Coffee table book

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A coffee table book resting on a coffee table
A coffee table book resting on a coffee table

A coffee table book is a hardcover book that rests on a coffee table or similar surface in an area where guests sit and are entertained, thus inspiring conversation or alleviating boredom. They tend to be oversized and of heavy construction, since there is no pressing need for portability. Subject matter is generally confined to non-fiction, and is usually visually-oriented. Pages consist mainly of photographs and illustrations, accompanied by captions and small blocks of text, as opposed to long prose. Most tend to be biographies or fall into the genres of history, art, or entertainment.

David R. Brower is sometimes credited with inventing the "modern coffee table book".[1] While serving as executive director of the Sierra Club, he had the idea for a series of books that combined nature photography and writings on nature, with, as he put it, "a page size big enough to carry a given image’s dynamic. The eye must be required to move about within the boundaries of the image, not encompass it all in one glance." The first such book, "This is the American Earth", with photographs by Ansel Adams and others and text by Nancy Newhall, was published in 1960; the series became known as the "Exhibit Format" series, with 20 titles eventually published. [2]

[edit] In popular culture

  • There is a 2003 coffee table book about coffee tables called The Coffee Table, Coffee Table Book by Alexander Payne.[3] [4]
  • In the 1980s, British comedy duo Smith and Jones released The lavishly-tooled Smith and Jones Coffee Table Book [5] - its cover was designed to look as if the book could double as a coffee table.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Harold Wood Presentation on H.R. 2715, Sierra Club
  2. ^ Natural Visions - Nature on the Coffee Table.
  3. ^ Payne, Alexander; James Zemaitis (2003-10-01). The Coffee Table, Coffee Table Book (Hardcover). ISBN 1-901033-04-X. Retrieved on June 20, 2006. 
  4. ^ The Coffee Table Coffee Table Book. MoCo Loco (February 7th, 2004). Retrieved on June 20, 2006.
  5. ^ Jones, Griff Rhys; P. R. McGrath, Clive Anderson (1986). The lavishly-tooled Smith and Jones Coffee Table Book. ISBN 0-006371-23-X. 
In other languages