A book is $90\%$ likely to be illustrated; an illustration is $90\%$ likely to be in color. How many of $10000$ books must have a color illustration

puzzle

This problem is in Art and Craft of Problem Solving by Paul Zeitz. It's an easy looking puzzle which is not "so obvious" according to the problem itself. It says –

Of all the books at a certain library, if you select one at random, then there is a $90\%$ chance that it has illustrations. Of all the illustrations in the book, if you select one at random, then there is a $90\%$ chance that it is in color. If the library has $10000$ books, then what is the minimum number of books that must contain colored illustrations?

I immediately got an answer, but the warning in the problem makes me thoughtful. Isn't it obvious, you have $\frac{90}{100}\cdot 10000=9000$ books with illustrations and then $\frac{90}{100}\cdot 9000=8100$ books with colored illustrations? Or am missing something obvious?

Best Answer

I am the author of this book. The problem as is misquoted. The correct language for the second sentence begins, "Of all the illustrations in all the books..." (cf. p. 25 of the second edition).

The problem is tricky, but the unambiguous answer is "one," since it is possible that one of the books in the library has the title, "the big book of illustrations, including all colored images in the library."