In a Report for the Society of Bookmen in 1928, British publishers estimated that between a quarter to two thirds of all the books they published went to four circulating libraries: Boots, Smith’s, Mudie’s, and The Times bookclub. This essay examines the literary impact of one of the largest of these, Boots Book-lovers’ Library (1899-66), which by 1935 had around 400 libraries attached to their high-street pharmacies catering for the tastes of over one million subscribers a year. Compared to the wealth of studies examining the influence of the library market in the Victorian period, the significance of the subscription libraries as key distributors of fiction in the twentieth century is not well known. But private libraries expanded rapid...
Despite growing attention to the material history of the nineteenth-century British novel, what I ca...
A review of Troy J. Bassett's The Rise and Fall of the Victorian Three-Volume Nove
In the late 1990s and early 2000s, the concept of book self-publishing for fiction and nonfiction be...
Whereas most histories of the British public library have focused upon its development as an instit...
The Public Libraries Act (England and Wales) was passed in 1850 at a time when democracy was being h...
In the nineteenth-century book trade in the UK, the proliferation of the book as a cheap read...
“Publishing the Victorian Novel” looks to the methods of book history and literary criticism to ask ...
This thesis examines the relationships between readers, writers and popular and literary novels in E...
Between 1880 and 1914, England saw the emergence of an unprecedented range of new literary forms fro...
In the twentieth century, cumulative millions of readers received books by mail from clubs like Book...
This thesis elucidates some of the ways in which concerns about the status of ‘the book’ at the end ...
Historian of the book Leah Price explains that, "transitively, the book that I touch after you've to...
Journal ArticleThe vast majority of historically significant nineteenth- and early-twentieth century...
What access did readers have to fiction in Britain during the Romantic period? To what extent might ...
Ever since circulating libraries first became commercially successful during the second half of the ...
Despite growing attention to the material history of the nineteenth-century British novel, what I ca...
A review of Troy J. Bassett's The Rise and Fall of the Victorian Three-Volume Nove
In the late 1990s and early 2000s, the concept of book self-publishing for fiction and nonfiction be...
Whereas most histories of the British public library have focused upon its development as an instit...
The Public Libraries Act (England and Wales) was passed in 1850 at a time when democracy was being h...
In the nineteenth-century book trade in the UK, the proliferation of the book as a cheap read...
“Publishing the Victorian Novel” looks to the methods of book history and literary criticism to ask ...
This thesis examines the relationships between readers, writers and popular and literary novels in E...
Between 1880 and 1914, England saw the emergence of an unprecedented range of new literary forms fro...
In the twentieth century, cumulative millions of readers received books by mail from clubs like Book...
This thesis elucidates some of the ways in which concerns about the status of ‘the book’ at the end ...
Historian of the book Leah Price explains that, "transitively, the book that I touch after you've to...
Journal ArticleThe vast majority of historically significant nineteenth- and early-twentieth century...
What access did readers have to fiction in Britain during the Romantic period? To what extent might ...
Ever since circulating libraries first became commercially successful during the second half of the ...
Despite growing attention to the material history of the nineteenth-century British novel, what I ca...
A review of Troy J. Bassett's The Rise and Fall of the Victorian Three-Volume Nove
In the late 1990s and early 2000s, the concept of book self-publishing for fiction and nonfiction be...