The Brand New Monty Python Bok Explained

The Brand New Monty Python Bok
Authors:Graham Chapman
John Cleese
Terry Gilliam
Eric Idle
Terry Jones
Michael Palin
Editor:Eric Idle
Illustrator:Terry Gilliam
Peter Brookes
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English
Genre:Humour
Publisher:Methuen
Pub Date:1 November 1973
English Pub Date:Print (hardcover)
Isbn:0-413-30130-3
Preceded By:Monty Python's Big Red Book
Followed By:Monty Python and the Holy Grail (Book)

The Brand New Monty Python Bok was the second book to be published by the British comedy troupe Monty Python.[1] Edited by Eric Idle, it was published by Methuen Books in 1973 and contained more print-style comic pieces than their first effort, Monty Python's Big Red Book.

The white dust jacket was printed with some realistic looking smudged fingerprints on the front, leading to several complaints and returned copies from booksellers. These complaints paled in comparison to the fuss created about the cover printed on the actual book. The title of the fake cover was Tits 'n Bums, appearing as a pornographic magazine with a background photo of several intertwined naked women, but purporting to be a church magazine with articles such as "Are you still a verger?", and a 'weekly look at church architecture'.[2] As Michael Palin remembered: "Our publisher Geoffrey Strachan told the story of an elderly lady bookseller from Newbury who refused to believe the fingerprints were put there deliberately. 'In that case I shall sell the books without their jackets', she said and slammed the phone down so quickly that Geoffrey was unable to warn her that beneath each dust-cover was a mock soft-core magazine".[3]

The book contained an amalgamation of print-style pieces and material derived from Flying Circus sketches. Examples of the former include an interconnected series of jokes based on figures of speech and an advertisement for the fictional Welsh martial art of Llap Goch, which claims to be able to teach students how to grow taller, stronger, faster, and more deadly in a matter of days. Examples of the latter include Sam Peckinpah's "Salad Days" and the Travel Agent sketch, a collection of stereotypes about annoying tourists and the perils of inter-country air travel.

In 1974 a paperback edition was issued as The Brand New Monty Python Papperbok, containing the same contents minus the Tits 'n Bums book cover. In 1981 both this book and Monty Python's Big Red Book were reissued as a hardback book entitled The Complete Works Of Shakespeare And Monty Python: Volume One - Monty Python. Paperback editions of both these books were reissued again in 1986 as The Monty Python Gift Boks, sold together inside an outer cover which folded out into a mini poster.

Contents

Covers

Inside

Credits

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Brand New Monty Python Bok. Monty. Python. 7 August 1973. Eyre Methuen. Biblio.com.
  2. Web site: Brand New Monty Python Bok, The – TV Cream.
  3. Palin, Michael , p.136, 2006, Weidenfeld & Nicolson.