I've followed the calculations given with the explanation of Atomic Mass and Atomic Mass Units up to a point.
I follow that the defiinition for Atomic Mass is based upon Carbon-12 and (for C-12): $$Atomic\ Mass = \dfrac{12g \ of\ ^{12}C}{6.022*10^{23} \ of\ ^{12}C\ atoms} = 1.993*10^{-23}g$$
And computing the mass of 1 amu: $$ 1\ amu = \dfrac {1.993*10^{-23}g} {12} = 1.661*10^{-24}g$$
All good. However, when I compute the number of amu's in 1 gram, I get: $$1\ gram = \dfrac{12\ amu} {1.993*10^{-23}} = 6.021*10^{23} amu$$
And that makes sense to me because an amu should be a very, very small thing so there should be a whole lot of them in one gram.
But the book says: $$1\ gram = 6.022*10^{-24}amu$$
What did I get wrong?