Biggest New Zealand book?
Today’s blog story on “The largest book in the world” prompts Auckland author Gordon Dryden to wonder if a presentation copy of his Chinese-language book, The Learning Revolution, is one of the largest printed versions of a New Zealand book.
After an earlier Chinese edition had sold 260,000 copies,* a slightly-amended new one sold 10 million in seven months from late 1998. At celebrations to mark the launch of the second 5-million-copy print-run, the then distributors, Clever Software, produced this giant souvenir edition: all 520 pages blown up from the pocketbook-sized original.
Dryden’s giant copy was presented to him at the celebratory press-conference dinner. “It weighed so much, it cost me US$400 in excess airfreight from Beijing to Auckland. Unfortunately my bathroom scales don’t go high enough to weigh it.”
The mainland and souvenir editions were printed in “simplified Chinese characters”. A much smaller edition in “traditional Chinese characters” was distributed in Hongkong and Taiwan.
* Each book print-run in China has to carry both the current print-run and the total copies printed to date. The title-page details of the first print run confirmed 1-130,000 copies printed (80,000 copies were sold to China’s Bertlesmann Book Club) , and the second 131,000-260,000.
Footnote:
If anyone out there knows of a larger version of a NZ title than this one by Dryden please let The Bookman know.
The George French Angas reprints?
ReplyDeleteWhy the fuck does anyone want to have 'the biggest book'? That is truly stupid- except for a publicity hound-