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The different elements which go into making up a book

00:00 Thu 27th Dec 2001 |

To the average reader a book is simply sheets of paper glued into a cover. However, each element which goes into making up a book has its own name - and this includes such specifics as the various parts of the page.

Q. So what are the right- and left-hand pages called

A. Right is recto and left is verso.

Q. Why recto and verso

A. Recto is short for recto folio, Latin for right (or top) leaf, while verso is from verso folio, the back side of a leaf. It is still good practice in publishing to refer to pages and page numbers as folios.

Q. And what about the different parts of the page

A.

Head: the top

Foot: the bottom

Foredge: the outside edge opposite the binding

Gutter: the inner or bound edge of a page

Q. So, how are books put together

A. Books are made up of a number of 'sections' - also known as 'signatures' - of eight or, more usually, sixteen or thirty-two pages, or a combination of all three. One large sheet is printed on both sides and folded two, three or four times. These are then bound into the covers.

Q. What are the different types of cover called

A. The traditional term for hardback is 'cased', because the boards - front, back and spine - which make up the cover are seen as a case to protect the block, that is the body of the book. The boards of the case are covered in 'cloth' - hence the other name for this type of binding, 'cloth-cover' - though these days it's more likely to be embossed paper which looks a bit like cloth.

Paperback covers are somewhat more prosaic in that they are simply one sheet of card wrapped around the block.

See also the answerbank article on how books are made

For more on Arts & Literature click here

By Simon Smith

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