Books
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Bunny
Mona Awad
Have you ever wondered why that 13-digit number on the back of a book costs $125 in the United States but is completely free in Canada and India? This book, The Global ISBN Handbook, is your 2025 guide to the International Standard Book Number. It explains everything about this global "fingerprint" for books. The ISBN is the most important cornerstone of the publishing industry. It started as a simple warehouse tool in the 1960s. Now, it is a complex digital identifier used in over 200 countries. This handbook deconstructs the entire system. It uses 15 distinct national case studies to do this. You will learn how the old 10-digit system changed to the new 13-digit one. We break down the five parts of the ISBN, from the "Bookland" prefix to the final check digit. The book explores the global governance framework, starting with the International ISBN Agency. Then, it dives deep into how different countries run their systems. You'll see the privatized, high-cost model in the United States. You'll compare it to Canada's free, government-run system. We explore the industry-led models in Brazil and Germany. We look at government-run systems in Mexico and India. We even cover the unique case of China, where the ISBN is not a simple identifier but a state-controlled publication license. The book also examines the systems in the UK , France , Russia , Japan , Australia , South Africa , Nigeria , and Egypt. Many books and websites can tell you how to get an ISBN. This handbook is the only resource that explains why the process is so different everywhere you look. It moves beyond a simple "how-to" and provides a true global analysis. It directly compares the privatized, for-profit models in the US and UK against the free, public-good systems in Canada and South Africa. You won't just learn the price; you will understand the cultural policies, market structures, and legal philosophies that shape that price. This book shows how the ISBN is a "global mirror". It reveals how a simple number can be a commercial product in one nation , a tool of cultural policy in another , and an instrument of state control in a third. This comparative insight is the missing piece for any author, publisher, or researcher trying to navigate the complex international publishing market. Disclaimer: This handbook is an independently produced resource for commentary and analysis. The author has no affiliation with the International ISBN Agency, R.R. Bowker, Library and Archives Canada, the National Press and Publication Administration, or any other national ISBN agency. This work is independently produced under the principle of nominative fair use.
The Perks of Being a Wallflower
Stephen Chbosky • 2010
The Scarlet Letter
Nathaniel Hawthorne • 1994
A Good Girl's Guide to Murder
Holly Jackson • 2021
To All the Boys I've Loved Before
Jenny Han • 2014
P.S. I Still Love You
Jenny Han • 2015
The Book Thief
Markus Zusak • 2007
The Picture of Dorian Gray
Oscar Wilde • 1993
The Queen's Gambit
Walter Tevis • 2014
The Secret History
Donna Tartt • 2004
Lockwood & Co 01: The Screaming Staircase
Jonathan Stroud • 2014
Frankenstein
Mary Shelley • 2015
Sidney Chambers and The Shadow of Death
James Runcie • 2012
Selected Tales of Edgar Allan Poe
Edgar Allan Poe • 2002
Nothing Like the Movies
Lynn Painter • 2024
Better Than the Movies
Lynn Painter • 2022
All the Bright Places
Jennifer Niven • 2016
My Year of Rest and Relaxation
Ottessa Moshfegh • 2018
Little Women
Louisa May Alcott • 2014
Wylder's Hand
J. Sheridan Le Fanu • 2004
Dead Poets Society
N. H. Kleinbaum • 2006
The Reappearance of Rachel Price
Holly Jackson • 2024

Good Girl, Bad Blood The Sequel to A Good Girl's Guide to Murder
Holly Jackson • 2022
Fatherland Enigma
Robert Harris • 1997
Always and Forever, Lara Jean
Jenny Han • 2018
The Great Gatsby
Francis Scott Fitzgerald • 2022
The Virgin Suicides
Jeffrey Eugenides • 1993
The Hound of Baskervilles
Sir Arther Conan Doyle • 2022
The Sign of Four
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle • 2001
A Study in Scarlet
Arthur Conan Doyle • 2020
The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes
Arthur Conan Doyle • 1988

Crime and Punishment
Fyodor Dostoyevsky • 2002
The Woman in White
Wilkie Collins • 2003
Why Didn't They Ask Evans?
Agatha Christie • 2012
The Murder of Roger Ackroyd
Agatha Christie • 2009
Poirot Investigates
Agatha Christie • 2009
And Then There Were None
Agatha Christie • 2011
Jane Eyre
Charlotte Brontë • 2020
The Body on the Train
Frances Brody • 2019
The Affair of the Mutilated Mink
James Anderson • 2009
The Affair of the Bloodstained Egg Cosy
James Anderson • 2008
The Mask of Dimitrios
Eric Ambler • 2009
Pride and Prejudice (Penguin Classics)
Jane Austen • 1813
Want

The Stranger
Albert Camus

Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
Andrew Butler · 2014

Frank Kafka Metamorphosis
Franz Kafka · 2010
Tender is the Night
F. Scott Fitzgerald • 2003
Recommendations
Recommendations?
Have you ever wondered why that 13-digit number on the back of a book costs $125 in the United States but is completely free in Canada and India? This book, The Global ISBN Handbook, is your 2025 guide to the International Standard Book Number. It explains everything about this global "fingerprint" for books. The ISBN is the most important cornerstone of the publishing industry. It started as a simple warehouse tool in the 1960s. Now, it is a complex digital identifier used in over 200 countries. This handbook deconstructs the entire system. It uses 15 distinct national case studies to do this. You will learn how the old 10-digit system changed to the new 13-digit one. We break down the five parts of the ISBN, from the "Bookland" prefix to the final check digit. The book explores the global governance framework, starting with the International ISBN Agency. Then, it dives deep into how different countries run their systems. You'll see the privatized, high-cost model in the United States. You'll compare it to Canada's free, government-run system. We explore the industry-led models in Brazil and Germany. We look at government-run systems in Mexico and India. We even cover the unique case of China, where the ISBN is not a simple identifier but a state-controlled publication license. The book also examines the systems in the UK , France , Russia , Japan , Australia , South Africa , Nigeria , and Egypt. Many books and websites can tell you how to get an ISBN. This handbook is the only resource that explains why the process is so different everywhere you look. It moves beyond a simple "how-to" and provides a true global analysis. It directly compares the privatized, for-profit models in the US and UK against the free, public-good systems in Canada and South Africa. You won't just learn the price; you will understand the cultural policies, market structures, and legal philosophies that shape that price. This book shows how the ISBN is a "global mirror". It reveals how a simple number can be a commercial product in one nation , a tool of cultural policy in another , and an instrument of state control in a third. This comparative insight is the missing piece for any author, publisher, or researcher trying to navigate the complex international publishing market. Disclaimer: This handbook is an independently produced resource for commentary and analysis. The author has no affiliation with the International ISBN Agency, R.R. Bowker, Library and Archives Canada, the National Press and Publication Administration, or any other national ISBN agency. This work is independently produced under the principle of nominative fair use.



