So You Want to Be a Wizard: The New Millennium Edition
The New Millennium Edition of the first Young Wizards novel, So You Want to Be a Wizard, is now available in ebook format from the online Ebooks Direct store at DianeDuane.com!
This is not a rewrite of the book, but a polish and update intended to bring SYWTBAW into the new century by modernizing its setting and establishing it as the beginning of a new and much more consistent timeline, thus making it more accessible for its newest readers. It also contains exclusive new material that does not appear in the original 1983 edition. The beautiful new cover is by noted German graphic artist Niko Geyer.
For much more information about the update, please see under the cut! You can also access this new podcast interview at GeekDad, where the updating of the book is discussed in some detail toward the end of the podcast: and the "Wizards in a New Millennium" interview with Kelly Knox at GeekMom.


This ebook, like all our books, is DRM-free and can be moved from device to device at your pleasure. Also, for the same flat price, we offer an all-format bundle containing various versions of the major ebook formats, so you can find out what works best for you. Just choose the "Bundle" option in the book's dropdown menu.
Some author notes: So You Want to Be a Wizard has been in print pretty much constantly, on one or both sides of the Atlantic and in various non-English speaking countries here and there, for thirty years now. Over the last ten years or so -- and particularly over the last five -- I've become increasingly aware of how some aspects of the book have been dating...which is to say, not very well. And newer young readers have been telling me with increasing frequency that though they love the book, the early-1980's feel of it put some of them off it to the point where it was a tossup whether they were ever going to read it at all. To say that I felt their pain would be an understatement. While SYWTBAW suffers from this problem, other installments in the series suffer from it far more severely (High Wizardry probably the most). The difficulty isn't just the difference between when they were written and now, but (in a way) the temporal distance or lack of it between the 80's "then" of SYW and the now of 2012. If the difference were greater, or less, the books might be able to pass either as time capsules of a sort, or be able to slide in "under the wire" with the tech differences not being so glaring. But for the present key audience, the disconnect is really getting in the way. So updating the first four books in particular has been something I've been wanting to get handled for a while. And now it's getting handled. I've taken a while about this (originally it was going to happen last year) because, especially as regarded the first book, I wanted to take care not to fix what wasn't broken. These new editions are emphatically not rewrites. However, they do involve:- The most important bit: adjustment of technology and background in the book(s) to reflect what's routinely been part of young readers' lives, starting in 2008
- Some minor editing of material that struck me while revising as clumsy or ineffective
- Some additional material (not vast amounts)
- Repair and reconstruction of what has for a long time been a very broken, inconsistent and frankly dysfunctional timeline
