@Book{1885490968, editor="Finkelstein, David and Nash, Andrew", title="British publishing industry in the nineteenth century: Volume IV: Publishers, markets, readers", year="2024", publisher="Routledge, Taylor {\&} Francis Group", address="London", keywords="Publishers and publishing; History; Great Britain; HISTORY / Europe / Great Britain", abstract="Volume 4: Publishers, Markets, ReadersVolume 4 IntroductionBibliographyPart 1. THE PRICE OF BOOKS Charles Knight, The Old Printer and the Modern Press (London: John Murray, 1854), pp. 238-58. ⁰́$_8$Literature for the People⁰́$_9$, Times (9 Feb 1854), p. 10.⁰́$_8$Cheap Books and their Readers: An Interview with Mr Routledge⁰́$_9$, Pall Mall Gazette (19 Nov 1885), pp. 1-2.⁰́$_8$Shilling Literature⁰́$_9$, Time (July 1885), 115-7. ⁰́$_8$The New Departure in Publishing: A Six-shilling Novel for Sixpence⁰́$_9$, Publishers⁰́$_9$ Circular (13 May 1899), pp. 519-20. A.D. Innes, ⁰́$_8$The Production and Purchase of Books⁰́$_9$. Paper delivered to the Third International Congress of Publishers, London 7-10 June 1899 (London : Printed for the Organising Committee by Eyre and Spottiswoode, 1899). ⁰́$_8$The Booksellers on the Question of Cheaper Books⁰́$_9$, Academy (21 May 1898), 558-9.Wm Laird Clowes, ⁰́$_8$The Cheapening of Useful Books⁰́$_9$, Fortnightly Review (July 1901), 88-98.W. T. Stead, ⁰́$_8$The World⁰́$_9$s Classics; or Bound Books for the Million⁰́$_9$, Review of Reviews (November 1901), 544-6. Part 2. THE CIRCULATION OF BOOKS James Grant, extract from The Great Metropolis, second series (London: Saunders and Otley, 1837), I, pp. 121-40.Charles Knight, extract from The Old Printer and the Modern Press (London: John Murray, 1854), pp. 260-9. ⁰́$_8$The Circulation of Modern Literature⁰́$_9$, Spectator (3 Jan 1863), pp. 16-18.⁰́$_8$The Publications of a Year⁰́$_9$, Leisure Hour (21 March 1863), 190-2.Walter Montagu Gattie, ⁰́$_8$What English People Read⁰́$_9$, Fortnightly Review (September 1889), 307-21.Joseph Ackland, ⁰́$_8$Elementary Education and the Decay of Literature⁰́$_9$, Nineteenth Century (March 1894), pp. 412-23.⁰́$_8$Do English People Buy Books?⁰́$_9$ The Author, 1 (16 March 1891), pp. 288-91. Part 3. POPULAR PUBLISHING AND READING Thomas Frost, ⁰́$_8$Popular Literature Forty Years Ago⁰́$_9$, in Forty Years Recollections (London: Sampson Low, Marston, Searle, and Rivington, 1880), pp. 77-95.Charles Manby Smith, ⁰́$_8$The Press of the Seven Dials⁰́$_9$, Chambers⁰́$_9$s Journal (28 June 1856), pp. 401-5.Report of the Select Committee on Newspaper Stamps (1851), pp. 371-80. ⁰́$_8$Literature of the People-Past and Present⁰́$_9$, Athenaeum (1 January 1870), pp. 11-14. William Alexander, ⁰́$_8$Literature of the People ⁰́$_3$ Past and Present⁰́$_9$, Good Words (Dec 1876), pp. 92-6.[Francis Hitchman], ⁰́$_8$Penny Fiction⁰́$_9$, Quarterly Review (July 1890), pp. 150-71. Part 4. RAILWAY BOOKSTALLS [⁰́$_8$The New Business in Bookselling⁰́$_9$], Athenaeum (27 January 1849), p. 95.Literature of the Rail: Re-published, by permission, from ``The Times'' of Saturday 9th August 1851, with a preface (London: John Murray, 1851).⁰́$_8$Railroad Bookselling⁰́$_9$, Saturday Review (31 January 1857), pp. 100-2.⁰́$_8$Our Modern Mercury⁰́$_9$, Once a Week (2 February 1861), pp. 160-3.⁰́$_8$W.H. Smith {\&} Son⁰́$_9$s⁰́$_9$, Ludgate Monthly (January 1892), pp. 161-9.⁰́$_8$The Harmsworth Magazine: Some Interviews⁰́$_9$, Academy (16 July 1898), pp. 67-8⁰́$_8$The Bookstall Monopoly⁰́$_9$, Graphic (23 July 1898), p. 58. Part 5. PERIODICAL MARKETS ⁰́$_8$The Edinburgh Review (1802-1902)⁰́$_9$, Edinburgh Review, CCCCII (October 1902), pp. 275-80; 284-86, 287-91, 295-96.⁰́$_9$Publishing and Puffing⁰́$_9$, Metropolitan Magazine (Oct 1833), 171-8.[Christian Isobel Johnstone], ⁰́$_8$Johnstone⁰́$_9$s Edinburgh Magazine⁰́$_9$, Tait⁰́$_9$s Edinburgh Magazine (January 1834), pp. 490-500. ⁰́$_8$Chambers⁰́$_9$s Edinburgh Journal⁰́$_9$, Chambers⁰́$_9$s Edinburgh Journal (1 February 1834), pp. 1-2. George M. Smith, ⁰́$_8$Our Birth and Parentage⁰́$_9$, Cornhill Magazine (January 1901), pp. 4-17. William Westall, ⁰́$_8$Newspaper Fiction⁰́$_9$, Lippincott's Monthly Magazine (June 1890), pp. 77-88. ⁰́$_8$Popular Magazines, Circulating Libraries, and the Sale of Books⁰́$_9$, Bookman (June 1898), pp. 67-70.Part 6. CIRCULATING LIBRARIES AND THE FICTION MARKET Charles Knight, extract from The Old Printer and the Modern Press (London: John Murray, 1854), pp. 229-34.Catherine Gore, 'The Monster Misery of Literature', Blackwood's Magazine (May 1844), pp. 556-60.⁰́$_8$New and Cheap Forms of Popular Literature⁰́$_9$, Eclectic Review (July 1845), pp. 74-84.⁰́$_8$Mudie's Library⁰́$_9$, Leisure Hour (March 1886), pp. 187-9. William C. Preston, ⁰́$_8$Mudie's Library⁰́$_9$, Good Words (December 1894), pp. 668-76⁰́$_8$Mr Mudie's Monopoly⁰́$_9$, Literary Gazette (29 September 1860), article and selected subsequent correspondence. [Original article, 29 September; letter from Mudie to the Athenaeum, 6 October; letter from ⁰́$_8$Z⁰́$_9$, 6 October; letter from Fair Play, 20 October; letter from ⁰́$_8$Senex⁰́$_9$, 27 October; ⁰́$_8$Mudie⁰́$_9$s Library⁰́$_9$, Saturday Review, 3 November; letters from Saunders, Otley and A Second-Rate Author, 17 November; letter from Charles J. Skeet, 24 November]. ⁰́$_8$A Novel ⁰́$_3$ One Guinea and a Half⁰́$_9$, Saturday Review (11 November 1871), pp. 615-16. Samuel Tinsley, ⁰́$_8$Three-Volume Novels⁰́$_9$, letter to the Times (4 December 1871). ⁰́$_8$On the Forms of Publishing Fiction⁰́$_9$, Tinsley's Magazine (May 1872), pp. 411-14.Alexander Innes Shand, ⁰́$_8$The Novelists and their Patrons⁰́$_9$, Fortnightly Review (July 1886), pp. 23-35.⁰́$_8$The Circulating Libraries and Three-Volume Novels⁰́$_9$, Publishers' Circular (7 July 1894), pp. 5, 7-8⁰́$_8$The Three-Volume Novel⁰́$_9$, The Author 5:3 (1 August 1894), pp. 63-5.Part 7. OBSCENITY LAW AND THE BOOK TRADE Extract from ⁰́$_8$Second Reading in the House of Lords of the Sale of Obscene Books Prevention Bill⁰́$_9$, Hansard, HL vol. 146 (25 June 1857), cols 329-337. The Case of ⁰́$_8$The Confessional Unmasked⁰́$_9$. Being a Report of the Proceedings at Wolverhampton, and in the Court of Queen⁰́$_9$s Bench, in the Matter of the Appeal ⁰́$_8$Scott v. Justices of Wolverhampton⁰́$_9$ (London: A. Gadsby, 1868), pp. 36-48.Extract from The National Vigilance Association, Pernicious Literature. Debate in the House of Commons. Trial and conviction for sale of Zola's novels. With opinions of the press (London: National Vigilance Association, [1889]), pp. 5-19.Index", note="edited by David Finkelstein and Andrew Nash", isbn="9781003099635", doi="10.4324/9781003099635", url="https://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/9781003099635", url="https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003099635", language="English" }