CR Blog
Visual Editions: Tristram Shandy
Books, Graphic Design, Type / Typography
Posted by Mark Sinclair, 18 October 2010, 13:25 Permalink Comments (4)

For their first book, Visual Editions tackled one of literature's most ambitious novels: Laurence Sterne's The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman. It's also one that, fittingly, is ripe for a visual reimagining...
"At our last count, there have been more than 120 different editions of The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman. If we're counting right, ours is the 123rd," say Visual Editions.
"Of the many editions, our contemporary favourites – after this one – are American artist John Baldessari's 1988 edition (which came out in a severe 400 copy edition) and Martin Rowson's 1997 illustrated version [a new edition of which was published earlier this year by Self Made Hero]. We also like British film-maker Michael Winterbottom's irreverent 2005 film all about Shandy's unfilmableness: A Cock and Bull Story.
"The visual elements in this edition highlight and exaggerate what Laurence Sterne intended when he first wrote Shandy," they explain. "We like to think that the designers at A Practice for Everyday Life (APFEL) put Laurence Sterne's jacket on and went for a little walk with it."
The new edition of Tristram Shandy also boasts an introduction by Will Self. More information on the book is on a special VE microsite here, and to buy a copy right this minute, go here.
Visual Editions are also set to release Jonathan Safran Foer's Tree of Codes, a die-cut reinterpretation of the text of Bruno Schulz's book, The Street of Crocodiles, later this year.
VE will be profiled in the December issue of CR.






4 Comments
Ah! I was just looking at the (very cool) APFEL Tristram Shandy poster on Household's Poundshop site. Do the images here do the project justice? I'm thinking of the last shot of red pages (endpapers?) in particular; I know A Practice for Everyday Life work in the hard to editorialise zone of the "deceptively simple" but I'm not sure you're feeding any major sense of excitement here... However, even with this limited showing we are (thank God) miles from Michael Winterbottom's painfully literal Cock and Bull...
2010-10-19 13:06:54
What exactly is so new about this book? If I remember correctly, there have been numerous version of it. Sorry, I really can't see the excitement. To repackage something that already exists is not ground breaking. Is it a publishing house catering for graphic designers that only look at the type and design? Not so sure about that.
2010-10-29 09:30:46
The excitement is that this one looks cool! At least I think it does. I would totally read that edition.
2010-10-30 04:25:08
i will run to buy it! it looks amazing, and i am a wil self fan, thanks for the precius information
2011-03-03 11:52:35
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