Suppose each page is an exact image of the corresponding page in the original, and they're all there: just in 4 volumes instead of 5. I would call that an "exact reprint". The difference is just in how they're bound.
LotR has been published in a one-volume format. Many, many series,* including Steven K.Z. Brust's Vlad Taltos books, are reprinted in omnibus editions, combining two or more books that were originally issued separately into a single larger product. Would you refuse to call such combinations "exact reprints"?
I'm a cataloger and I work with rare books where differences in editions are important, so yeah, I would. :)
There are cataloging rules that say how different something can be before it is considered to be a new edition rather than just a reprint (rare book catalogers and catalogers of special collections argue for more) which means a new record -- when I'm cataloging a book I can put different reprints on the same record with the original with a note that identifies each as the original or a reprint, but something being officially put out in four volumes instead of five would need a new record even if the text is the same.
I did have another title that was originally published in one volume that I got in two, but that was a case of being bound differently; the second volume had a handwritten title page and obviously had not been published with the intent of being in two volumes; that one was an exact printing (or reprint, if there was more than one printing) of the one volume version and went on that record with a note that our copy was bound in two volumes instead.
no subject
Suppose each page is an exact image of the corresponding page in the original, and they're all there: just in 4 volumes instead of 5. I would call that an "exact reprint". The difference is just in how they're bound.
LotR has been published in a one-volume format. Many, many series,* including Steven K.Z. Brust's Vlad Taltos books, are reprinted in omnibus editions, combining two or more books that were originally issued separately into a single larger product. Would you refuse to call such combinations "exact reprints"?
no subject
There are cataloging rules that say how different something can be before it is considered to be a new edition rather than just a reprint (rare book catalogers and catalogers of special collections argue for more) which means a new record -- when I'm cataloging a book I can put different reprints on the same record with the original with a note that identifies each as the original or a reprint, but something being officially put out in four volumes instead of five would need a new record even if the text is the same.
I did have another title that was originally published in one volume that I got in two, but that was a case of being bound differently; the second volume had a handwritten title page and obviously had not been published with the intent of being in two volumes; that one was an exact printing (or reprint, if there was more than one printing) of the one volume version and went on that record with a note that our copy was bound in two volumes instead.
no subject
LO♡E A LIBRARIAN*
* I did, for the best 42 years of my life.