Stray Studies from England and Italy, by John Richard Greene. Published 1876.
Thanks to Barbara Kosker for post-processing this project!
June 21st, 2008 | Project Gutenberg
1876, Nonfiction
Stray Studies from England and Italy, by John Richard Greene. Published 1876.
Thanks to Barbara Kosker for post-processing this project!
June 14th, 2008 | Project Gutenberg
1830, Nonfiction
On the Portraits of English Authors on Gardening, by Samuel Felton. Published 1830.
What an odd book. The title says exactly what it is, but yet it doesn’t. The author 1) makes a list of English authors who have written (or published) books about 2) gardens and gardening (including horticulture), lists them and discusses 3) portraits that have been made of them. These are not “word picture” portraits, but engravings of paintings, etc. that can be found in the various books. Oh, and 4) they were deceased at the time of writing.
Thanks to Anonymous for post-processing this project!
June 7th, 2008 | Excerpts
1902, 1903, DP, Fragments
1. This Club shall be known as the Ignoramus Club of ——.
4. Every member shall be pledged not to read the latest book until people have stopped expecting it.
5. The Club shall have a Standing Committee that shall report at every meeting on New Things That People Do Not Need to Know.
6. It shall have a Public Library Committee, appointed every year, to look over the books in regular order and report on Old Things That People Do Not Need to Know. (Committee instructed to keep the library as small as possible.)
8. No member (vacations excepted) shall read any book that he would not read twice. In case he does, he shall be obliged to read it twice or pay a fine (three times the price of book, net).
11. The Club shall meet weekly.
12. Any person of suitable age shall be eligible for membership in the Club, who, after a written examination in his deficiencies, shall appear, in the opinion of the Examining Board, to have selected his ignorance thoughtfully, conscientiously, and for the protection of his mind.
13. All persons thus approved shall be voted upon at the next regular meeting of the Club—the vote to be taken by ballot (any candidate who has not read When Knighthood Was in Flower, or Audrey, or David Harum—by acclamation).
Perhaps I have quoted from the by-laws sufficiently to give an idea of the spirit and aim of the Club. I append the order of meeting:
Another gem from Gerald Stanley Lee, this time from The Lost Art of Reading, GP Putnam’s Sons, 1903.
May 29th, 2008 | Project Gutenberg
1880, 1882, Poetry
“He Giveth His Beloved Sleep”, by Elizabeth Barrett Browning. Illustrated by Miss L. B. Humphrey, engraved by Andrew. Published 1882, ©1880.
One of my oldest clearances — it took a while for us to figure out that the best way to present this heavily illustrated book is the simplest way: as illustrations.
May 29th, 2008 | Project Gutenberg
1903, Poetry
Graded Memory Selections, by SD Waterman, et al. Published 1903.
May 26th, 2008 | Project Gutenberg
1844, Periodicals
The Knickerbocker, or New-York Monthly Magazine, Volume 23, Issue 6.
The last one of this volume. It took a very long time — January’s issue was posted in September 2006; June’s just this month. I think I’ve got to get faster at producing them, because I’ll never get through 60 volumes at this rate…
May 26th, 2008 | Project Gutenberg
1922, Fiction
The Ranger Boys and the Border Smugglers, by Claude A. Labelle. Published 1922.
Thanks to Anonymous for post-processing this project!
May 26th, 2008 | Project Gutenberg
Fiction, Nonfiction
A Collection of Stories, Reviews and Essays, by Willa Cather.
This is a “Made for PG” collection of newspaper and magazine stories, reviews and essays. You can see some of the early development of Cather’s style, and follow her move from Nebraska to New York.