RECENTLY PUBLISHED BOOKS DISCUSSED IN THIS ESSAY
Ballantine, 176, 175 illustrations pp., $8.95 (paper)
Knopf, 256, 203 illustrations pp., $35.00
Newsweek Books, 16, black and white illustrations pp., $60.00
Abrams, 64 pp., $10.95 (paper)
Dover (reprint of London 1920 edition), 2 vols pp., $20.00 (paper)
Oxford University Press, 130, 128 photographs, 64 in full color pp., $19.95
Crown, 64 pp., $4.95 (paper)
Simon and Schuster, 384 pp., $12.95
Dover (reprint of 1923 edition), 382 pp., $4.00 (paper)
Knopf, 416, 87 illustrations pp., $15.95
Peter Smith, 381 pp., $10.00
New Directions, 85 pp., $3.25 (paper)
University of Chicago Press (Phoenix Books), 392, 25 illustrations pp., $6.95 (paper)
Routledge & Kegan Paul (reprint of London 1899 edition), 216 pp., $5.95 (paper)
Dover, 234 pp., $3.00 (paper)
Routledge & Kegan Paul (reprint of London 1937 edition), 156 pp., $10.00
Dodd, Mead (revised edition), 335 pp., $7.95 (paper)
Dodd, Mead (revised edition), 385 pp., $7.95 (paper)
Grosset and Dunlap, 116 pp., $7.95 (paper)
Multimedia (reprint of London 1890 edition), 628, 24 illustrations pp., $15.00 (paper)
Avon, 350 pp., $3.95 (paper)
Harper & Row, 253 pp., $18.95
Andrews and McMeel, 167 pp., $5.95 (paper)
Princeton University Press, Bollingen Series No. XL:2, 176, 64 plates pp., $5.95 (paper)
Abbeville Press, 264, 200 color illustrations pp., $39.95
By the time the Tutankhamun exhibition closes in San Francisco, it will have been seen by more than eight million people, almost all of whom had to apply for reserved tickets: the potential audience was probably twice as large again. Museum directors and their PR men have in the past decade become experts at what one critic nicely terms 'the techniques of hype and hoopla,' the hard sell of cultural packages, from the Chinese show of 1973 to this year's 'Pompeii AD '79': not surprisingly, since the windfalls that such happenings generate can be immense, and the 'Tut craze' is the biggest money-maker of the lot. The New Orleans Museum of Art, for instance, let it be known that 'a minimum of $69.4 million was pumped into the New Orleans economy' in no more than four months, as a direct result of the Tutankhamun exhibition being on view there.[1]
Review, 6327 words
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