The most notable achievement of the book is that its title is considered to be one of the oddest of any book ever published. It first won the
Bookseller/Diagram Prize for Oddest Title of the Year in 1996, In 2008, a special "Diagram of Diagrams" prize was held in order to mark the 30th anniversary of the creation of the prize.
Greek Rural Postmen and Their Cancellation Numbers was one of the candidates, along with all other previous winners. The book managed to win the top prize, earning 13% of the vote from around 1,000 voters. It won the prize despite another book, ''People Who Don't Know They're Dead
, leading the poll for most of the running. It came second with 11% of the vote, with How to Avoid Huge Ships'' coming third with 10%. Philip Stone, charts editor at
The Bookseller, said that the book won because the subject matter related to current news about post office closures. He said: "The papers are littered with news stories regarding the closure of local, rural post offices across Great Britain, and I sincerely believe that this title provides further proof to the current Government that the British public are passionate about the maintenance and continuation of local mail delivery services. And not just nationally, but internationally". ==References==