Yes, but so was Ben Goldacre's book Bad Science which was published as exactly that, no more, in the UK. For the US edn, published after some delay, out came the metre-long-subtitle syndrome. Luckily, I read (and bibliographed) the UK edn, heh heh.
I know the academic phenomenon you mention only too well: the Keith Brooke scholarly work to which I recently contributed a chapter on time-travel fiction has a title+subtitle that's about a paragraph and a half long, with the hugely embarrassing result that I can never offhand remember the title of a book to which I've contributed a significant chunk!
no subject
Date: 2010-11-26 10:58 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-11-26 11:10 pm (UTC)Yes, but so was Ben Goldacre's book Bad Science which was published as exactly that, no more, in the UK. For the US edn, published after some delay, out came the metre-long-subtitle syndrome. Luckily, I read (and bibliographed) the UK edn, heh heh.
I know the academic phenomenon you mention only too well: the Keith Brooke scholarly work to which I recently contributed a chapter on time-travel fiction has a title+subtitle that's about a paragraph and a half long, with the hugely embarrassing result that I can never offhand remember the title of a book to which I've contributed a significant chunk!