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Frankfurt (dpa) - This year's Frankfurt Book Fair will feature more exhibitors than ever before in what the event's director called "a barometer of the industry," a press conference before the official opening ceremony heard Tuesday.
The 58th edition of the world's largest trade fair for books will see 7,272 exhibitors from 113 countries display almost 400,000 titles in the event running October 4-8.
A total 4 per cent more floor space was booked by exhibitors than last year, said the book fair's director Juergen Boos in the opening press conference. In particular the number of Asian exhibitors has grown, while small and medium German publishers are also more strongly represented.
All 13 hall levels were booked out and 283 agencies would be present in the Agents Centre and the film section's International Agents Centre. Germany has 3,288 exhibitors, followed by Britain with 803 and the US with 676. China has doubled its space.
The 2,500 programmed events will make the fair "a cultural event of superlatives," predicted Boos.
Speaking of India's status as Guest of Honour at this year's fair, Boos said that "worldwide, India is in the media spotlight: its economic development, political debate in and concerning India, the diversity of cultures in today's India fascinate the entire world."
He stressed that the event is "is all about the economic interests of the book industry," adding that "no other fair provides so many opportunities and chances to make contacts, to develop business ideas and to do deals."
The fair will also feature campaigns to encourage literacy and education.
The book fair was to be officially opened later Tuesday by German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier, Indian Minister for Human Resource Development Arjun Singh and Indian writer Mahasweti Devi.
This was to be followed on Tuesday evening by a gala concert in honour of India at Frankfurt's Alte Oper. Entitled "Dhwani: the resonance of India," the concert was to be a mixture of Indian traditional, folk and modern performing arts.
Meanwhile it was announced that Canadian director Atom Egoyan won the book fair's prize for Best International Literary Film Adaptation for his film Where The Truth Lies.
Copyright 2006 dpa Deutsche Presse-Agentur GmbH