Edité par John Dicks, London
Vendeur : Jacket and Cloth, Chippenham, Royaume-Uni
EUR 230,06
Autre deviseQuantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Ajouter au panierHardcover. Etat : Poor. Etat de la jaquette : No DJ. F. GILBERT AND W.G. STANDFAST (illustrateur). Published: n.d. [c1880] Margaret; or, the Discarded Queen was originally serialised in Reynolds's Miscellany between 5 July 1856 and 11 July 1857) and the Young Duchess; or, Memoirs of a Lady of Quality between 17 June 1857 and 9 June 1858. Reprint. Originally published Margaret; or, the Discarded Queen was originally serialised in Reynolds's Miscellany between 5 July 1856 and 11 July 1857) and the Young Duchess; or, Memoirs of a Lady of Quality between 17 June 1857 and 9 June 1858. DESCRIPTION: Two novels bound as one in three quarter brown leather. Contains 1) The Young Duchess, Parts I & II and 2) Margaret, Parts I and II from the 'Dicks English Novels' series. The parts are illustrated with 27, 26, 22, 21 engravings respectively. Each title page has a stamp for 'Basant Lall Simla'. Language: English. Book Condition: Poor: Probably a library binding that appears to have been repaired at some point in the past with rough sewn endpaper gutters. Wear to corners, edges and spine ends. Cracked gutter to first page. Plate prior to title page re-inserted incorrectly due to heavy wear and loss to original gutter edge. First thirty pages attached at upper gutter edge only. A few further pages roughly re-inserted. Page are toned but unmarked. DJ Condition: No DJ Pages 144, 168, 149, 140, Size: 21cm by 13cm. PROVENANCE: STAMP: Basant Lall Simla [Shimla, India]. AUTHOR: George William MacArthur Reynolds (1814-1879) was a British fiction writer and journalist. Born in Sandwich, the son of Captain Sir George Reynolds, a flag officer of the Royal Navy. Educated at Dr. Nances school in Ashford, Kent, and then attended the Royal Military College, Sandhurst. Intended for a career in the British Army, but quit the military following the death of his parents where he travelled a great deal, particularly in France, and became a naturalised French citizen. He began residence in Paris in 1834, where he started a daily English newspaper. The venture failed, and Reynolds returned bankrupt to England in 1836. Reynolds served as editor of The Teetotaller (a weekly journal advocating teetotalism) beginning in 1840. Reynolds was a prolific writer of popular fiction starting from The Youthful Imposter, published in 1835. During his lifetime he was more read than Dickens or Thackeray with his is best-known work being the long-running serial The Mysteries of London (1844)that sold 40,000 copies a week in penny instalments and more than a million copies cumulatively. The Mysteries of London and The Mysteries of the Court of London, are considered to be among the seminal works of the Victorian "urban mysteries" genre. The Mysteries of London, like most of Reynolds works, was published first as a weekly penny dreadful, or "Penny Blood", illustrated with lurid engravings and circulating mainly among readers of limited means and education.