How About Word Count?

It’s ironic that in this modern information age, sites like Amazon still list a “page count” on Kindle e-books. Given the range of devices and font options for e-books, the size of a page is entirely arbitrary. I might need 300 page flips to read a novel on my old Kindle when someone with higher resolution and better eyes could do it in 100. That makes it a pretty poor unit of measurement. It’s like — just as a wild example — using a person’s actual foot to measure distance. We stopped doing that hundreds of years ago, and for good reason.


Page count is obviously meant to help print readers relate, but the fact is even in the print world page count is sketchy. Font size, margins, line spacing, all these things can cause page count for the “same” novel to vary widely. If you’ve ever read a Science Fiction Book Club edition, you know that it’s possible to cram a whole lot of words onto a page.


Even the folks who compiled the Christian Bible knew pages couldn’t be depended upon. They numbered chapters and verses — the actual content — rather than tracking the medium that the content was printed on. That’s why to this day, virtue signalling Jesus fans plaster “John 3:16” all over the place and not “Page 900.”


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For my money, the best way to measure a book is with words. Word count describes the length of a book, regardless of how it is presented. A Kindle e-book, a mass-market paperback, a trade hardcover, a large print edition, all have the same number of words.


Of course, readers aren’t as familiar with word count, but it’s been used behind the scenes in the publishing industry forever. NaNoWriMo uses word count to decide when you’ve written a novel: 50,000 or more. The SFWA Nebula awards say a novel is 40,000 words (a novella is 17,500 to 40,000 words, a novelette is 7500 to 17,500, and a short story is under 7500). They don’t use page count. They use words. It’s a proven concept.


So I would encourage anyone who finds themselves in a position to report the length of a book to go ahead and tell people something meaningful. Tell them how many words are in it.


Les Miserables 655,000 words

Atlas Shrugged 645,000 words

War and Peace 587,000 words

The Lord of the Rings 481,000 words

Shogun 429,000 words

Lonesome Dove 365,700 words

HP Order of the Phoenix 257,100 words

Dune 201,000 words

HP Deathly Hallows 198,200 words

Catch-22 174,000 words

Fifty Shades of Grey 155,000 words

Last of the Mohicans 145,500 words

To Kill A Mockingbird 100,400 words

Hunger Games 99,750 words

Nineteen Eighty-Four 88,900 words

Neuromancer 79,000 words

HP Sorcerer’s Stone 77,000 words

Catcher in the Rye 73,400 words

Brave New World 63,700 words

Lord of the Flies 59,900 words

Fahrenheit 451 47,000 words

Lion, Witch, Wardrobe 36,300 words*

Animal Farm 30,000 words

Of Mice and Men 29,160 words


 


*Note that my book, The Lesbian, the Bitch, and the Bathrobe has 40,000 words. It’s clearly a much better bargain.


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Published on April 13, 2017 10:06
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