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When a numismatic book is refered to with the dreaded "coffee table book" label, does that
I was aghast when I read the current issue of Esylum, and someone wrote some commentary about one of the finest numismatic books to come onto the market in several years. Referring to the book, the reviewer wrote, "[w]hether enjoyed as a thoroughly researched history, or simply as a beautiful coffee-table book..." I could not believe this term was used.
Along similar lines, I frequently see the "100 Greatest" books referred to as "coffee table books". In my mind, a "coffee table book" is a rather derogatory term, and should not be used in the same sentence as a well researched book. The 100 Greatest books are more than just a pretty coffee table book, and the book referred to in the opening paragraphy is certainly a ground-breaking work, not worthy of the dreaded "coffee table book" moniker.
Does the use of the coffee table label change your perception of a numismatic book?
Along similar lines, I frequently see the "100 Greatest" books referred to as "coffee table books". In my mind, a "coffee table book" is a rather derogatory term, and should not be used in the same sentence as a well researched book. The 100 Greatest books are more than just a pretty coffee table book, and the book referred to in the opening paragraphy is certainly a ground-breaking work, not worthy of the dreaded "coffee table book" moniker.
Does the use of the coffee table label change your perception of a numismatic book?
Always took candy from strangers
Didn't wanna get me no trade
Never want to be like papa
Working for the boss every night and day
--"Happy", by the Rolling Stones (1972)
Didn't wanna get me no trade
Never want to be like papa
Working for the boss every night and day
--"Happy", by the Rolling Stones (1972)
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I give away money. I collect money.
I don’t love money . I do love the Lord God.
I think of a coffee-table book as one that's long on beautiful pictures and short on text. And it's big, but not thick.
Early next year 100 Greatest Ancient Coins will hit the shelves. Now, how can a book on ancient Greek, Roman, and Byzantine coinage be fluffy and insubstantial?
Does it have eye candy? Oh, it has sweet eye candy aplenty. If that makes it a coffee-table book, then crack out the Starbucks.
That doesn't mean a lack of substantial information.... just that you won't be overwhelmed (like a textbook), often the information is condensed & to the point - with lots of illustrative pictures - to browse or read.
<< <i>I like to think that the 100 Greatest collection is turning the coffee-table world upside down.
Early next year 100 Greatest Ancient Coins will hit the shelves. Now, how can a book on ancient Greek, Roman, and Byzantine coinage be fluffy and insubstantial?
Does it have eye candy? Oh, it has sweet eye candy aplenty. If that makes it a coffee-table book, then crack out the Starbucks. >>
I'll have to ask. Are you Whitman people thinking up a "100 Greatest Numismatic Literature Works" or is that something I merely had a dream about? (And should I admit to that if that is the case?) Or was it a thread here?
Ed. S.
(EJS)
Where is this list published ? Can someone republish this list here?
Coin's for sale/trade.
Tom Pilitowski
US Rare Coin Investments
800-624-1870
My personal definition of a coffee table book is something that is not super-deep, that guests to the house could read without being really into the subject matter. They are usually segmented to be able to read small parts of the book without needing to read the rest, and usually containing some nice pictures.
I haven't read that particular book yet, but it sounds like it would make a nice coffee-table book.
"You Suck Award" - February, 2015
Discoverer of 1919 Mercury Dime DDO - FS-101
Should you desire you can put one on your coffee table and just maybe hook a yn into collecting.
Be careful though, you may end up showing him some real coins.
I like coffee table books. I have about a dozen of them.
<< <i>It usually means I am the only one that reads it in my house. >>
Same here.
My definition of a coffee table book is something you buy to leave where people can see it and be impressed by your couth, whether you have read it or not. I am proud to say that I read every word in Dave's book, though thank God it was in galley form a handful of pages at a time.
TD
The point was to impress guests without engaging then in anything substantial.
To me, things like the “100 Best Stuff” and other picture books fit the above. However, other similar sized books (the new CA, etc.) invite the casual viewer deeper into the subject, and might be good for the coffee table only when there is a dedicated numismatic crowd.
(My own books do not belong on a coffee table – with all the B&W pictures, the kids will want to color them, and the footnotes might provoke a coronary in some guest.)
I remember owning a coffee table, I just haven't seen it in years ...
Betts medals, colonial coins, US Mint medals, foreign coins found in early America, and other numismatic Americana
Didn't wanna get me no trade
Never want to be like papa
Working for the boss every night and day
--"Happy", by the Rolling Stones (1972)
<< <i>To a publisher, distributor, or retailer, "coffee table" might simply denote the format: 10" x 12" or larger, hardcover; with the content not being a factor. >>
Thanks. If that is the standard viewpoint of people in the industry, then that is good enough for me.
Didn't wanna get me no trade
Never want to be like papa
Working for the boss every night and day
--"Happy", by the Rolling Stones (1972)
Publishers are in business to make as much money as possible - just like lawyers. It is the buyer who decides what they want to do with any book they buy - regardless of size, weight or content.
i.e. it is out in the open ready to read as apposed to having to drag it off of a lost bookshelf.
Now I'm hungry for coffee cake.
It took you 8 years to get hungry for coffee cake?
Keeper of the VAM Catalog • Professional Coin Imaging • Prime Number Set • World Coins in Early America • British Trade Dollars • Variety Attribution
To a publisher, distributor, or retailer, "coffee table" might simply denote the format: 10" x 12" or larger, hardcover; with the content not being a factor.
This. It's a standard industry term. Any google search will tell you that.
Now I'm hungry for coffee cake.
I'm thinking pizza!
My YouTube Channel
awesome coins. It would be neat to see a book "coffee table" sized devoted to DMPL dollars or
toned coins. PCGS should issue a desk top day by day calendar of the best coins in their
Coin Facts files.
Wow - Longacre, Pistareen, IGWT, RWB, TDN ...
What a great thread.
Man, I couldn't agree more. A book of serious scholarship should not be described as a coffee table book.