2011-08-11
Snopes: The Town, The Hamlet and The Mansion
The book itself is a literacy masterpiece - five stars.
It's too bad that that the e-Book version is riddled with typos. I cross checked the original printed version against the e-version (where I thought the proof readers had failed) and the e-book proof readers have done a terrible job of ensuring the accuracy of e-book (did they even cross-check the original printed one against this one?).
For example, with the e-book version open to a single page view (page 993) the phrase "fifty acres of diit" appears. It should read (as it does in the printed version): "fifty acres of dirt".
Several other examples are as follows: Page 1275 (Single page of the digital version is spelled "MeadowfilPs". It should read "Meadowfill's".
On page 1381 of the ebook (single page rendering) or page 1055 of the original text the word "modter" should read "mother".
On page 1014 of the printed text and 1327 (single page of the digital version) should read "Did anyone ever say you were not?" but instead reads "Oid anyone ever say you were not".
On page 1329 of the digital edition (single page rendering) - Should note "In which case" not "Hi which case".
Later in the text Faulkner refers to the F.B.I. investigating the character of Linda Snopes - the word F.B.I. appears with a subscript I instead of a uppercase I.
This shows that in the rush to digitize the text, the editors were sloppy in their proof reading.
The printed version is superior to the e-version and is a disgrace to Faulkner's mastepiece and to the casual reader who will not be able to discern the difference.
$16 is lot to spend (plus tax) on an inferior typo-filled copy of a text - 0 stars for the typos.
The content of this book - thirty-four (34) years in the making - is unprecedented.
Buy the printed version if you want an accurate version of this text.