I'm happy to share some details, and don't think I'm violating any confidences by doing so. It was a last minute request with barely time to prepare a binding and get it delivered in time. Fine leather bindings can take weeks, even months --because the best binders have huge backlogs. But my binder and I have been friends over 30 years and he's not taking new clients, so he can sometimes get things done in short order in an emergency. I did it at cost (if I count time and gas with trips back and forth to my binder and to the post office, and my wrecked nerves as the deadline approached, I think I lost a buck and a few brain cells on the deal, but this was an honor, and nobody's noticed the missing brain cells yet). The story I was told was that one of Bill Cosby's parents read him `How to Cure a Cold' when he was a child and that this sparked his affinity for Twain. The PBS people also thought something with a Philadelphia connection would be appropriate. They also had a tight budget, which limited options. I offered them the first book printing of `How to Cure a Cold' (SKETCHES NEW AND OLD 1875) but that was beyond their budget (a beat up second state copy would have fit anybody's budget but would make an execrable gift...). The only thing with a solid Philadelphia connection that came to mind was his Hannibal sketch that appeared in the Philadelphia Courier in 1852, but I wasn't going to part with my own copy of that paper --way beyond their budget anyway. There is a 20th century reprint of that Hannibal sketch but its meager format makes it a poor choice for a gift. We discussed several other options and they went with the two volume Berkeley edition of THE EARLY TALES AND SKETCHES. I had my local binder rebind them in a restrained but elegant brown morocco binding with a gilded caption naming Bill Cosby as the recipient of the award. The result was a very handsome set of books, and I admit I was a bit disappointed not to see them on a table next to the bronze award itself. I wish I'd had months instead of days to reflect and connect dots and come up with a perfect gift, and I wish I could have attended the award ceremony. On the other hand, I'm making steady progress on the tunnels I'm boring into the MTP and the MTM and the Boyhood home and the Birthplace Museum. Kevin Mac Donnell Austin TX