Charles Ardai, editor of HARD CASE CRIME books, sent this email message to readers:
Those of you who are tuned in to goings-on in the publishing industry may have seen the announcement last week from Dorchester Publishing that they’ve decided to get out of the business of publishing mass-market paperback novels (the main business they’ve been in for the past 40 years). Instead, they’ve announced they’re only going to publish ebooks and a limited number of larger trade paperbacks, using a ‘print on demand’ process.
What does this have to do with Hard Case Crime? Well, for the past six years, Dorchester has been the company that has printed and distributed our books. They’re a first-rate company run by good people, and I’m sorry to see them going through tough times. I’m also sorry to see them stop publishing books in our format. What does this mean for us? Well, either we’ll need to switch from the smaller “mass market” format to the larger “trade” format, or we’ll need to start working with another publisher, or both. (Most likely both, but we’ll see.)
I immediately went out and bought what is likely to be the last mass market format HARD CASE CRIME book: Murder is My Business with a great Robert McGinnis cover. Buy it fast! It’s the end of an era.

Kim Stanley Robinson is best known for his excellent science fiction novels like his Mars trilogy: Red Mars, Green Mars, and Blue Mars. Robinson also wrote the under-rated Three Californias Trilogy: The Wild Shore, The Gold Coast, Pacific Edge (but that’s a topic for another FORGOTTEN BOOKS Friday). Most readers head for the novels. Yet, Robinson also wrote some dazzling short stories. Thanks to Night Shade Books, we have the just published collection, The Best of Kim Stanley Robinson. The title is no misnomer. Some of Robinson’s best writing can be found in these pages. Many of these stories hard to find. Now, they’re in one convenient package. Robinson also threw in a new, original story. There are hours of reading pleasure to be found here.
Diane and I had so much fun going to the Shaw Festival with Patti and Phil to see An Ideal Husband that we decided to return and see The Women, a play about women and divorce. First presented on stage in 1936, The Women went on to have a couple of movie incarnations. This Shaw Festival version brought out plenty of laughter from the audience. The all female cast captured Clare Booth Luce’s wisdom and frivolity. If you get a chance to see a stage version of The Women, take it. This insightful play holds up. GRADE: A 