On this page
-
Text (2)
-
^^ _ . - ___ . ,_ ^
-
BooK f and l^umou^ of
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
-
-
Transcript
-
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Qomebody Recently Rushed Into Print ^ Wi...
activity of the two countries is to contrast their literary journals . Mr . Bunce cites the
jlthenacnm , the Saturday Review , and the Spectator as representative of all that is most
typical in the English world of letters , and he shows that—setting aside all questions as
to the quality , variety , and promptness of literary treatment — these journals reveal a
much greater activity in the production of books than is apparent in the only three
American periodicals which are worthy to be named in the same connection -the Natioti ,
I the Critic , and the Literary World . He places side by side , for instance , a copy of
the Athenaeum and of the Nation of the same date , and he does so to point out , by way of
object-lesson , the significant fact that whilst the former contains thirty-six columns of book
i announcements and advertisements , the Nation can show only about seven , the columns being
of equal length . This is no exceptional case , and the remarkable difference speaks for itself .
We have no space for the compliments j which Mr . Bunce pays to English
publ lishers concerning the many cheap * libraries ' of standard works which have appeared in
recent years , much less to repeat the kind words he has to say in regard to our magazine
literature . He admits that in America a public is to be found that devours the
newspapers , buys the magazines , and ' idles over the last sensational novel / but he is forced to
the conclusion that the readers for books that come ' distinctly under the name of literature '
are extremely limited . We are assured that , when the American publisher is told of the
great number of book buyers in the United States , he is inclined to ask wistfully where
they are to be found . He is perfectly aware that school-books , text-books , and works of
reference sell largely , and that occasionally the public make a mad rush for a novel of
acme kind . He sees the most powerful of his English competitors continually producing
books which would soon ruin any one who was rasli enough to embark in such speculations on
I his side of the Atlantic ; and therefore the question returns , If there are twenty readers
in America to one in England , or * ten to one , <> r one to one / whore are they to be found !
Mr . Bunco ifl inclined to think that mr the ' cheap fiction libraries which abound in the United
States are rather a disgrace than a credit to the country , and that what is needed are cheap
and neat editions of standard authors , and an extended circulating library tiystem like that
which prevails hero , so that new books by unknown writers mny at all events got the
chance of a prompt hearing .
ferrr—— ¦ '
^^ _ . - ___ . ,_ ^
^^ _ . - ___ . , _ ^
May i , 1890 The Publishers' Circular 49 i
Book F And L^Umou^ Of
BooK f and l ^ umou ^ of
Bood f ITT learn * that , * * m jv * T T 1 < ¦ * t /*
We Mr . Hamley ^ , the editor of the 4 Views Snots and Observer Reviews , is publishing : Essays in a A work ppreciation entitled . '
* ' Northern Studies , ' by Mr . Ed mund Gosse , in
a new the popu 4 Camelot lar edition Series , is . ' to be the next volume * *
< * We are informed that the new novel of Tolstoi 4 , which is creating so much sensation ,
K Kreutzer reutzer oonata Sonata , ' is is shortl shortlv y to to be be issued issued in m English through Me 3 sr # 3 . Remington & Co ,
Miss Eastlake , the eminent actress , has been so much interested by American life and
society that she is about to give her impressions of the United States .
¦ w * au author thor It is of of stated that that . strikiner striking that Mark book book Rutherford 4 The lhe Revolt Revol , . the m in I
Tanner ' s Lane , ' will shortly issue another work of very considerable interest . Messrs .
Kegan Paul it Co . are the publishers . # ¦ W
* * We understand that the Wellhausen school I of Biblical criticism is to be attacked in a work 1
from the pen of the Rev . W . Probyn-Nevis . The opening chapters of Genesis will bo specially dealt with .
An interesting memorial of the late
Empress Berlin . It Augusta embraces has most just of been the notices issued that at appeared in German , English , and French
newspapers when the Empress died . ?
The Hampton Lectures by Archdeacon Watkins are to be published by Mr . John Murray . The subject chosen by the
Archdeacon is the Fourth Gospel and the criticism made upon it in modern # times .
» # An interesting gift has been received by Cardinal Manning from the Pope . His
Holiness has sent to the English Cardinal a phototype copv of the celebrated manuscript the
* Codex Vaticanus . ' # # * ##
' Queens of Society and ' Wits and Bc « vix of Society / by IMiilip and Grace Wharton , arc
to ^ _ r n be - * - * -- ^ - ^~ issued ~* - ^ If in */ new editions M by Messrs . Jarvis * and Son . Mr . J . Huntly McCarthy lias
written a preface .
4 Walks in the Grand Duchy of Luxemburg / a district little known to Continental
travelforthcoming lers , will form issue a new of illustrated Mr . Percy section Lindley in the n
pleasant little book , ' Walks in the Ardennes . '
„ «—* -. *
-
-
Citation
-
Publishers’ Circular (1880-1890), May 1, 1890, page 491, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/pc/issues/tec_01051890/page/5/
-