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The series list is easy to manage with a plugin entitled "Manage Series". I'm writing this change to my message after I loaded all nine books (including the new one) into it, arranged the titles in internal chronological order, and then revised the series numbers to the new correct order and 1, 2, 3,...7, 8, 9.
If the story then occurs between two prior publications, just mention that and the rest will take care of itself.

Of course, to a regular follower it is not a problem.
By the way, I love it! Finished first read through just a few minutes ago. Will start first re-read fairly soon. I have read all of your books multiple times. Perhaps Gentleman Jole the fewest re-reads, as it is newish and longish (short tales are a bit easier to re-read than long), but I have at least 2 or 3 reads and at least one listen on that one. All the rest, except perhaps for Spirit Ring, have 5 or more.

Those who are currently discombobulated may complain, yet more people will be reading the series in the future.

"
The trouble with that is that then you need to adjust it each time a new book is written based on if it's set later or earlier. Far easier to number on publication order officially and then readers can do their own.

(If you do happen to have a time machine, can I borrow it?)

I think a timeline of the series in each book, like with the Vorkosigan series, works well. I can open up any book at get a good idea of what the internal read order should be (knowing that I had best check the most recently published book for the most up-to-date timeline.) I have used the Vorkosigan timeline countless times over the years, sometimes as a handy guide to choose which story to re-read, occasionally to realize I am missing a book.
I would be fine with numbering by publication order as long as it was clear it was not internal order. I think an accessible timeline could accomplish that.
Would Amazon allow you to include an internal chronology timeline on the info page of each Penric book? That way no matter which a reader found they could easily be directed to their personal choice starting point, as well as empowered to know exactly how many more are available. When shopping books on Amazon that is often confusing. There might be sequels listed in the "other's bought" section but there is often no quick reference to get to know how many exist in a given series and how to get them all. It gave me a lot of trouble when buying "Legend of Korra" anime books for my daughter.
As for decimals, I would be ok with it, but I wouldn't expect it. If I had # 3 I would look for and buy #4, but would never think to search for #3.5. This of course is where a timeline on each information page would help tremendously.
Overall I would say go with the easy #9 but include timelines.

That's fine for your internal storage. The problem is that if one wants to employ Amazon's (and perhaps other vendors, not sure) connections so that series titles cross-link on the vendor pages, the template into which one must enter the data requires numbering, or it won't play with you. (It also has embedded on the template the term "novel" -- one can't change it to "novella" or other more nuanced terminology.)
Not sure about whether decimal numbering is allowed by the bots -- I'm sure I've seen it somewhere, but calling the work "3.5" or some such seems to imply it's some lesser part, perhaps a side story, which in this case of the assorted roughly co-equal Pen & Des novellas, they're not.
The numbering problem could be evaded by just presenting the works ala carte, not numbered at all, but then one would lose the series cross-connections. Which browsing new readers kinda want. (I know I do, as a new purchaser. When my eye has been caught by some multi-part thing, almost my first question is, "Which book do I start with? And where can I find it?")
There is no perfect solution to this that will please everyone, btw. I already know that.
We did the renumbering trick last time with "Penric's Fox". I think we'll try it in publishing order this round, and see how it goes. On any lists that are labeled internal-chronological, I'll have it that way.
I did slather the internal-ordering information all over the place, but not everyone stops to read the fine print. Or any print.
Ta, L.

I include the Bujold reading-order guide, covering all my books, at the back of every. single. ebook. I . sell. It's listed in the table of contents 'n everything. Does no one ever find it...?
(And if not why not?)
The trouble with that, of course, is that's it's after the fact of at least the first purchase.
It's also on a lot of my Amazon pages, down in the matter one has to click on to read. I don't think anyone sees that, either. If the information isn't on the top line of the vendor page, people just zip on. Because that's the way browsing is done.
L.



I have to admit that before I knew to look for it, I did not find it. Sure, I know to look now. Now I check every part of every book for hidden goodies. But the only reading order I ever truly found as intended (that is, didn't know it was there, wasn't looking for it, saw it anyway, and saw it before reading it, while still in the store, so I bought 2 more books in the series at the same time) was printed at the beginning (back of the title page?), as a "More Books By This Author" sort of thing. Except that it was cleverly formatted in columns with headings like,
Blah World Series, In Order:
・Title
・Title
・Title
・Title
Adventures of Blah Trilogy:
1.Title
2.Title
3.Title
-Two columns? Three? I remember I was impressed. So many series, different worlds & genres. Like, it would have been overwhelming if it hadn't had such a good layout. I'm sorry I don't recall what book it was.
(I loaned it and a bunch of other most-favorites to a now FORMER friend who apparently had no idea I expected to get them back. If only I'd made a list!)
That was long ago, before Amazon. A strong modern reason to put the reading order near the title page is then it would be part of the Preview pages, when looking online. I would LOVE to have that become common!

@ 15, 16 -- It sounds like a good idea, but if everyone else uses the e-table of contents the way I do, they just navigate right to page 1 of the text, skipping all of what used to be called "front matter".
Nevertheless, putting the books-by at the front might catch the look-inside browsers; I'll pass the idea along. The link to it is in the table of contents, but it falls last.
Ta, L.


On the chalion.fandom.com site's front page, I track them in chronological order rather than publisher order because it's easier for a new reader to deal with them in that sequence, but I've found it fascinating to see how the universe changes when I read the books in published order....


A nice counterpoint.

Penric and Desdemona Publication order
Penric and Desdemona Chronological order
(I know this doesn't help for what should be on the book cover or vendor listings.)
My personal preference is for publication order. For me The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe will always be book 1 of the Narnia series.


If you are counting votes, I'm for #9, i.e. for the order of publication. The frontnote is perfectly sufficient to relieve any distress to the reader. And yes, all Penric books can be read independetly.
P.S. Ok, maybe I could live with the 3.5 numbering too. Confusing.


We've decided to solve, or at least treat, the issue in my ebooks by moving the "books by Lois" page to the front matter, which do list the stories in internal-chronological order. Since a prospective purchaser will only see this once they've seen and decided to open the ebook, if then, I will continue to try to make up the information gaps by putting any new stories within a series-listing in my vendor page ad copy. If people don't even read that, I can't help them...
"Masquerade" is going to be #9 for now, but I'll revisit the problem if I ever write another prequel.
Ta, L.


eg: Masquerade in Lodi becomes "P9; C3.5"
The best of BOTH at the same time!!!
Also, the Vorkosigan style series summary is super helpful!!

As a reader, I appreciate having the series listed in chronological order near the front of the book.
I have seen authors number an interpolation as 3.5 - which I thought was interesting. (And it was clear to me, but I'm not sure how others feel about it.)

Heh. SubPress editions are single, limited printings. Anything not done already cannot be added.
I'll keep pumping out my rolling updates of internal chronologies, and hope they'll get around.
Ta, L.

The internal chronologies are so very helpful, but maybe not so much for the new reader who is only looking at that page. On the vendor page, maybe it's enough to say: "Standalone; falls between XXXX and YYYYY in the series. (link to full reading list)."
I see there's no easy link to the series' lists on your Amazon author page. Ideally, you'd list them there, but maybe there's a limit to what you can do? They do have your blog updates.
In the ebooks, you can put a link to the back. So, you wouldn't have to list three pages of titles before the reader can get to your book. Just list something like "Chronological order for Penric and Desdemona series", "Chronological order for Vorkosigan series" etc.
This works with e-footnotes, I've noticed. People get notice of the extra material, and either go straight to it, or save it for later (or ignore it at their own loss).
I'm so happy you are going back and filling in extra bits of Penric and Desdemona's past. I really enjoy the books!



But you just got one two months ago, she whines...
Anyway, backbrain has not reported for duty, so don't hold your breaths. (I've reached level 187 in Bubble Pop, however.)
Ta, L.
Because it will at least be consistent. Renumbering ultimately will be constraining to you, and a nightmare of frustration for future new readers to discover that "Number X in the series" USED to mean title A, but now means title C, unless you're buying it used, in which case "Number X" might refer to title A or to title B.
I loved what you did with the Miles books, putting a timeline that let me know the internal chronology AND how old Miles is in that particular story. Extremely helpful in letting me keep things clear in my head, refreshing my memory which title is which story, and never a care about series numbers.