Part One of Mark Lewisohn’s new biography of the Beatles is now out in two separate hard cover editions – one for the United States market, and one for the UK.
So, how are they similar – and how do they differ?
Here are some photos to show you in a direct side-by-side comparison. The UK edition is 946 pages. It appears on the left. The US edition is 932 pages and it appears on the right:
The book spines with their dust jackets on:
There’s an interesting and as-yet unexplained design element about the spines. On both dust-jackets you can see the word “All”. My guess is that Volume 2 will have the the word “These”, and Volume 3 will have the word “Years”. When they are eventually lined up on our bookshelves they will collectively read “All These Years”.
The UK edition gets fancy end papers, front and rear. The front ones show pictures of a youthful John and Paul:
The rear has George and Ringo. It is a nice additional design touch:
The US edition has plain end papers. Here are the title pages. First, the UK edition:
And the US:
You’ll be pleased to know that despite the design and layout differences the contents are exactly the same. Both have the same text and chapters, and both have three sections with pages of historic photographs – some of which have never been previously published.
In the UK The Beatles: All These Years Volume One: Tune In is published by Little Brown. In the Unites States the book is published by Crown Archetype.
Now, the people at Crown Archetype have kindly given Beatles Blog a US edition of the book to give away to a lucky reader. All you need to do is answer this simple question:
How old was Paul McCartney when John Lennon invited him to join his group The Quarry Men?
The first correct answer to reach beatlesblogger @ gmail . com will win a US copy of Mark Lewisohn’s book – kindly provided by publishers Crown Archetype.
I believe Paul McCartney was 15 when John approached him to join the Quarry Men.
LikeLike
The U.S. spine looks better, but neither cover stands out at all imo. I can’t wait to get my copy of the extended edition though, cover aside, its the text I’m most interested in!
LikeLike
The British standard edition has more pages the American counterpart, does this mean that it uses a larger typeface ?
LikeLike
Hi, yes – these two standard editions (UK & US) both have the same content. They just have differnet fonts and layouts, hence more pages in the UK version.
LikeLike
Is there any benefit in purchasing the standard British edition over the American one, or the other way around ?
(mostly, regarding quality of paper / printing, general layout, typeface)
LikeLike
No real advantage either way. They are just presented slightly differently (cover art, internal layout) but have the exact same great content.
LikeLike
Have you checked for any Americanisms or missing “u”s that might occur in words in the US edition?
Maybe it’s worth getting the English version if we don’t want it in American English?
LikeLike
Paul was 15. I see someone already said that but I wanted to answer anyway! Congrats to you who answered before me!
LikeLike