Patricia Pistner, resident of Naples, FL., started collecting miniature books in 1997, when she commissioned the building of an eighteenth century French designed dollhouse.
More than 60 world renowned miniature artisans worked on the house, and created furnishings, rooms (including 9 bedrooms), paintings, porcelain and other items that were exact replicas of that period.
“I decided I should have a library in my miniature house and that I would put real books in my library; miniature books,” she said.
Pistner then went on a hunt for any ancient miniature books she could find, and joined the Miniature Books Society (MBS).
“In 1997, I went to my first Miniature Books Society meeting which they call the Conclave,” Pistner said.
According to the organization’s history, MBS is an international non-profit organization chartered in 1983 by the State of Ohio. Its purposes are to maintain an interest in all aspects of miniature books, to provide an environment where ideas are exchanged amongst people with an interest in miniature books, and to serve as a clearinghouse for those books.
The conclave takes place annually where members of the society get to meet each other. Dealers, collectors, manufacturers and publishers all come together to interact with other people who share the same interest.
Competitions and exhibits also take place at the Conclave which next year is scheduled for September 3-6, 2010, in Lexington, Ky.
Pistner says that some of the society’s members come from outside the U.S. MBS has therefore occasionally held its annual meeting in foreign countries such as Germany, Scotland, Canada and England.
Pistner says her collection encompasses 4,000 miniature books that she has accumulated in almost 30 years.
“I acquired my very first miniature book in the early 1980’s,” she said. “But I can’t say that I truly started collecting books with seriousness until 1997.”
“I have paid in the 5 figures for a miniature book,” Pistner said.
She says she holds artifacts ranging from ancient Egyptian cuneiform tablets dating from 2,000 B.C., to early printed miniature books.
Pistner’s dollhouse and some of her miniature books were even featured in the “Masters of Miniature” exhibition at the Naples Museum of Art.
She says she has acquired these valuables mostly through dealers and auctions.
A world renowned company located in Peru which has been part of the Miami scene recently, is one of some rare distributors of miniature books.
The company is called “Los Libros Mas Pequeños Del Mundo” (The Smallest Books of the World.)
This company is well known for its religious miniature books. “Mensajes Para Toda la Vida” (Messages for Life) is one of them. It contains sayings that were taken directly from the bible and is a best seller for adults, according to Ludy Briceño, sales manager for Los Libros Mas Pequenos Del Mundo.
Other subjects this company prints include Greek fairy tales for kids, life lessons geared towards men and women specifically, books on love, and collections of poems from around the world.
Although these books are more recent and contemporary than what can be found in Pistner’s collection, Los Libros Mas Pequeños Del Mundo has made a name for itself in the past decade or so.
Luis Enrique Pereyra Espinoza, sales chief for Los Libros Más Pequeños Del Mundo, says he has been attending the Miami book fair for 12 consecutive years.
Ludy Briceño, sales manager for Los Libros Mas Pequenos Del Mundo says this year they sold 4,000 books out of three stands at the fair.
“We participate in book fairs around the world to sell our books,” Espinoza said. “I have traveled to Spain, Italy, the United States and South America.”
Besides book fairs, the company’s books can be purchased in bookstores in Peru, South America and even Miami; they can also be ordered online in English, Spanish, Portuguese and Italian.
“Our books are 100 percent hand-made,” Briceño said.
Espinoza added that they are all made in Peru by a team of 45 men and women who work full time to print the texts with a press machine, and put the books together.
The books measure anywhere from 1 x 1.5 x 1cm to 11.5 x 18 x 1cm; their prices ranging from two dollars for the smallest books, to eight dollars for the biggest ones.
Los Libros Mas Pequenos Del Mundo has been around since 1970. The company was created by Alberto Briceño Polo. Polo was born in Cajamarca, Perú on June 29, 1950.
According to the company’s history, Polo always had an affinity for reading literary works. After college, he began reading hundreds of novels which inspired him to create and develop the concept for his miniature books company.
He wanted to bring cultures of the world together. One of the greatest ways he succeeded in doing so was in his revision of the bible, and other holy scriptures of the world from which he took some of the most beautiful messages to put together in one book.
The company started with only one book, and now has 300 published titles.
Pistner says she’s never heard of them, but she has books that are much smaller than those Los Libros Mas Pequeños Del Mundo claim to be the smallest of the world.
“I’ve seen books that are smaller than a fingernail,”Pistner said.
Some highlights of Pistner’s collection can be found at http://gallery.mac.com/pistnerhouse#100015.

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