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Re: Printed in the millions?



I guess it depends on whether the library-story writer meant one million
overall or a single printing of one million.

According to Publisher's Weekly, the latest John Grisham book had a
first printing of 2.6 million copies.
Tami Hoag's The Alibi Man - 1.2 million
Eckhart Tolle's A New Earth has 3.45 million paperbacks in print (pub
date, Jan 30, 2008), though it's largest single printing was only (!)
776,000.
The latest Janet Evanovich mystery had a first printing of 750,000.

Those are just the figures in PW in the last few weeks. Many books on
the bestseller lists are in print in the millions: Barak Obama's
Audacity of Hope has sold 1.6 million in hardcover and several hundred
thousand in paperback. A Thousand Splendid Suns has sold more than 2.2
million in hardcover. Don't even get me started on The Secret.

Million-copy first printings are no longer uncommon in genre literature
and self-help books. Any book featured in Oprah's book club gets at
least 500,000 extra copies in print, and usually more.

********************************************
P. Scott Brown, Editor
Fine Books & Collections magazine
http://www.finebooksmagazine.com

Blogging at http://blog.myfinebooks.com

PO Box 106
Eureka, CA 95502
tel. 707.443.9562
fax. 707.443.9572
*******************************************




Ellen Middlebrook Herron wrote:
perhaps the bible - or maybe the latest john grisham book... certainly
never any publication i've been involved in!



"Most recently, these rare books and thousands like them were being stored
in
the library stacks alongside modern volumes that are printed by the
millions
instead of by the dozens."

What books are printed in the millions?




----- Original Message ----- From: "Everett Wilkie" <ewilkie@IX.NETCOM.COM> To: <EXLIBRIS-L@LISTSERV.INDIANA.EDU> Sent: Tuesday, March 11, 2008 7:41 PM Subject: [EXLIBRIS-L] Description of new PA state library rare book wing



This appeared in the Post Gazette.  One interesting aspect of the new
library is that they seemed to have banned traditional writing
instruments
entirely from the reading room.  --ECW

http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/08069/863695-85.stm#

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

State library's new wing slows aging of old documents
Sunday, March 09, 2008
By Tracie Mauriello, Post-Gazette Harrisburg Bureau

Brady C. Bower for the Post-Gazette

HARRISBURG -- Paper booties, cotton smocks and blue latex gloves are de
rigeur in the austere and darkened corridors, where hidden cameras,
key-card
readers and fingerprint scanners track every movement.

A filtration system removes harmful gases from the air. Sensors detect
chemical changes as subtle as new colognes worn by the small cadre of
personnel authorized to enter the innermost sanctum.

This isn't a scene from "The Matrix." There are no secrets being guarded
here, rather documents that the curators want you to see.

This is the new $7.2 million Rare Collections wing of the Pennsylvania
State
Library.

After two years of design and two years of construction, the wing now is
being filled with 12,000 of the state's oldest and most valuable
holdings,
including Ben Franklin's "Poor Richard's Almanacs" and a well-worn copy
of
the Magna Carta that the founding fathers referred to during the
Continental
Congress as they drafted the U.S. Constitution.

In six months, the wing will be ready for scholars and researchers who
come
from all corners of the state and, recently, as far as Japan to view the
state's collection of historical documents.

The documents will be available to the public, too.

"Our purpose is to make documents available to serious researchers and
students, but we had a limited capacity to make them available to the
public. Now, because we can protect them, we can make them known," said
Caryn Carr, director of the Pennsylvania State Library. "Now we can make
them available to greater numbers."

There is a 1739 ceremonial Bible that the Pennsylvania General Assembly
used
in its earliest days. There is a 1795 map of Harrisburg hand-drawn on
animal
skin. There a copy of the 1752 newspaper in which Benjamin Franklin
first
described his kite-and-key experiment that resulted in the discovery of
electricity.

The collection also includes agricultural pamphlets, musical scores,
ornithology books and religious texts, including the German Saur Bible,
the
first non-English-language Bible printed in the colonies.

For the oldest volumes, the relocation to the collections wing will be
their
12th move since in 1777.

Thought to be a target of British soldiers in the Revolutionary War, 425
volumes were taken at night from Philadelphia to a hay barn in Easton
for
safekeeping, said Mary Clare Zales, the state Department of Education's
deputy director for libraries. All but two of those volumes survived
war,
fire, flood and neglect, she said.

Most recently, these rare books and thousands like them were being
stored
in
the library stacks alongside modern volumes that are printed by the
millions
instead of by the dozens. Centuries-old documents were stored on metal
shelves in a room with peeling paint, dusty curtains and florescent
lights
known to cause paper to disintegrate.

"They are in a much better environment now, much better," Ms. Carr said.

Thousands of books, pamphlets, maps and newspapers have been moved to
the
new environmentally controlled area already, and library employees are
transporting the rest one bookcart at a time from the library stacks to
the
renovated 18,000-square-foot wing that used to house card catalogs,
meeting
rooms and administrative offices.

The area includes an elegant reading room with Venetian plaster walls,
stained-glass depictions of Franklin and granite floors and tabletops
that
reflect and amplify light, which is kept at low levels to better
preserve
documents. The room is framed on three sides by Pennsylvania black
cherry
wood, which came from trees hand picked by project architect Cornelius
Rosnov, of the state Department of General Services. The fourth side
comprises plaster tryptychs depicting figures from Greek mythology.

No pens or pencils are allowed here, lest graphite dust and stray ink
mar
its treasures. Instead, patrons can use laptop computers to take notes.
The
reading room is the only elaborately decorated part of the wing. It was
designed with people in mind, while the rest of the vault is aimed not
at
creature comforts, but at book preservation. Translation: It is dim and
cool.

Out of that darkness will come new light shed on the state's past as the
library provides greater access to the treasures of William Penn's time.

"This is really going to help us elevate the discourse about that time
period," Ms. Zales said.

The high-tech environment is the only one of its kind in Pennsylvania,
and
already is becoming a model for other states. It was designed by a team
of
architects, engineers, chemists, physicists, historians, librarians and
paper-preservation specialists.

"We are showing that we can produce an appropriate environment to
preserve
books despite the climate inside," Mr. Rusnov said. "It is a model
project
that other libraries could learn from."

Paper and other artifacts cannot be stopped from deteriorating, but Mr.
Rusnov believes he has created the perfect environment to slow the
process.

"These things are going to continue to deteriorate naturally. They are
going
to rot," he said. "We can't stop the process, but we can extend the life
of
these materials until technology catches up and can extend it again."








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