Other timeless but year-of-publication restricted anthologies like “Year’s Best Dark Fantasy and Horror” and “Year’s Best Science Writing” have either “Nth annual” or [year the entries were published] prominently on the title. This is an established convention. The problems of “what the hell book did I read that in?”, “Finding the books on Amazon” and “Have I read this already? Who’s to say.” seem much bigger to me than a fraction of the audience that hasn’t picked up that convention AND will be blocked from reading by it.
I think a “Nth annual” is a good thing. It will be on the Amazon page (still not fully sure what the series title will be, by default something like “Best of LessWrong”), and of course we will have a section on the site that will organize the books in order, after we released more than one. But having each individual book be prominently stand-alone seems pretty important to me, and also having a prominent series title for the first book, or book set, in a series seems also kind of unnecessary to me. If we’ve done three of those, then maybe there is a benefit that people get from knowing what series it is part of, but for the first one, the info seems really unnecessary for the vast majority of readers.
I also don’t want to commit us too hard to doing a book every year. Like, I know we want to do a book for this year’s (2019) review, but I really don’t know yet whether we will do one for next year, and also the book for this year’s review might look so totally different that putting them in a series doesn’t really make sense. Starting a whole series title and then abandoning it seems pretty bad to me, if you don’t even know whether it will have more than two entries.
Other timeless but year-of-publication restricted anthologies like “Year’s Best Dark Fantasy and Horror” and “Year’s Best Science Writing” have either “Nth annual” or [year the entries were published] prominently on the title. This is an established convention. The problems of “what the hell book did I read that in?”, “Finding the books on Amazon” and “Have I read this already? Who’s to say.” seem much bigger to me than a fraction of the audience that hasn’t picked up that convention AND will be blocked from reading by it.
I think a “Nth annual” is a good thing. It will be on the Amazon page (still not fully sure what the series title will be, by default something like “Best of LessWrong”), and of course we will have a section on the site that will organize the books in order, after we released more than one. But having each individual book be prominently stand-alone seems pretty important to me, and also having a prominent series title for the first book, or book set, in a series seems also kind of unnecessary to me. If we’ve done three of those, then maybe there is a benefit that people get from knowing what series it is part of, but for the first one, the info seems really unnecessary for the vast majority of readers.
I also don’t want to commit us too hard to doing a book every year. Like, I know we want to do a book for this year’s (2019) review, but I really don’t know yet whether we will do one for next year, and also the book for this year’s review might look so totally different that putting them in a series doesn’t really make sense. Starting a whole series title and then abandoning it seems pretty bad to me, if you don’t even know whether it will have more than two entries.