laceblade: Nana Oosaki of NANA, singing (Nana sing)
laceblade ([personal profile] laceblade) wrote in [community profile] ebooks2012-03-22 08:23 am

Fanfic / WIP Question

I have a question about long-ish fanfics that are works in progress.

Let's say that I'm reading a 200,000+ word fic, which isn't yet complete. I download it to my e-reader, and read it on that.
Then, the author updates the fic with a new chapter.

Is there a way to add this chapter to the existing e-book?
Or is the only way to get it to re-download the entire fic?

If I do re-download the entire fic, does anybody know of an easy way to breeze past those first 55 chapters of 200,000+ words, or am I better off just reading the new chapters on my laptop?

--
Side notes, in case they are useful, although I think the question is applicable to any site/management tool/e-reader:
Using a Kobo Touch, downloading fic from the AO3.org, managing fic with Calibre.
elf: Computer chip with location dot (You Are Here)

[personal profile] elf 2012-03-22 01:52 pm (UTC)(link)
You can use Sigil to edit the ePub directly, and add the new chapter to the end, but that's perhaps a bit complicated. You'd have to

* view page source to get the HTML,
* create a new XHTML chapter in Sigil (that's easy; you right-click the "text" folder & select "create new"),
* copy-paste the "head" section from the previous chapter into the new one,
* copy-paste the HTML text from the new chapter into the "body" section of the new chapter in Sigil.

Otherwise, you can re-download and just save over the file you already have. I don't know if that will let you skip past chapters you've already read, but the chapters are bookmarked; if you remember what chapter you left off on, you should be able to navigate to the new one. And it's possible that if the file contents are the same, you'll just jump to the page you left off on.

ETA: I'm assuming you're talking epubs of fic archived at AO3. I don't know exactly how it works if you're using fanfic downloader for (example) ff.net files; the principles are similar but I don't know if the internal structure is the same.
Edited 2012-03-22 13:54 (UTC)
elf: Computer chip with location dot (You Are Here)

[personal profile] elf 2012-03-22 02:30 pm (UTC)(link)
Sigil's a bit complicated at first--it's an epub *editing* program--but it's not too bad once you sort out what's going on with it. (I should probably post a basic intro tutorial soon. Gah. Have no time this week.)

*google* Looks like the Kobo Touch has no chapter listing system? No way to "jump to next chapter" or see a list of them? Wow, that's awful.

[personal profile] fides 2012-03-22 02:51 pm (UTC)(link)
I think it does (although I haven't used one) - from the Kobo site:

To use the Table of Contents on your Kobo eReader Touch:
1. Tap the middle of your page to bring up the Reading Menu.
2. Tap the Annotations icon.
3. Tap Table of Contents.
4. Tap the title of the chapter you want to go to.
elf: Computer chip with location dot (You Are Here)

[personal profile] elf 2012-03-22 03:34 pm (UTC)(link)
Don't feel stupid. Most ereader navigation is clunky and non-intuitive... reading straight through is easy; figuring out how they manage bookmarks and a TOC is different on every single reader, and never as smooth as it is for paper books.

Or rather: of COURSE you should've know that the Table of Contents is under ANNOTATIONS; where ELSE would it be, right?