21st Century Literature discussion
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By Length & Width, What Are The Largest/Smallest Books You've Read? (12/22/24)
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Marc
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Dec 23, 2024 08:30AM
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My largest book is my copy of John Cale’s autobiography, What’s Welsh for Zen. From the ground it reaches my knee (I’m 173 cm in height)
I wouldn’t say read but during my time at The British Library, I was involved in the project to make the digitised version of the Klencke Atlas available to the public.
Again , not read , but my mother had a tiny leather bound copy of Cymbeline by Shakespeare which was about the length of my thumb and the width and depth of half that. . It fascinated me as a child .
Hester wrote: "Again , not read , but my mother had a tiny leather bound copy of Cymbeline by Shakespeare which was about the length of my thumb and the width and depth of half that. . It fascinated me as a child ."I can picture that on the Borrowers’s bookshelf.
Biggest by dimension? I'm going to assume this is for a single volume, else I could throw 'In Search of Lost Time' or the four volume versions of the Great Chinese Classics. I did have a huge one volume version of one of the latter at some point (probably The Romance of the Three Kingdoms), but I don't tend to own what I've already read and trying to search up dimensions online is beyond me.Let's start with width x height. Dodd Mead & Co's 1930 edition of Lorna Doone ran 7.5" x 9.5", which didn't help the pisspoor reading experience at all. I was also pretty cranky by the end of I Am the Most Interesting Book of All: The Diary of Marie Bashkirtseff, Volume 1 which runs 7.25" x 9.5". I had better fortunes with The Longman Anthology of World Literature by Women: 1875-1975, which runs 7.5" x 9.25", but at least that had variety.
In terms of thickness? My edition of War and Peace is was 2.39" thick, which is especially impressive for a paperback.
This got me running around measuring my unread doorstoppers, which is a good feeling to have going into the new year. Not sure what I'll end up choosing, but I have some pretty nice options.
Smallest possibly Edward Gorey's unconventional novel The Helpless Doorknob: A Shuffled Story, size of a standard pack of playing cards. Largest probably a collection of Little Nemo comic strips but not sure which one it is on GR The Complete Little Nemo in Slumberland, Vol. 3: 1908-1910 roughly A3 sized but possibly bigger, that's closed, so double that opened out to a double page spread.
Art Spiegelman’s In the Shadow of No Towers was larger than I anticipated when I ordered it.Described on Goodreads as “almost A3 planks of cardboard”.
I think the smallest was Woolgathering by Patti Smith. It was tiny: 3 x 0.5 x 4.25 inches
I still have it somewhere.
Greg wrote: "I think the smallest was Woolgathering by Patti Smith. It was tiny: 3 x 0.5 x 4.25 inches
I still have it somewhere."
I used to be quite a fan of Patti Smith’s music & have read a few of her books. I’ve considered Woolgathering a few times. Irrespective of size would you recommend it?
@Lesley, I enjoyed some of her other books more to be honest. But everything she does has something special about it - she's a fascinating and unique individual! And I am a fan of her music as well. She's one of a kind!
Greg wrote: "@Lesley, I enjoyed some of her other books more to be honest. But everything she does has something special about it - she's a fascinating and unique individual! And I am a fan of her music as well..."Yes, she is definitely one of a kind.
Thanks for your feedback. I think I will get round to Woolgathering at some point. I’m drawn to the title and, as you say, there is something to find in all of her work.
Books mentioned in this topic
Woolgathering (other topics)Woolgathering (other topics)
In the Shadow of No Towers (other topics)
The Helpless Doorknob: A Shuffled Story (other topics)
The Complete Little Nemo in Slumberland, Vol. 3: 1908-1910 (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Patti Smith (other topics)Patti Smith (other topics)
Art Spiegelman (other topics)

