COINS & CURRENCY OF THE MIDDLE EAST Público Deposited

REVIEW

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  • The E-Sylum: Volume 11, Number 2, January 13, 2008, Article 4

    REVIEW: COINS & CURRENCY OF THE MIDDLE EAST

    I recently received a copy of the 2006 book from Krause
    Publications, 'Coins & Currency of The Middle East' by Tom
    Michael and George Cuhaj. While far from my normal area of
    interest, the continuing news from that region of the world
    makes a good topical subject for a book. I found it
    interesting and think others will, too.

    Covered countries include Afghanistan, Djibouti, Egypt,
    Ethiopia, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon,
    Oman, Pakistan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, Somaliland,
    Sudan, Syria, Turkey, United Arab Emirates and Yemen.
    The time period covers that last quarter-century or so.

    The book is a useful handbook-style compendium of information
    on not just the modern coins and paper money of the region,
    but military tokens, medals, challenge coins, propaganda
    leaflets and more. The cover and title page describe the
    book as "A Descriptive Guide to Pocket Collectible" and
    that's a fitting description. It is clearly intended for
    a Western audience, particularly people who served in the
    military and diplomatic corps in the region, and their friends
    and family members back home. Every generation of soldiers
    brings back souvenirs of their deployment, and people will
    be naturally curious to learn more about them. This book
    is a "World War II Remembered" for today's generation. The
    272-page card covered book is profusely illustrated in color,
    and lists for $17.94 retail.

    It seems a natural product to market directly to returning
    servicemen and their families as well as collectors. I don't
    know that many dealers would rush to buy it (except for resale
    to collectors) because of the low value of most of the items
    listed. Few are listed at over $100 and many if not most are
    under $10. There aren't many "hidden treasures" that the book
    could help a bargain hunter locate. But for the collector or
    "average joe" with an interest in the topic, the new book is
    an invaluable companion.

    Tom Michael writes: "George and I had a lot of fun doing the
    Middle East book and I think that shows in the end product.
    I tried to keep the text light and airy. Our original intent
    was to make this for the service personnel and their families,
    though our marketing people completely re-wrote the back cover
    copy and only distributed the book to bookstores and through
    the numismatic trade. George and I wanted it in the PX's."

    "Everyone we worked with liked our idea also, but sometimes
    you just can't get the marketing and sales staffs to work
    for something different. I think the designer did a great
    job of creating a book for the service personnel, just as
    we intended. It's one of my favorite books that I have done
    over the years."

    The book absolutely has the look and feel of a military
    theme throughout. While the illustrations and price listings
    (in two grades, "Worn" and "New") have the familiar Krause
    flavor, they are augmented with many large color photos of
    U.S. military personnel in the region. Critics could argue
    that the selected photos have too much of an officially-
    sponsored military publication flavor to them, with page
    after page of soldiers handing out candy to delighted
    children, smiling doctors administering vaccines and relief
    workers handing out supplies to grateful locals - nary a
    Green Zone checkpoint or car bomb aftermath among them.
    But that's not what the book is meant to be about. I
    found it a pleasant relief from the headlines and think
    others will too.

    The photos are good quality, printed on glossy paper. As a
    numismatist I take issue with the layout of paper money
    photos, however. For visual effect the designer made two
    choices - one of them I can live with, but the other greatly
    limits the book's usability for research purposes. The first
    choice was to lay out the photos at slight angles, and while
    reading the book I found myself tilting my head like a
    quizzical dog. That part I got quickly used to and I came
    to appreciate the not-your-average-coin-catalog feel. But
    the other choice - to lay out the photos with the front of
    each note overlaying the back - was grating. With parts of
    the back design of nearly every note obscured, it felt like
    the numismatic content had a gaping hole. While I realize
    that numismatists are not the primary target readers, I was
    disappointed with this choice - for me, I'd much rather trade
    the space used for ancillary photos for space to properly
    illustrate each note.

    For bibliophiles there is a useful multipage section on
    books relating to the conflicts. For fun, there are also
    sections on comic books, propaganda leaflets and memorabilia,
    including the famous decks of "most wanted" cards. I'm glad
    the editors decided to include these items, as they often
    accompany the coin and paper money souvenirs brought home
    by veterans.

    Overall I was quite pleased with the book. I think it will
    be well received in its target market, and should still be
    of interest and use in the numismatic market despite the
    banknote illustration shortcoming. In the category of
    nitpicks I feel compelled to note there are some misplaced
    apostrophes in the narrative text that would have given my
    grammar teachers conniptions. The only error that was
    jarring to me was the misspelled heading for the Appendices
    section (on p262, "Appenices").

    I hope the military readers among us help promote the book
    by posting notices on various military web sites and blogs.
    And if anyone has a connection with people stocking the PX,
    put in a good word - I think the book would be a good seller.
    It's a little outdated now as we enter 2008, but still quite
    useful and interesting.

    George Cuhaj adds: "It was our first full color book from
    the KP Numismatic staff, thus quite a learning curve. It
    was the first in a long time to have coins and paper combined.
    The idea was not to show every item, so not every banknote
    got illustrated. The positive military photographic spin
    was intentional. We had plenty bad images in the public
    press and decided that our book would have a different tone."

URL de origen Fecha de publicación
  • 2008-01-13
Volumen
  • 11

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Autor NNP