Type d'article
Etat
Reliure
Particularités
Pays
Evaluation du vendeur
Edité par The Vickery & Hill Publishing Company, Augusta, Maine, 1911
Vendeur : Legacy Books II, Louisville, KY, Etats-Unis
Magazine / Périodique
Soft cover. Etat : VG. Light gauge paper, pictorial printed wraps, sized about 11 x 15 1/2 inches, profusely illustrated including an abundance of advertisements. Overall a clean, bright copy with light toning around edges. Contributors include Clifford Howard (A Balanced Confession, complete), L. G. Moberly (Christina, chapters VI - VII), Henry Gardner Hunting (The Patent Envelope, complete), Ellen Leys (The Wiles Of A Woman, Chapters XVI - XVIII), Bushrod C. Washington, Jr. (Cupid Krag - Jorgensen, complete), and St. George Rathborne (Carried By Storm, chapters XVI - XVII). From 1869 - 1942, over 70 years, Augusta, Maine was America's mail - order magazine publishing capital with some seventeen titles published there and circulation at its height reaching an estimated three million copies. Magazines were mailed to subscribers nation - wide, and the sheer volume of sales led to the opening of a new post office in January, 1890. The major publications targeted women, particularly women in rural areas, but some also included articles and stories of interest to men and children. Farm and literary magazines were other types published in Augusta. The primary focus for the majority of the magazines was family and home life, and content included down - home advice on family life, decorating, business (raising chickens, for example), personal care, health, fashion, and the latest trends. Reading material included poetry, romantic fiction, short stories, and editorials, but most prominently the magazines offered opportunity (and encouragement) for women to buy the various and sundry items advertised. Contests and competitions were part of the allure, and subscription rates were very cheap (and often not even collected) as the magazines were supported well by the advertisements. The major publishers, E. C. Allen, P. O. Vickery and John F. Hill (who later became Governor of Maine), and William H. Gannett all became very wealthy. Publications included Good Stories, Happy Hours, Hearth and Home, American Woman, Needlecraft, and Farm World, all by Vickery - Hill Publishing Company, Comfort, by Gannett, which was the most successful of the magazines, Fireside Magazine, Peoples Illustrated Journal, the Illustrated Family Herald, Thrifty Farmer, Farming World, National Farmer, Golden Moments, Sunshine, Daughters Of America, and Practical Housekeeper, all by Allen, and later Gannett who took over Allen's publications in 1891. Some of the magazines including the present number were oversized, newpaper - style, and printed in quadruple columns, on cheap paper that did not hold up over time and use, thus, copies are relatively scarce, especially the early issues. Worldcat / OCLC locates only 5 repositories. See Zuckerman, A History Of Popular Women's Magazines In The United States, 1792 - 1995.
Edité par Goldsmith, Chicago
Vendeur : Spafford Books (ABAC / ILAB), Regina, SK, Canada
[no date]. (Cloth) Very good plus in very good plus dust jacket. 238pp. Former owner's inscription. The author seems a bit confused about his geography. He assigns raging rivers and timberlands to the most unlikely locations in Alberta (Saskatchewan?). Peel(3) 3796.
Edité par Street & Smith, New York, 1899
Vendeur : Currey, L.W. Inc. ABAA/ILAB, Elizabethtown, NY, Etats-Unis
Edition originale
Octavo, title page printed in red and black, original pictorial green cloth stamped in yellow, black and gold, t.e.g. First edition. Adventure fiction set during the Spanish-American War. Partly saltwater sailing in the Caribbean on a yacht. Wright (III) 4436. A bright very good copy. This first printing is uncommon; copies currently available online are later printings. (#133510).
Edité par The Hobart Company, New York, 1897
Vendeur : Currey, L.W. Inc. ABAA/ILAB, Elizabethtown, NY, Etats-Unis
Edition originale
Octavo, pp. [1-2] 3-267 [268: blank], original pictorial light brown cloth, front and spine panels stamped in green. First edition. Later issue with cancel title leaf tipped in on stub with Hobart imprint on recto and 1897 copyright notice of F. Tennyson Neely on verso. Variant with no publisher's imprint on spine panel. Adventure novel set in South Africa where scientist seeks the "missing link." "The story line imitates Verne, while the background is indebted to Haggard." - Clareson, Science Fiction in America, 1870s-1930s 637. Bleiler (1978), p. 164. Not in Reginald (1979; 1992). A bright, near fine copy. (#90897).