Why’d you have to ruin it? 
I bet you could’ve almost printed out all the items referenced in the book on 500 pages of green bar dot matrix paper. I think I read everything there was to read around that time. I was a Gopher addict…when I wasn’t MUDding.
I miss my MUD days. I’m even nostalgic about going to the library to check my email which ran on Pine. The internet was so simple back then.
I’m guessing we are similar ages because I feel that way too. I spent so many hours in my university terminal labs on my MUD, or typing in my FORTRAN and hoping it compiled (it didn’t). I still remember the keystrokes for Pine and how to FTP an attachment. Finally getting a 14.4K modem for my home 486 opened up so much and didn’t require me to sneak beers into the campus labs now that I could dial into the university modem pool.
A zillion years ago some colleagues of mine looked at storing a copy of the WWW on a large storage system they had. Of the order of 9 gigabytes. (It may have been a Thinking Machines Data Vault, but I can’t remember.) There was some reason. As it was, it seemed viable at the time. Not for long however. They didn’t actually try, which is a great pity. Bragging rights would have been immense.
The modern web is largely filled with dynamically generated content, so it isn’t clear just how big it is or what it holds. Some parts are likely infinite in size.
This reminds me of one of my uncles who installed Netscape (?) on my first computer back in 1999.
He added a program that allowed you to… sort of… download all of the Internet. Don’t ask me, I never tried it, but I think the idea was to allow you to read something offline without wasting your precious bucks in the times of dial-up. I vaguely remember that the icon depicted a whirlpool.