Subject
Re: Nabokov's Russian print runs
From
Date
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In response to Simon Rowberry's musings on the very large print runs of Nabokov Russian editions.
It is rather amazing that runs of six figures were common as the Nabokov barriers to publication fell only years before the Soviet system itself crashed. Here are some figures I've quickly pulled from the colophons of what I call A-item Lolitas (books with only the novel and no other novels or stories) issued from 1989 to 1991. (You can see fuller A-item descriptions at www.vnbiblio.com.):
A28.20, 1989, Izvestia, 100,000 (first printing)
A28.20, 1989, Izvestia, 100,000 (second printing)
A28.22, 1990, Altaiskoe, 100,000
A28.23, 1990, Smart, 100,000
A28.24, 1990, MP Anion, 300,000
A28.25, 1991, Prometei, 300,000
A28.26, 1991, Vodolei, 300,000
A28.27, 1991, Khudozhestvennaia literatura, 100,000
A28.28, 1991, Amur, 100,000
A28.30, 1991, ANS-Print, 300,000
A28.31, 1991, Solo, 50,000
A28.32, 1991, Tsentral'no-Chernozemne, 100,000
A28.33, 1991, Tatarskoe, 100,000
A28.34, 1991, Moka, 150,000
A28.35, 1991, Universul, ?
A28.36, 1991, Murattas, ?
A28.37, 1991, Patroit, 100,000
That's at least 2.3 million copies within three years. I'm sure that I've missed some editions and printings and so the stated print runs would certainly be higher. The same kind of numbers can be seen for Lolita compilations (that is, issues with other novels and stories) and other Nabokov novels and compilations. Here is a very incomplete list of Russian Nabokov publications of at least 100,000 from 1988 to 1993. There is some overlap with the list above:
Title
Title Transliterated
Year
ISBN
Printing
Print Run
Source
Машенька. Защита Лужина. Приглашение на казнь. Дру...
Mashen'ka. Zashchita Luzhina. Priglashenie na kazn...
1988
5-280-00895-8
first
200,000
colophon
Машенька. Защита Лужина. Приглашение на казнь. Дру...
Mashen'ka. Zashchita Luzhina. Priglashenie na kazn...
1988
second
100,000
colophon
Другие берега
Drugie berega
1989
5-7000-0136-5
first
300,000
colophon
Другие берега
Drugie berega
1989
first
300,000
colophon
Защита Лужина
Zashchita Luzhina
1989
5-270-01060-7
first
500,000
colophon
Защита Лужина
Zashchita Luzhina
1989
additional
400,000
colophon
Избранные произведения
Izbrannye proizvedeniia
1989
5-268-00065-9
first
200,000
colophon
Лолита
Lolita
1989
first
100,000
colophon
Лолита
Lolita
1989
second
100,000
colophon
Машенька. Защита Лужина. Приглашение на казнь. Дру...
Mashen'ka. Zashchita Luzhina. Priglashenie na kazn...
1989
later
100,000
colophon
Машенька. Камера обскура
Mashen'ka. Kamera obskura
1989
5-292-00554-1
first
100,000
copyright page
Облако, озеро, башня: Романы и рассказы
Oblako, ozero, bashnia: Romany i rasskazy
1989
5-239-00553-2
first
200,000
colophon
Романы
Romany
1989
5-270-00673-1
first
200,000
colophon
Terra incognita
1990
5-85207-011-4
first
300,000
colophon
Ангелом задетый: Стихи
Angelom zadetyй: Stikhi
1990
5-7110-0052-7 (both vols.)
first
200,000
colophon
Дар
Dar
1990
5-85300-002-0
first
100,000
colophon
Круг
Krug
1990
5-280-00953-9
first
100,000
colophon
Лолита
Lolita
1990
5-85025-225-5
first
100,000
colophon
Лолита
Lolita
1990
first
300,000
colophon
Лолита
Lolita
1990
5-7405-0135-0
first
100,000
colophon
Машенька: Роман. Камера-обскура: Роман. Лолита: Ро...
Mashen'ka: Roman. Kamera-obskura: Roman. Lolita: R...
1990
5-7509-1290-6
first
100,000
colophon
Пьесы
P'esy
1990
5-210-00165-2
first
100,000
colophon
Пьесы
P'esy
1990
second
100,000
colophon
Собрание сочинений в четырех томах: том 1
Sobranie sochineniĭ v chetyrekh tomakh: tom 1
1990
first
1,700,000
colophon
Собрание сочинений в четырех томах: том 2
Sobranie sochineniĭ v chetyrekh tomakh: tom 2
1990
first
1,700,000
colophon
Собрание сочинений в четырех томах: том 3
Sobranie sochineniĭ v chetyrekh tomakh: tom 3
1990
first
1,700,000
colophon
Собрание сочинений в четырех томах: том 4
Sobranie sochineniĭ v chetyrekh tomakh: tom 4
1990
first
1,700,000
colophon
Аня в стране чудес
Ania v strane chudes
1991
first
300,000
colophon
Аня в стране чудес
Ania v strane chudes
1991
first
200,000
colophon
Камера обскура
Kamera obskura
1991
5-8086-0015-4
first
100,000
colophon
Лолита
Lolita
1991
5-7042-0213-6
first
300,000
colophon
Лолита
Lolita
1991
5-85760-006-5
first
500,000
colophon
Лолита
Lolita
1991
5-7585-0001-1
first
300,000
colophon
Лолита
Lolita
1991
5-280-01639-X
first
100,000
colophon
Лолита
Lolita
1991
5-7458-0400-9
first
100,000
colophon
Лолита
Lolita
1991
5-298-01122-5
first
100,000
colophon
Лолита
Lolita
1991
first
100,000
colophon
Лолита
Lolita
1991
5-7030-0582-5
first
100,000
colophon
Аня в стране чудес
Ania v strane chudes
1992
5-2474-0466-2
first
100,000
colophon
Аня в стране чудес
Ania v strane chudes
1993
5-692-01894-2
first
100,000
colophon
The sizes of the press runs quickly dropped as the Soviet system was replaced by a non-centralized one through the 1990s.
I know nothing about the workings of the old system, or even the new, semi-capitalist one. But I can launch some probes:
Report a high press run and be able to acquire more paper for other purposes.
Look good for having met a quota.
Or, simply, the reading public was very hungry for a formerly proscribed author.
It is hard to imagine, as Rowberry does, that a publisher (or printer or publisher/printer), while working within the Soviet system, would care about copyright or permissions or being a sole publisher or there being competition. In any case, a series of questions presents itself: “Were the reported press runs accurate?” “Were all printed sheets bound?” “Were all bound copies distributed through whatever channels (stores, schools)?” “Or did they end up in warehouses or landfills?”
Michael Juliar
michael@juliar.com
michael.juliar@gmail.com
blog@vnbiblio.com
www.vnbiblio.com
On Oct 29, 2013, at 6:48 AM, S.Rowberry.13 <S.Rowberry.13@UNIMAIL.WINCHESTER.AC.UK> wrote:
> There is a trend in discussion of Nabokov's return to Russia to frame the success through the sheer volume and range of Russian editions that have been published since the fall of the Soviet Union. Undoubtedly, Nabokov is a popular author and this has led to a wide range of Russian-language editions. I am less trusting, however, of the claims that some of the earliest Russian editions print runs were over 1 million.
>
> From what I understand, the information about print run comes from the тираж, included in the colophon. Given the cultural capital of Nabokov and the competition to establish dominance within the marketplace, this does not appear to be a reliable figure to quote. Why would a publisher who does not have a privilege, permission from the Nabokov estate or any other number of protective mechanisms that allow them to be the sole publisher risk such a large (and costly) print run that is not guaranteed to sell or to be undercut by a competitor selling at a much cheaper price? Surely these figures are part of an arms race between publishers to assert their publishing muscles. If you can print 500,000 copies, I can print 1,000,000, and so forth...
>
> Is there any evidence that these publishers actually produced print runs this large? Perhaps there is an abandoned warehouse full of copies of these early spectacular print runs similar to the apocryphal pit in the Californian desert packed full of unsold copies of the Atari ET game.
>
> Best,
> Simon
>
> Simon Rowberry
> PhD Student and Associate Lecturer
> Department of English, Creative Writing and American Studies
> University of Winchester
> Google Search the archive Contact the Editors Visit "Nabokov Online Journal" Visit Zembla View Nabokv-L Policies Manage subscription options Visit AdaOnline View NSJ Ada Annotations Temporary L-Soft Search the archive
> All private editorial communications are read by both co-editors.
Search archive with Google:
http://www.google.com/advanced_search?q=site:listserv.ucsb.edu&HL=en
Contact the Editors: mailto:nabokv-l@utk.edu,nabokv-l@holycross.edu
Visit Zembla: http://www.libraries.psu.edu/nabokov/zembla.htm
View Nabokv-L policies: http://web.utk.edu/~sblackwe/EDNote.htm
Visit "Nabokov Online Journal:" http://www.nabokovonline.com
Manage subscription options: http://listserv.ucsb.edu/
It is rather amazing that runs of six figures were common as the Nabokov barriers to publication fell only years before the Soviet system itself crashed. Here are some figures I've quickly pulled from the colophons of what I call A-item Lolitas (books with only the novel and no other novels or stories) issued from 1989 to 1991. (You can see fuller A-item descriptions at www.vnbiblio.com.):
A28.20, 1989, Izvestia, 100,000 (first printing)
A28.20, 1989, Izvestia, 100,000 (second printing)
A28.22, 1990, Altaiskoe, 100,000
A28.23, 1990, Smart, 100,000
A28.24, 1990, MP Anion, 300,000
A28.25, 1991, Prometei, 300,000
A28.26, 1991, Vodolei, 300,000
A28.27, 1991, Khudozhestvennaia literatura, 100,000
A28.28, 1991, Amur, 100,000
A28.30, 1991, ANS-Print, 300,000
A28.31, 1991, Solo, 50,000
A28.32, 1991, Tsentral'no-Chernozemne, 100,000
A28.33, 1991, Tatarskoe, 100,000
A28.34, 1991, Moka, 150,000
A28.35, 1991, Universul, ?
A28.36, 1991, Murattas, ?
A28.37, 1991, Patroit, 100,000
That's at least 2.3 million copies within three years. I'm sure that I've missed some editions and printings and so the stated print runs would certainly be higher. The same kind of numbers can be seen for Lolita compilations (that is, issues with other novels and stories) and other Nabokov novels and compilations. Here is a very incomplete list of Russian Nabokov publications of at least 100,000 from 1988 to 1993. There is some overlap with the list above:
Title
Title Transliterated
Year
ISBN
Printing
Print Run
Source
Машенька. Защита Лужина. Приглашение на казнь. Дру...
Mashen'ka. Zashchita Luzhina. Priglashenie na kazn...
1988
5-280-00895-8
first
200,000
colophon
Машенька. Защита Лужина. Приглашение на казнь. Дру...
Mashen'ka. Zashchita Luzhina. Priglashenie na kazn...
1988
second
100,000
colophon
Другие берега
Drugie berega
1989
5-7000-0136-5
first
300,000
colophon
Другие берега
Drugie berega
1989
first
300,000
colophon
Защита Лужина
Zashchita Luzhina
1989
5-270-01060-7
first
500,000
colophon
Защита Лужина
Zashchita Luzhina
1989
additional
400,000
colophon
Избранные произведения
Izbrannye proizvedeniia
1989
5-268-00065-9
first
200,000
colophon
Лолита
Lolita
1989
first
100,000
colophon
Лолита
Lolita
1989
second
100,000
colophon
Машенька. Защита Лужина. Приглашение на казнь. Дру...
Mashen'ka. Zashchita Luzhina. Priglashenie na kazn...
1989
later
100,000
colophon
Машенька. Камера обскура
Mashen'ka. Kamera obskura
1989
5-292-00554-1
first
100,000
copyright page
Облако, озеро, башня: Романы и рассказы
Oblako, ozero, bashnia: Romany i rasskazy
1989
5-239-00553-2
first
200,000
colophon
Романы
Romany
1989
5-270-00673-1
first
200,000
colophon
Terra incognita
1990
5-85207-011-4
first
300,000
colophon
Ангелом задетый: Стихи
Angelom zadetyй: Stikhi
1990
5-7110-0052-7 (both vols.)
first
200,000
colophon
Дар
Dar
1990
5-85300-002-0
first
100,000
colophon
Круг
Krug
1990
5-280-00953-9
first
100,000
colophon
Лолита
Lolita
1990
5-85025-225-5
first
100,000
colophon
Лолита
Lolita
1990
first
300,000
colophon
Лолита
Lolita
1990
5-7405-0135-0
first
100,000
colophon
Машенька: Роман. Камера-обскура: Роман. Лолита: Ро...
Mashen'ka: Roman. Kamera-obskura: Roman. Lolita: R...
1990
5-7509-1290-6
first
100,000
colophon
Пьесы
P'esy
1990
5-210-00165-2
first
100,000
colophon
Пьесы
P'esy
1990
second
100,000
colophon
Собрание сочинений в четырех томах: том 1
Sobranie sochineniĭ v chetyrekh tomakh: tom 1
1990
first
1,700,000
colophon
Собрание сочинений в четырех томах: том 2
Sobranie sochineniĭ v chetyrekh tomakh: tom 2
1990
first
1,700,000
colophon
Собрание сочинений в четырех томах: том 3
Sobranie sochineniĭ v chetyrekh tomakh: tom 3
1990
first
1,700,000
colophon
Собрание сочинений в четырех томах: том 4
Sobranie sochineniĭ v chetyrekh tomakh: tom 4
1990
first
1,700,000
colophon
Аня в стране чудес
Ania v strane chudes
1991
first
300,000
colophon
Аня в стране чудес
Ania v strane chudes
1991
first
200,000
colophon
Камера обскура
Kamera obskura
1991
5-8086-0015-4
first
100,000
colophon
Лолита
Lolita
1991
5-7042-0213-6
first
300,000
colophon
Лолита
Lolita
1991
5-85760-006-5
first
500,000
colophon
Лолита
Lolita
1991
5-7585-0001-1
first
300,000
colophon
Лолита
Lolita
1991
5-280-01639-X
first
100,000
colophon
Лолита
Lolita
1991
5-7458-0400-9
first
100,000
colophon
Лолита
Lolita
1991
5-298-01122-5
first
100,000
colophon
Лолита
Lolita
1991
first
100,000
colophon
Лолита
Lolita
1991
5-7030-0582-5
first
100,000
colophon
Аня в стране чудес
Ania v strane chudes
1992
5-2474-0466-2
first
100,000
colophon
Аня в стране чудес
Ania v strane chudes
1993
5-692-01894-2
first
100,000
colophon
The sizes of the press runs quickly dropped as the Soviet system was replaced by a non-centralized one through the 1990s.
I know nothing about the workings of the old system, or even the new, semi-capitalist one. But I can launch some probes:
Report a high press run and be able to acquire more paper for other purposes.
Look good for having met a quota.
Or, simply, the reading public was very hungry for a formerly proscribed author.
It is hard to imagine, as Rowberry does, that a publisher (or printer or publisher/printer), while working within the Soviet system, would care about copyright or permissions or being a sole publisher or there being competition. In any case, a series of questions presents itself: “Were the reported press runs accurate?” “Were all printed sheets bound?” “Were all bound copies distributed through whatever channels (stores, schools)?” “Or did they end up in warehouses or landfills?”
Michael Juliar
michael@juliar.com
michael.juliar@gmail.com
blog@vnbiblio.com
www.vnbiblio.com
On Oct 29, 2013, at 6:48 AM, S.Rowberry.13 <S.Rowberry.13@UNIMAIL.WINCHESTER.AC.UK> wrote:
> There is a trend in discussion of Nabokov's return to Russia to frame the success through the sheer volume and range of Russian editions that have been published since the fall of the Soviet Union. Undoubtedly, Nabokov is a popular author and this has led to a wide range of Russian-language editions. I am less trusting, however, of the claims that some of the earliest Russian editions print runs were over 1 million.
>
> From what I understand, the information about print run comes from the тираж, included in the colophon. Given the cultural capital of Nabokov and the competition to establish dominance within the marketplace, this does not appear to be a reliable figure to quote. Why would a publisher who does not have a privilege, permission from the Nabokov estate or any other number of protective mechanisms that allow them to be the sole publisher risk such a large (and costly) print run that is not guaranteed to sell or to be undercut by a competitor selling at a much cheaper price? Surely these figures are part of an arms race between publishers to assert their publishing muscles. If you can print 500,000 copies, I can print 1,000,000, and so forth...
>
> Is there any evidence that these publishers actually produced print runs this large? Perhaps there is an abandoned warehouse full of copies of these early spectacular print runs similar to the apocryphal pit in the Californian desert packed full of unsold copies of the Atari ET game.
>
> Best,
> Simon
>
> Simon Rowberry
> PhD Student and Associate Lecturer
> Department of English, Creative Writing and American Studies
> University of Winchester
> Google Search the archive Contact the Editors Visit "Nabokov Online Journal" Visit Zembla View Nabokv-L Policies Manage subscription options Visit AdaOnline View NSJ Ada Annotations Temporary L-Soft Search the archive
> All private editorial communications are read by both co-editors.
Search archive with Google:
http://www.google.com/advanced_search?q=site:listserv.ucsb.edu&HL=en
Contact the Editors: mailto:nabokv-l@utk.edu,nabokv-l@holycross.edu
Visit Zembla: http://www.libraries.psu.edu/nabokov/zembla.htm
View Nabokv-L policies: http://web.utk.edu/~sblackwe/EDNote.htm
Visit "Nabokov Online Journal:" http://www.nabokovonline.com
Manage subscription options: http://listserv.ucsb.edu/