Warlord of Kor

Warlord of Kor, by Terry Carr. This science fiction novella is quite a bit younger than my normal Project Gutenberg fare, having been published in 1963. The project manager has been working very diligently to identify mid-20th century science fiction works that have not had their copyrights renewed. This is one of them.

I post-processed it — practically jumping up and down in my message to the project manager requesting it as a project — and did something I seldom do: recorded every (putative) typo that I changed. I’m not exactly sure why I did that. Let me know if you find it interesting or inane, please. As a post-processor, I’m often caught trying to decide if I want to make a “Project Gutenberg” edition based on a particular published item, or if I want to preserve an edition as printed, including all of its faults. Some things get changed anyway, such as removing page headers and footers. Is that wrong? At what point does it become a new thing?