Info On Old Book

Discussion in 'Books' started by Thrifster, Nov 5, 2019.

  1. Thrifster

    Thrifster Well-Known Member

    I purchased this old book of Swiss Family Robinson at the ts today. I know it has condition issues but I liked it and bought it anyways. The book is missing the first couple of pages so I am lacking info on it. The book ends on page number 404. I was trying to find out what year and any other info on the book that the first couple of pages may have had. I searched around on the internet but could not find the same book. Any information on the book would be helpful. Thanks in advance for all replies.

    HPIM3131.JPG
    HPIM3132.JPG
    HPIM3133.JPG HPIM3134.JPG HPIM3136.JPG HPIM3137.JPG HPIM3138.JPG HPIM3139.JPG HPIM3140.JPG
     
    Christmasjoy and pearlsnblume like this.
  2. Debora

    Debora Well-Known Member

    That is a challenge. I don't know who P&M is and can find no reference to a publishing house of that name on line. Perhaps someone else will have better luck. In the meantime, are any of the illustrations signed?

    Debora
     
    Christmasjoy and pearlsnblume like this.
  3. Thrifster

    Thrifster Well-Known Member

    I looked through the book and I didn't find any other illustrations other than the 1 I already posted above.
     
    Christmasjoy likes this.
  4. 2manybooks

    2manybooks Well-Known Member

    2many's partner here. There are over 1000 English-language editions of SFR listed on Worldcat, a catalogue of books held in world libraries, from 1812 on. A few from 1888 and 1900 are noted as being the "seventh edition", but there are dozens if not hundreds of editions and translations, including a ninth edition as early as 1834. I find one version on Abebooks, published by Donohue, Henneberry in Chicago, of 404 pages, but the binding described is different - no photo or date is offered. The work was long out of copyright by the late Victorian period, so anyone could print it.

    The period would be 1890-1900 or so, based on the binding style, materials, & decorations. My theory is that P & M was a start-up of the day, offering classics sold by door-to-door salesmen, and did not last long. Those initials match no publishers I know or find in the Worldcat listings - though I only looked at 1880-1900. Publishing in that era was wild & woolly, with schisms, mergers, and failure not uncommon. There were probably several 'children's classics' produced by them, in identical bindings. They might well have pirated the Donohue Henneberry edition, or bought DH's old plates, or even used their own binding on pages printed by DH. The cheapness (apologies) of the paper & binding are common to books of that type & time.
     
  5. Thrifster

    Thrifster Well-Known Member

    Thanks 2manybooks, lots of great info you provided there. I guess exact details may remain a mystery at this time then. Debora, thanks to you also for looking into this.
     
    Christmasjoy and 2manybooks like this.
  6. clutteredcloset49

    clutteredcloset49 Well-Known Member

    @2manybooks partner
    Excellent information
    This an area I'm not well versed in. Was unaware that the book industry was so "shifty".
    Thank you for joining in.
     
    Christmasjoy likes this.
  7. Debora

    Debora Well-Known Member

    The book industry operated like pirates back in the day. But, as above, the paper quality indicates yours was not an expensive volume. And, with damage, etc. no resale value so you can just read and enjoy.

    Debora
     
    Christmasjoy and Figtree3 like this.
  8. Figtree3

    Figtree3 What would you do if you weren't afraid?

    @Thrifster , can you make out any of the partial words at the bottom of the spine? That usually will be the publisher's name. I have flipped the picture and cropped it, slightly sharpened it. Looks like an "AR" as part of a word but I can't make out the rest. It almost looks like an "H" before that. I don't think it's Harcourt, which is the first name that came to mind.

    @2manybooks ' partner, do you have any other thoughts on that?

    PM HPIM3133.JPG
     
    Christmasjoy likes this.
  9. Iowa Jayhawk

    Iowa Jayhawk Well-Known Member

  10. Iowa Jayhawk

    Iowa Jayhawk Well-Known Member

    Sorry, didn't read the entire post.
     
  11. Figtree3

    Figtree3 What would you do if you weren't afraid?

    Thanks. The tops of the letters following the AR just don't look to me like they could be COURT.
     
  12. Iowa Jayhawk

    Iowa Jayhawk Well-Known Member

  13. 2manybooks

    2manybooks Well-Known Member

    He will be back later. He is out buying MORE books. :banghead:
     
  14. 2manybooks

    2manybooks Well-Known Member

    I think you're right, this would be the publisher's name, and P & M is, perhaps, a series title, like Places & Men or People & Manners...I dunno.

    @Iowa Jayhawk's link to H publishers is good; searching the Worldcat listings from the appropriate time period should offer some matching suspects, but I still think it's a more obscure publisher, and I'm not absolutely sure that's a 'H'. I did do some surfing on Abebooks looking at pictures of possible publishers from 1890-1905, but saw nothing similar, which is why I think it's a small-time, short-lived operation.
     
    Christmasjoy and Figtree3 like this.
  15. Figtree3

    Figtree3 What would you do if you weren't afraid?

    Thanks for replying! I don't necessarily think it's an H, either. I wrote "it almost looks like an H." Not very precise, but I meant it might be an H.

    Good idea about the P&M possibly satanding for the name of a series.
     
    Christmasjoy and 2manybooks like this.
  16. Thrifster

    Thrifster Well-Known Member

    Figtree3, here's a couple more pictures of the book. Sorry about the delay in posting them.
    HPIM1786.JPG
    HPIM1787.JPG
    HPIM1797.JPG
     
    Figtree3 likes this.
  17. Thrifster

    Thrifster Well-Known Member

    Perhaps "Pollard & MA"
     
    Christmasjoy and Figtree3 like this.
  18. 2manybooks

    2manybooks Well-Known Member

  19. Thrifster

    Thrifster Well-Known Member

    2manybooks, could be, looked like the letters "MA" on the book but certainly could be "MO". Thanks for the info!
     
    Christmasjoy likes this.
  20. Debora

    Debora Well-Known Member

    Clever you! 1879-1890. Began as a subscription publisher, hence quality. Here's an intact spine.

    Debora

    19152.jpg
     
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page