Brent Metcalfe wrote:Then let me give you a reason to doubt it: the Review of Books on the Book of Mormon received via snail-mail by a Californian FARMS subscriber.
...To suggest that a subscription-based publication like RBBM would be mailed to subscribers after only "fewer than ten" "were printed and bound" is, well, perhaps the "joke" that you've been referring to all along.
Regards,
</brent>
This is interesting, Brent. It seems obvious that your friend got a copy of one of the few printed Reviews with the acrostic. Do you know what he/she did with it?
I also find it interesting, however, that I-- living in Ogden-- never received such a copy. I was always one of the first to get my copies of the new Reviews. I wonder why it is that a copy was sent to someone in California while those people who lived closer (and generally received their copies earlier) did not get such copies?
I don't know how FARMS decides who gets the first editions of a new Review, but if they kick out labels based on an alphabetical listing of surnames, mine usually rises near the top. If they base it on proximity of zip codes, mine would be fairly high. If they do it numerically based on zip code, the subscribers in the eastern states would get first choice. I've done some bulk mailing for work and I can't image that the FARMS shipping dept. would only send 1 or 2 copies of the Review out at a time (unless your source had some sort of vip privilges). Typically, a book like the Review (just like Dialouge) would be sent out in bulk to many people-- yet who else has ever received a copy of the infamous Review?
I'm not doubting that your source received a copy of this book I just find it odd that more people also didn't receive copies. If, from what I infer from your post, you believe that dozens or hundreds of copies were printed before the book was recalled, how is it that we hear almost nothing about people who own(ed) said copies (your source is the first non-FARMS person I've heard who has even handled a copy)?
You've had quite a bit of experience in printing and I know at least a little, so don't you find it odd-- from a printing aspect-- that your source got a copy as a "subscriber"?
What printer prints a dozen copies which are then taken & shipped to subsribers? Typically a printer prints in larger batches. These batches are then picked up by shipping & sent to subscribers. I guess it's possible that the shipping dept. grabbed the first pile of books of the printer's table & began shipping them out 1 by 1, but that seems atypical to how it would normally work.
Sometime during the printing process the FARMS leaders found out about the accrostic & halted the printing. Who would send copies out after the presses had been stopped to fix the mistake?
It seems to me that the virtual absence of such copies suggests that either a handful were printed (and your source got his/her hands on one), or your source has some sort of vip status or luck to get a copy of the Review before a bulk mailing was made. Either way, it suggests that very few copies of the Review ever left FARMS and I think it supports Dan's recollection that possibly less than a dozen books were printed before the printing stopped.
Mike Ash