a 2-item collection or omnibus. This is particularly true if the publication has the same title as the novel. It is a judgment call, however.
    • OMNIBUS. A publication may be classified as an omnibus if it contains multiple works that have previously been published independently, and at least one of them is a NOVEL, ANTHOLOGY, COLLECTION, or NONFICTION. However, generally this category should not be used unless the other categories do not seem appropriate. For example, if a publication contains stories that have previously been published independently in pamphlet form, this should be classified as an anthology. A collection such as Robert Heinlein's "The Past Through Tomorrow" should be categorized as a collection, although one of the works is a novel. "Omnibus" is appropriate for such publications as the Science Fiction Book Club's collections of three independent novels by different authors under one set of covers; or for a single-volume edition of all the Amber novels by Roger Zelazny. If none of the contents have been published before, the inclination should be to classify the publication as an anthology, rather than an omnibus, but this does not have to be an absolute rule. The distinction between "Omnibus" and the other types is somewhat subjective and may require discussion on ISFDB:Help desk or the Community Portal.
    • Boxed sets. Boxed sets which have additional data elements (ISBNs, cover art, etc) not present in the individual books that they collect should be entered as OMNIBUS publications. Boxed sets which do not have additional data elements and are merely bundlings of pre-existent books should not be entered.
    • Other Types
      • Fixups. This is a single work composed primarily of several previously published works. It should generally be typed as NOVEL. Some fixups are less coherent, consisting of largely independent stories, formed into a whole by the addition of linking material between the stories. In these cases, it is possible that the publication could be typed as either COLLECTION or NOVEL. The decision should be discussed with other verifiers or on a community page if there is any doubt. Factors that should be taken into consideration: table of contents page, title pages for the constituent parts, the publisher's marketing of the book, and the author's personal designation of the work.
      • "Split" novels. Occasionally a novel will be published as a single volume, and then republished (perhaps in another country) as two or more separate volumes. For example, Peter Hamilton's "Night's Dawn" trilogy was republished as six volumes in the US. The first book, "The Reality Dysfunction", was republished as "The Reality Dysfunction, Part One: Emergence", and "The Reality Dysfunction, Part Two: Expansion". The other two volumes were treated similarly. In these situations, the books should be treated as novels, even though they form only part of a work published as a novel. Also note that the original book is still treated as a novel; it does not become an OMNIBUS because it contains two works later republished as novels. Situations like this should be documented in the Notes field.