The idea for the first book originated in some cards that Schott made to send to friends, which contained booklets of what he considered vital but hard to find information. Schott typeset the book himself and had 50 copies privately printed by the Pear Tree Press in Stevenage. After sending copies out to his friends, he sent one to the CEO of
Bloomsbury,
Nigel Newton. Newton told
The Boston Globe, "I was completely bowled over when it arrived on my desk. It was a work of striking originality, and it was remarkable to receive an unsolicited submission like this in the mail. I immediately passed it to one of our editors, who signed it up." ''Schott's Original Miscellany
was published with little fanfare in 2002, but after an article in the Guardian
, in which the book was described as the "publishing sensation of the year", sales increased, and within weeks Schott's Original Miscellany
was at No. 1. Robert McCrum said of the book in The Observer'': "Originality is like charisma. It's hard to define, but we know it when we find it ... ''Schott's Original Miscellany'' is, without doubt, the oldest, and possibly merriest title you will come across in a long day's march through the shimmering desert of contemporary publishing". Schott followed the Original Miscellany with three sequels: ''Schott's Food & Drink Miscellany
, Schott's Sporting, Gaming, & Idling Miscellany
and Schott's Quintessential Miscellany''. While the first two were best-sellers (Schott had two books simultaneously in the Sunday Times top ten), sales did not match the success of the first book. == Schott's Almanacs ==