PART FOUR
A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF ALL BORZOI BOOKS PUBLISHED FROM 25 SEPTEMBER, 1915 TO 25 SEPTEMBER, 1920
BIBLIOGRAPHY
CONRAD AIKEN
SCEPTICISMS: Notes on Contemporary Poetry. 1919. 12mo, cloth; 306 pages; $2.00.
PEDRO A. DE ALARCÓN
THE THREE CORNERED HAT. Translated by Jacob S. Fassett, Jr. 1918. 12mo, cloth; 208 pages; $1.50.
SHALOM ALEICHEM
JEWISH CHILDREN. Stories Translated by Hannah Berman. 1920. 284 pages; 12mo, cloth; $2.00.
LEONID ANDREYEV
THE CONFESSIONS OF A LITTLE MAN DURING GREAT DAYS. Translated by R. S. Townsend. 1917. 12mo, cloth; 244 pages; [out of print].
THE CRUSHED FLOWER and Other Stories. Translated by Herman Bernstein. 1916. 12mo, cloth; 361 pages; $2.00.
THE LITTLE ANGEL and Other Stories. Translated by W. H. Lowe. 1915. 12mo, cloth; 255 pages; [out of print].
ANONYMOUS
GONE WEST. By a Soldier-Doctor. Edited by H. M. G. and M. M. H. With a preface by Frederick W. Kendall. 1919. 12mo, cloth; 103 pages; $1.25.
THE BOOK OF MARJORIE. 1920. 12mo, Toyogami boards; 128 pages; $1.50.
WOMEN. 1919. 12mo, boards; 159 pages; $1.25.
ETIENNE ANTONELLI
BOLSHEVIK RUSSIA. Translated by Charles A. Carroll. 1920. 12mo, cloth, 319 pages; $2.50.
WILLIAM ARCHER
GOD AND MR. WELLS. 1917. 12mo, cloth; 144 pages; [out of print].
INDIA AND THE FUTURE. 1918. 8vo, cloth; 336 pages illustrated; [out of print].
ALMA C. ARNOLD
THE TRIANGLE OF HEALTH. 1918. 12mo, cloth; 188 pages; [now published by Dr. Arnold].
MICHAEL ARTZIBASHEF
WAR. A Play. Translated by Thomas Seltzer. 1916. 12mo, boards; 87 pages; [out of print].
EMILE AUGIER
FOUR PLAYS. Translated by Barrett H. Clark, with a Preface by Brieux. 1915. Contents: Olympe’s Marriage / Monsieur Poirier’s Son-in-Law / The House of Fourchambault / The Post-Script. Small 8vo, boards; 264 pages; $2.00.
PÍO BAROJA
THE CITY OF THE DISCREET. A Novel. Translated by Jacob S. Fassett. 1917. 12mo, cloth; 360 pages; $2.00.
CAESAR OR NOTHING. A Novel. Translated by Louis How. 12mo, cloth; 337 pages; $2.00.
YOUTH AND EGOLATRY. Translated by Jacob S. Fassett Jr. and Frances L. Phillips. 1920. Introduction by H. L. Mencken. [Number 1 in the Free Lance Books.] 12mo, half cloth; 267 pages; $1.75.
LILLIAN BARRETT
THE SINISTER REVEL. A Novel. 1919. 12mo, half cloth; 363 pages; $2.00.
JOHN SPENCER BASSETT
OUR WAR WITH GERMANY: A History. 1919. 8vo, cloth; 398 pages, maps; $4.00.
C. W. BEAUMONT AND M. T. H. SADLER
NEW PATHS. 1919. 8vo, boards; 184 pages, illustrated; [out of print].
ALEXANDRE BENOIS
THE RUSSIAN SCHOOL OF PAINTING. Translated by Alexander Yarmolinsky. 1916. Small 4to, boards; 205 pages, illustrated; $5.00.
KONRAD BERCOVICI
CRIMES OF CHARITY. 1917. 12mo, cloth; 278 pages; [out of print].
HERMAN BERNSTEIN
THE WILLY NICKY CORRESPONDENCE. 1918. 12mo, cloth; 166 pages. [Now published by Mr. Bernstein.]
ALBERTO BLEST-GANA
MARTIN RIVAS. A Novel. Translated by Mrs. Charles Whitham. 1918. 12mo, cloth; 437 pages; $2.00.
MAXWELL BODENHEIM
ADVICE: A Book of Poems. 1920. 16mo, boards; 85 pages; $1.25.
JACOB BOEHME
SIX THEOSOPHIC POINTS and Other Writings. Translated by John Rolleston Earle, M. A. 1920. Contents: Six Theosophic Points / Six Mystical Points / On the Earthly and Heavenly Mysteries / On the Divine Intuition. 8vo, cloth; 220 pages; $3.00.
CONFESSIONS OF JACOB BOEHME. Compiled and Edited by W. Scott Palmer. Introduction by Evelyn Underhill. 1920. 12mo, cloth; 189 pages; $2.00.
MARY BORDEN
THE ROMANTIC WOMAN. A Novel. 1920. 12mo, cloth; 347 pages; $2.50.
WILLIAM ASPINWALL BRADLEY
SINGING CARR and Other Song-Ballads of the Cumberlands. 1918. 8vo, paper; 37 pages; $.75.
CLAUDE BRAGDON
FOUR-DIMENSIONAL VISTAS. 1916. 8vo, cloth; 144 pages; $2.00.
ARCHITECTURE AND DEMOCRACY. 1918. 8vo, cloth; 229 pages, illustrated; $2.00.
ROBERT BRIDGES
OCTOBER and other Poems. 1920. 12mo, boards; 74 pages; $1.50.
EMMA BEATRICE BRUNNER
BITS OF BACKGROUND: In One-Act Plays. 1919. Contents: Over Age / The Spark of Life / Strangers / Making a Man. 12mo, French boards; 120 pages; $1.00.
WITTER BYNNER
THE BELOVED STRANGER: Two Books of Song and a Divertisement for the Unknown Lover. Preface by William Marion Reedy. 1919. 12mo, half cloth; 121 pages; $1.50.
A CANTICLE OF PAN and Other Poems. 1920. 12mo, half cloth; 230 pages; $2.00.
FELDWEBEL C....
THE DIARY OF A GERMAN SOLDIER. 1919. 12mo, boards; 253 pages; [out of print].
COULSON T. CADE
DANDELIONS. A Novel. 1917. 12mo, cloth; 356 pages; $2.00.
WILLA CATHER
YOUTH AND THE BRIGHT MEDUSA. 1920. Contents: Coming Aphrodite! / The Diamond Mine / A Gold Slipper / Scandal / Paul’s Case / A Wagner Matinée / The Sculptor’s Funeral / “A Death in the Desert.” 12mo, cloth; 303 pages; $2.25.
ANNIE VIVANTI CHARTRES
THE OUTRAGE. A Novel. 1918. 12mo, cloth; 261 pages; $1.50.
SHELDON CHENEY
THE ART THEATRE. 1917. 12mo, half cloth; 251 pages, illustrated; $2.00.
EUGENE CHRISTIAN
EAT AND BE WELL. 1916. 12mo, cloth; 147 pages; $1.25.
MEATLESS AND WHEATLESS MENUS. 1917. 12mo, cloth; 144 pages; $1.20.
CHESTER CORNISH
BEATING ‘EM TO IT, or, The Sultan and the Sausages. Illustrated by Alfred J. Frueh. 1917. 12mo, boards; 126 pages; [out of print].
ADELAIDE CRAPSEY
A STUDY IN ENGLISH METRICS. 1918. 8vo, cloth; 80 pages; $1.00.
WARREN H. CUDWORTH [Translator]
THE ODES OF HORACE. 1917. 12mo, cloth; 181 pages; $1.50.
RICHARD CURLE
THE ECHO OF VOICES. Stories. 1917. 12mo, cloth; 304 pages; $2.00.
WILLIAM H. DAVIES
COLLECTED POEMS OF WILLIAM H. DAVIES. 12mo, boards; 190 pages; frontispiece by W. Rothenstein; $1.50.
THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF A SUPER TRAMP. With a preface by Bernard Shaw. 1917. 8vo, cloth; 367 pages; $2.50.
ALLAN DAVIS [AND ANNA R. STRATTON]
THE INWARD LIGHT. A Play. 1919. 12mo, cloth; 137 pages; $1.35.
C. A. DAWSON-SCOTT
THE ROLLING STONE. A Novel. 1920. 12mo, cloth; 383 pages; $2.25.
CLARENCE DAY, JR.
THIS SIMIAN WORLD. 1920. Illustrated by the author. 12mo, cloth; 101 pages; $1.50.
L. J. DeBEKKER
THE PLOT AGAINST MEXICO. Introduction by John Farwell Moors. 1919. 12mo, cloth; 308 pages, illustrated; $1.50.
E. M. DELAFIELD
ZELLA SEES HERSELF. A Novel. 1917. 12mo, cloth; 315 pages; $2.00.
THE WAR WORKERS. A Novel. 1918. 12mo, cloth; 296 pages; $2.00.
THE PELICANS. A Novel. 1919. 12mo, cloth; 358 pages; $2.50.
CONSEQUENCES. A Novel. 1919. 12mo, cloth; 350 pages; $2.50.
WALTER DE LA MARE
THE THREE MULLA MULGARS. Illustrated by Dorothy P. Lathrop. 1919. 8vo, cloth; 275 pages; boxed; $5.00.
FLOYD DELL
WERE YOU EVER A CHILD? 1919. 12mo, cloth; 206 pages; $1.75.
BEULAH MARIE DIX
MOLOCH. A Play. 1916. 12mo, boards; 102 pages; [out of print].
OSSIP DYMOW
NJU. A Play. Translated by Rosalind Ivan. 1917. 12mo, boards; 96 pages; [out of print].
SOLOMON EAGLE [J. C. Squire]
BOOKS IN GENERAL. 1919. 8vo, cloth; 280 pages; $2.00.
BOOKS IN GENERAL: Second Series. 1920. 8vo, cloth; 273 pages; $2.50.
MAX EASTMAN
COLOURS OF LIFE: Poems and Songs and Sonnets. 1918. 16mo, boards; 129 pages; $1.25.
JOURNALISM VERSUS ART. 1916. Square 12mo, cloth; 144 pages illustrated; [out of print].
DOROTHY EASTON
THE GOLDEN BIRD and Other Sketches. Introduction by John Galsworthy. 1920. 12mo, cloth; 281 pages; $2.00.
JOSÉ ECHEGARAY
EL GRAN GALEOTO. Edited by Aurelio M. Espinosa. 1918. 12mo, cloth; 271 pages; $1.50.
T. S. ELIOT
POEMS. 1920. 12mo, boards; 63 pages; $1.25.
EZRA POUND: His Metric and Poetry. 1918. 12mo, boards; 32 pages, frontispiece; $.35.
HAL G. EVARTS
THE CROSS PULL. A Novel. 1920. 12mo, cloth; 273 pages, frontispiece; $2.00.
GUSTAVE FLAUBERT
MADAME BOVARY. Translated by Eleanor Marx Aveling. Introduction by Burton Roscoe. 1919. 8vo, cloth; 455 pages; $3.50.
J. S. FLETCHER
THE MIDDLE TEMPLE MURDER. 1919. 12mo, cloth; 319 pages; $2.00.
THE TALLEYRAND MAXIM. 1920. 12mo, cloth; 295 pages; $2.00.
THE PARADISE MYSTERY. 1920. 12mo, cloth; 306 pages; $2.00.
DEAD MEN’S MONEY. 1920. 12mo, cloth; 313 pages; $2.00.
WILSON FOLLETT
THE MODERN NOVEL: A Study of the Purpose and Meaning of Fiction. 1918. 12mo, cloth; 336 pages; $2.00.
E. M. FORSTER
WHERE ANGELS FEAR TO TREAD. A Novel. 1920. 12mo, cloth; 283 pages; $2.25.
GILBERT FRANKAU
THE OTHER SIDE: and Other Poems. 1918. 16mo, boards; 80 pages; $1.00.
PETER JAMESON: A Romance. 1920. 12mo, cloth; 439 pages; $2.50.
FUTABATEI
AN ADOPTED HUSBAND. A Novel. Translated by M. Mitsui and Gregg M. Sinclair. 1919. 12mo, half cloth; 275 pages; $2.00.
ALFRED GANACHILLY
THE WHISPERING DEAD. 1920. 12mo, cloth; 281 pages; $2.00.
W. M. GARSHIN
THE SIGNAL and Other Stories. Translated by Captain Rowland Smith. 1915. 12mo, cloth; 363 pages; [out of print].
THEOPHILE GAUTIER
MADEMOISELLE DE MAUPIN. Translated from the French with an Introduction by Burton Roscoe. 1920. 8vo, cloth; 424 pages; $4.00.
KAHLIL GIBRAN
THE MADMAN: His Parables and Poems. 1918. With three drawings by the author. 8vo, cloth; 73 pages; $1.50.
TWENTY DRAWINGS. With an Introductory Essay by Alice Raphael. 1919. 4to, half cloth; 62 pages; $5.00. [There is also an edition of one hundred numbered copies, specially bound and autographed by Mr. Gibran. $15.00.]
THE FORERUNNER: His Parables and Poems. 1920. With five drawings by the author. 8vo, cloth; 64 pages; $1.50.
NIKOLAI V. GOGOL
THE INSPECTOR GENERAL. A Comedy. Translated by Thomas Seltzer. 1916. 12mo, boards; 119 pages; [out of print].
TARAS BULBA: A Tale of the Cossacks. Translated by Isabel F. Hapgood. 1915. 12mo, cloth; 284 pages; $2.00.
IVAN ALEKSANDROVICH GONCHAROV
THE PRECIPICE. A Novel. Translated from the Russian by M. Bryant. 1916. 12mo, cloth; 320 pages; [out of print].
CARL H. GRABO
THE WORLD PEACE AND AFTER. 1918. 12mo, boards; 154 pages; $1.25.
ROBERT GRAVES
FAIRIES AND FUSILIERS. Poems. 1918. 16mo, boards; 97 pages; $1.25.
COUNTRY SENTIMENT. Poems. 1920. 16mo, boards; 104 pages; $1.25.
J. B. HARRIS-BURLAND
THE WHITE ROOK. 1918. 12mo, boards; 239 pages; $1.75.
THE SHADOW OF MALREWARD. 1919. 12mo, boards; 336 pages; $1.90.
ALEXANDER HARVEY
SHELLEY’S ELOPEMENT. 1918. 8vo, cloth; 296 pages; [out of print].
OWEN HATTERAS
PISTOLS FOR TWO. 1917. Contents: George Jean Nathan / H. L. Mencken. 12mo, paper; 48 pages; [out of print].
HAROLD M. HAYS, Major, M. C., U. S. A.
CHEERIO. 1919. 12mo, cloth; 297 pages, frontispiece; $1.50.
OTTO HELLER
PROPHETS OF DISSENT. 1918. 12mo, cloth; 228 pages; $1.50.
DANIEL HENDERSON
GREAT HEART. Introduction by Major-General Leonard Wood. 1919. 8vo, cloth; 256 pages, illustrated; $2.50.
A. P. HERBERT
THE SECRET BATTLE. A Novel. 1920. 12mo, cloth; 266 pages; $2.00.
THE BOMBER GYPSY and Other Poems. 1920. 16mo, cloth; 111 pages; $1.50.
JOSEPH HERGESHEIMER
THE LAY ANTHONY. A Romance. 1919 [first published elsewhere 1914]. 12mo, cloth; 316 pages; $2.00.
MOUNTAIN BLOOD. A Novel. 1919 [first published elsewhere 1915]; 12mo, cloth; 368 pages; $2.25.
THE THREE BLACK PENNYS. A Novel. 1917. 12mo, cloth; 416 pages; $2.25.
GOLD AND IRON. 1918. Contents: Wild Oranges / Tubal Cain / The Dark Fleece. 12mo, cloth; 332 pages; $2.00.
JAVA HEAD. A Novel. 1919. 12mo, cloth; 225 pages; $2.00. [One hundred numbered copies on special paper, specially bound and autographed by the author were also sold.]
THE HAPPY END. 1919. Contents: Lonely Valleys / The Egyptian Chariot / The Flower of Spain / Tol’able David / Bread / Rosemary Roselle / The Thrush in the Hedge. 12mo, cloth; 315 pages; $2.00. [Fifty numbered copies on special paper, specially bound and autographed by the author were also sold.]
LINDA CONDON. A Novel. 1919. 12mo, cloth; 304 pages; $2.00. [Fifty numbered copies on special paper, specially bound and autographed by the author were also sold.]
CHARLES F. HIGHAM
SCIENTIFIC DISTRIBUTION. Introduction by James Howard Kehler. 1918. 12mo, cloth; 195 pages; $2.00.
LOOKING FORWARD: Mass Education Through Publicity. 1920. 12mo, cloth; 205 pages; $2.00.
ARTHUR HOPKINS
HOW’S YOUR SECOND ACT. Introduction by George Jean Nathan, 1919. [First published elsewhere 1918.] 12mo, boards; 65 pages; $1.00.
LOUIS HOW
NURSERY RHYMES OF NEW YORK CITY. 1919. 16mo, boards; 71 pages; $1.00.
KATHLEEN HOWARD
CONFESSIONS OF AN OPERA SINGER. 1918. 8vo, cloth; 273 pages, illustrated; [out of print].
E. W. HOWE
VENTURES IN COMMON SENSE. 1919. Introduction by H. L. Mencken; [number 2 in the Free Lance Books]; 12mo, half cloth; 273 pages; $1.75.
STEPHEN HUDSON
RICHARD KURT. A Novel. 1920. 12mo, cloth; 341 pages; $2.25.
W. H. HUDSON
GREEN MANSIONS: A Romance of the Tropical Forest. With an Introduction by John Galsworthy. 1916. 12mo, cloth; 368 pages; $2.50.
BIRDS AND MAN. 1916. 8vo, cloth; 309 pages, frontispiece; $3.50.
TALES OF THE PAMPAS. 1917. Contents: El Ombú / Story of a Piebald Horse / Pelino Viera’s Confession / Niño Diablo / Marta Riquelme / Tecla and the Little Men / Appendix to El Ombú. 12mo, cloth; 261 pages; $1.50.
A LITTLE BOY LOST. 1918. Illustrated by A. D. M’Cormick. 8vo, cloth; 222 pages; $2.00.
ALBERT M. HYAMSON
PALESTINE: The Rebirth of an Ancient Nation. 1917. 8vo, cloth; 317 pages, illustrated; $2.50.
VICENTE BLASCO IBAÑEZ
THE CABIN. A Novel. Translated by Francis Haffkine Snow and Beatrice M. Mekota. Introduction by John Garrett Underhill. 1917. 12mo, cloth; 310 pages; $2.00.
EDGAR JEPSON
THE LOUDWATER MYSTERY. 1920. 12mo, cloth; 285 pages; $2.00.
ORRICK JOHNS
ASPHALT: and Other Poems. 1917. 8vo, boards; 114 pages; $1.25.
GODMUNDUR KAMBAN
HADDA PADDA. A Play. Translated by Sadie Louise Peller. Foreword by Georg Brandes. 1917. 12mo, boards; 80 pages; [out of print].
SHEILA KAYE-SMITH
SUSSEX GORSE: The Story of a Fight. 1916. 12mo, cloth; 468 pages; $2.50.
R. G. KIRK
ZANOZA. 1918. 16mo, boards; 112 pages, illustrated; [out of print].
ALEXANDER KORNILOV
MODERN RUSSIAN HISTORY. Translated by A. S. Kaun. 1916. Two volumes 8vo, cloth. Volume I 323 pages with maps. Volume II 384 pages with maps; $7.50 the set. (Sold only in sets.)
ALFRED KREYMBORG
MUSHROOMS: A Book of Free Forms. 1916. [First published elsewhere 1916.] 12mo, boards; 156 pages; [out of print].
OTHERS: An Anthology of the New Verse. 1916. 12mo, boards; 160 pages; [out of print].
OTHERS: An Anthology of the New Verse. 1917. 12mo, boards; 120 pages; [out of print].
P. KROPOTKIN
IDEALS AND REALITIES IN RUSSIAN LITERATURE. 1915. 8vo, cloth; 315 pages; $2.50.
MUTUAL AID: A Factor in Evolution. 1916. 12mo, cloth; 251 pages; $1.50.
A. J. L.
TALES AND TAGS. Illustrated by C. H. L. 1918. 8vo, half cloth; 115 pages; $1.25.
M. Y. LERMONTOV
A HERO OF OUR TIME. A Novel. Translated by J. H. Wisdom and Marr Murray. 1916. 12mo, cloth; 344 pages; [out of print].
WYNDHAM LEWIS
TARR. A Novel. 1918. 12mo, cloth; 379 pages; $2.00.
THE EARL LOREBURN
HOW THE WAR CAME. 1920. 8vo, cloth; 348 pages with map; $3.00.
WILLIAM LOVETT
LIFE AND STRUGGLES OF WILLIAM LOVETT in his Pursuit of Bread, Knowledge and Freedom. With some Short Account of the Different Associations he belonged To and of the Opinions He Entertained. Introduction by R. H. Tawney, B. A. 1920. Two Volumes: 16mo, cloth; 277 and 209 pages; $3.00 the set. (Sold only in sets.)
J. W. MACKAIL
RUSSIA’S GIFT TO THE WORLD. 1915. 8vo, cloth; 48 pages; [out of print].
PERCY MACKAYE
RIP VAN WINKLE: A Folk Opera in Three Acts. 1919. 8vo, cloth; 97 pages, illustrated; $1.50.
WASHINGTON: The Man who Made Us. 1918. 12mo, half cloth; 329 pages, illustrated; $2.00.
THOMAS MANN
ROYAL HIGHNESS: A Novel of German Court Life. Translated by A. Cecil Curtis. 1916. 12mo, cloth; 372 pages; [out of print].
WILLIAM SOMERSET MAUGHAM
THE LAND OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN: Sketches and Impressions in Andalusia. 1920. 8vo, half cloth; 238 pages, frontispiece; $2.50.
GUY DE MAUPASSANT
YVETTE and ten Other Stories. Translated by Mrs. John Galsworthy. Introduction by Joseph Conrad. 1915. 12mo, cloth; 259 pages; $1.75.
JOHN McCLURE
AIRS AND BALLADS. 1913. 12mo, boards; 84 pages; $1.00.
THE STAGS HORNBOOK. 1918. 16mo, cloth; 446 pages; $2.00.
H. L. MENCKEN
A BOOK OF PREFACES. (Opus 13). 1917. Contents: Joseph Conrad / Theodore Dreiser / James Huneker / Puritanism as a Literary Force. 12mo, cloth; 238 pages; $2.00.
PREJUDICES: First Series. 1919. Partial Contents: The Late Mr. Wells / Arnold Bennett / The Dean / Professor Veblen / The New Poetry Movement / The Heir of Mark Twain / Hermann Sudermann / George Ade / The Butte Bashkirtseff / 12mo, cloth; 254 pages; $2.00.
IN DEFENSE OF WOMEN. 1919 [First published elsewhere 1918]. 12mo, cloth; 218 pages; [Temporarily out of print. To be reissued in revised form in 1921].
A BOOK OF BURLESQUES. 1920 [First published elsewhere 1916]. Partial Contents: Death: a Philosophical Discussion / From the Program of a Concert / The Wedding: A Stage Direction / The Visionary / The Artist: a Drama Without Words. 12mo, cloth; 237 pages; $2.00.
THE AMERICAN LANGUAGE. 1919. 8vo, cloth; 384 pages; [Temporarily out of print. To be reissued in revised form in 1921].
A BOOK OF CALUMNY. 1919. [First published elsewhere as “Damn,” 1918.] 12mo, cloth; 130 pages; [out of print].
H. L. MENCKEN [AND GEORGE JEAN NATHAN]
HELIOGABALUS: A Buffoonery in Three Acts. 1920. 8vo, cloth; 183 pages; [out of print]. [Fifty numbered copies on special paper specially bound and autographed by the authors were also sold.]
A. A. MILNE
FIRST PLAYS. 1920. Contents: Wurzel-Flummery / The Lucky One / The Boy Comes Home / Belinda / The Red Feathers. 12mo, cloth; 234 pages; $2.00.
FRED MITCHELL
FRED MITCHELL’S WAR STORY. 1917. 12mo, half cloth; 240 pages, illustrated; $1.50.
PHILIP MOELLER
MADAME SAND. With a foreword by Mrs. Fiske and an introduction by Arthur Hopkins. 1917. 12mo, boards; 167 pages; $1.75.
FIVE SOMEWHAT HISTORICAL PLAYS. 1918. Contents: Helena’s Husband / The Little Supper / Sisters of Susannah / The Roadhouse in Arden / Pokey. 12mo, Toyogami boards; 157 pages; $1.50.
MOLIERE: A Romantic Play. 1919. 12mo, French boards; 239 pages; $1.50.
SOPHIE: A Comedy. Prologue by Carl Van Vechten. 1919. 12mo, Toyogami boards; 264 pages; $1.75.
JOHN MORSE
IN THE RUSSIAN RANKS. 1916. 12mo, cloth; 344 pages; [out of print].
EDWIN MUIR
WE MODERNS: Enigmas and Guesses. 1920. Introduction by H. L. Mencken; [number 4 in the Freelance Books]. 12mo, half cloth; 244 pages; $1.75.
JOHN MURRAY IV
JOHN MURRAY III. 1919. 12mo, cloth; 115 pages, illustrated; $1.50.
JOHN MIDDLETON MURRY
THE EVOLUTION OF AN INTELLECTUAL. 1920. Partial Contents: The Honesty of Russia / The Dream of Dostoevsky / Mr. Sassoon’s War Verses / Realism / The Gulf Between / The Sorrows of Satan / A Hero of our Time / The Problem of Intelligentsia / The Defeat of Imagination / The Republic of the Spirit. 8vo, cloth; 237 pages; $3.00.
GEORGE JEAN NATHAN
MR. GEORGE JEAN NATHAN PRESENTS. 1917. Partial Contents: The Hawkshavian Drama / The American Musical Show / Slapsticks and Rosemary / The Case for Bad Manners / The Vaudeville / America’s Most Intellectual Actress / The Case of Mr. Winthrop Ames. 12mo, cloth; 310 pages; $2.00.
THE POPULAR THEATRE. 1918. Partial Contents: The Popular Theatre / Its Plays / Its Broadway and its Playwrights / Its Audiences / Its Music Shows / Its Comedians / Its Motion Pictures / Its Actors / Its Typical Season. 12mo, cloth; 236 pages; $2.00.
COMEDIANS ALL. A Book of Contradictory Criticism. 1919. 12mo, cloth; 269 pages; $2.00.
A BOOK WITHOUT A TITLE. 1919. [First published elsewhere 1918]. 12mo, boards; 85 pages; $1.00.
GEORGE JEAN NATHAN [AND H. L. MENCKEN]
THE AMERICAN CREDO: A Contribution Toward the Interpretation of the National Mind. 1920. 12mo, cloth; 191 pages; $1.75.
FRIEDRICH NAUMANN
CENTRAL EUROPE. Translated by Cristabel M. Meredith. 1917. 8vo, cloth; 362 pages; $3.00.
F. W. NIETZSCHE
THE ANTICHRIST. 1920. Translation and Introduction by H. L. Mencken; [number 3 in the Free Lance Books]. 12mo, half cloth; 182 pages; $1.75.
ALFRED OLLIVANT
THE BROWN MARE. 1916. 12mo, cloth; 145 pages. [Now published by Doubleday, Page & Co.]
JAMES OPPENHEIM
THE BOOK OF SELF. 1917. 12mo, boards; 273 pages; $2.00.
ROBERT OWEN
THE LIFE OF ROBERT OWEN by Himself. 1920. Introduction by M. Beer. 16mo, cloth; 368 pages; $1.50.
ROLAND PERTWEE
OUR WONDERFUL SELVES. A Novel. 1919. 12mo, cloth; 349 pages; $2.00.
SAMUEL PETERSON
DEMOCRACY AND GOVERNMENT. 1919. 12mo, cloth; 304 pages; $2.00.
EZRA POUND
LUSTRA of Ezra Pound, with Earlier Poems. 1917. 12mo, boards; 202 pages; $1.50.
PAVANNES AND DIVISIONS, 1918. Partial Contents: Jodindranath Mawhwor’s Occupation / Aux Etuves de Wiesbaden / L’Homme Moyen Sensuel / Stark Realism / Twelve Dialogues of Fontenelle / Remy de Gourmont / Arnold Dolmetsch / Troubadours. 8vo, cloth; 272 pages, frontispiece; $2.50.
EZRA POUND [AND ERNEST FENOLLOSA]
“NOH” or Accomplishment: A Study of the Classical Stage of Japan. 1916. 8vo, cloth; 276 pages, frontispiece; $3.00.
THE ABBÉ PRÉVOST
MANON LESCAUT. Translated from the French with an Introduction by Burton Roscoe. 1919. 8vo, cloth; 345 pages; $3.50.
STANISLAW PRZYBYSZEWSKI
HOMO SAPIENS: A Novel in three parts. Translated by Thomas Seltzer. 1915. 12mo, cloth; 400 pages; [out of print].
E. R. PUNSHON
THE SOLITARY HOUSE. 1918. 12mo, boards; 301 pages; $1.90.
EDWARD C. RANDALL
THE DEAD HAVE NEVER DIED. 1918. 12mo, cloth; 262 pages; $2.00.
M. E. RAVAGE
THE JEW PAYS: A Narrative of the Consequences of the War to the Jews of Eastern Europe, and of the Manner in which Americans have attempted to meet them. 1919. 12mo, cloth; 161 pages, illustrated; $1.50.
DOROTHY RICHARDSON
POINTED ROOFS. [Pilgrimage I]. Introduction by May Sinclair. 1917. 12mo, cloth; 303 pages; $2.00.
BACKWATER. [Pilgrimage II] 1917. 12mo, cloth; 293 pages; $2.00.
HONEYCOMB. [Pilgrimage III] 1918. 12mo, cloth; 286 pages; $2.00.
THE TUNNEL. [Pilgrimage IV] 1919. 12mo, cloth; 342 pages; $2.50.
INTERIM. [Pilgrimage V] 1920. 12mo, cloth; 284 pages; $2.00.
JOHN RUSSELL
THE RED MARK and Other Stories. 1919. Contents: The Red Mark / Doubloon Gold / The Wicks of Macassar / The Practicing of Christopher / The Passion-Vine / The Adversary / The Slanted Beam / The Lost God / Meaning—Chase Yourself / Jetsam / East of Eastward / The Fourth Man / The Price of the Head / Amok. 12mo, cloth; 397 pages; $2.00.
CHARLES SAROLEA
GREAT RUSSIA: Her Promise and Achievement. 1916. 12mo, cloth; 264 pages; [out of print].
BORIS SAVINKOV [“ROPSHIN”]
WHAT NEVER HAPPENED: A Novel of the Revolution. Translated by Thomas Seltzer. 1917. 12mo, cloth; 448 pages; $2.00.
THE PALE HORSE. Translated by Z. Vengerova. 1912. 12mo, cloth; 196 pages; [out of print.]
HERBERT SCHOLFIELD
SONNETS OF HERBERT SCHOLFIELD. 1919. 12mo, half cloth; 151 pages; $1.50.
MARJORIE ALLEN SEIFFERT
A WOMAN OF THIRTY. 1919. 12mo, half cloth; 135 pages. $1.50.
DON CAMERON SHAFER
BARENT CREIGHTON: A Romance. 1920. 12mo, cloth; 335 pages. $2.00.
EDWARD SHANKS
THE QUEEN OF CHINA and Other Poems. 1920. 8vo, half cloth; 207 pages; $2.00.
ELIZABETH SIMPSON
PRINCE MELODY IN MUSIC LAND. Illustrated by Mary Virginia Martin. 1917. 8vo, cloth; 183 pages; $1.50.
OSBERT SITWELL
ARGONAUT AND JUGGERNAUT. 1920. 12mo, half cloth; 136 pages; $1.50.
FEODOR SOLOGUB
THE LITTLE DEMON. A Novel. Translated by John Cournos and Richard Aldington. 1916. 12mo, cloth; 365 pages; [out of print].
THE OLD HOUSE. 1916. Stories. Translated by John Cournos. 1916. 12mo, cloth; 309 pages; [out of print].
VLADIMIR SOLOVIEV
WAR, PROGRESS, AND THE END OF HISTORY including a Short Story of the Anti-Christ; Translated by Alexander Bakshy. 1915. 8vo, cloth; 262 pages; [out of print].
THOMAS SPENCE [WILLIAM OGILVIE AND THOMAS PAINE]
THE PIONEERS OF LAND REFORM. 1920. Contents: “The Nationalization of the Land,” by Thomas Spence / “The Right of Property in Land,” by William Ogilvie / “Agrarian Justice,” by Thomas Paine. With an Introduction by M. Beer. 16mo, cloth; 219 pages; $1.50.
J. C. SQUIRE
POEMS: First Series. 1919. 8vo, boards; 115 pages; $1.50.
FRANCIS ELLINGTON LEUPP [“TATTLER”]
NATIONAL MINIATURES. 1918. 12mo, cloth; 296 pages; [out of print].
LUDWIG THOMA
MORAL. A Play. Translated by Charles Recht. 1916. 12mo, boards; 100 pages; [out of print].
EUNICE TIETJENS
BODY AND RAIMENT. Poems. 1919. 12mo, boards; 83 pages; $1.25.
PROFILES FROM CHINA: Sketches in Free Verse of People and Things Seen in the Interior. 1919. [First published elsewhere 1917]. 12mo, boards; 77 pages; $1.25.
LEO TOLSTOI
THE JOURNAL OF LEO TOLSTOI. [Translated by Rose Strunsky.] 1917. 12mo, cloth; 447 pages; $2.50.
H. M. TOMLINSON
OLD JUNK. Foreword by S. K. Ratcliffe. 1920. 8vo, cloth; 208 pages; $2.00.
JOHN TREVENA
MOYLE CHURCH TOWN. 1915. 12mo, cloth; 388 pages; [out of print].
A DRAKE, BY GEORGE! 1916. 12mo, cloth; 397 pages; [out of print].
W. B. TRITES
BRIAN BANKER’S AUTOBIOGRAPHY. 1917. 8vo, cloth; 300 pages; [out of print].
GEORGE KIBBE TURNER
HAGAR’S HOARD. A Novel. 1920. 12mo, cloth; 311 pages; $2.25.
ROSS TYRELL
THE PATHWAY OF ADVENTURE. 1920. 12mo, cloth; 312 pages; $2.00.
CARL VAN VECHTEN
MUSIC AND BAD MANNERS. 1916. Contents: Music and Bad Manners / Music for the Movies / Spain and Music / Shall we Realize Wagner’s Ideals / The Bridge Burners / A New Principle in Music / Leo Ornstein. 12mo, boards; 243 pages; $2.00.
INTERPRETERS AND INTERPRETATIONS. 1917. 12mo, cloth; 368 pages; [out of print].
THE MERRY-GO-ROUND. 1918. Partial Contents: In Defense of Bad Taste / Music and Super-music / The New Art of the Singer / Music and Cooking / The Authoritative Work on American Music / De Senectute Cantorum. 12mo, boards; 334 pages; $2.00.
THE MUSIC OF SPAIN. 1918. Contents: Spain and Music / _The Land of Joy_ / From George Borrow to Mary Garden / Notes. 12mo, boards; illustrated; 223 pages; $1.50.
IN THE GARRET. 1920. Partial Contents: Variations of a Theme by Havelock Ellis / The Folk Songs of Iowa / Isaac Albeniz / The Holy Jumpers / Sir Arthur Sullivan / On the Rewriting of Masterpieces / Oscar Hammerstein: An Epitaph / In the Theatres of the Purlieus. 12mo, boards; 347 pages; $2.00.
INTERPRETERS. 1920. Contents: Fremstad / Farrar / Mary Garden / Chaliapine / Mazarin / Yvette Guilbert / Nijinsky / Epilogue. 12mo, boards; 202 pages, illustrated; $2.00.
VIKENTY VERESSAYEV
THE MEMOIRS OF A PHYSICIAN. Translated by Simeon Linden. Introduction and notes by Henry Pleasants, Jr. M. D. 1916. 12mo, cloth; 390 pages; [out of print].
A. HYATT VERRILL
A BOOK OF CAMPING. 1917. 12mo, cloth; illustrated; 195 pages. [Now published by Barse and Hopkins.]
P. VINAGRADOFF
THE RUSSIAN PROBLEM. 1914. [First published elsewhere 1915.] 8vo, cloth; 52 pages; [out of print].
DE VOGÜE
THE RUSSIAN NOVEL. Translated by Colonel H. A. Sawyer. 1915. [First published elsewhere 1915.] 8vo, cloth; 348 pages, illustrated; [out of print].
WILLIAM ENGLISH WALLING
RUSSIA’S MESSAGE: The People against the Czar. 1917. 8vo, cloth; 245 pages, illustrated; [out of print].
ARTHUR WALEY
170 CHINESE POEMS. 1919. 8vo, half cloth; 243 pages; $2.50.
MORE TRANSLATIONS FROM THE CHINESE. 1919. 8vo, half cloth; 144 pages; $2.00.
GRAHAM WALLAS
THE LIFE OF FRANCIS PLACE (1771–1854). 1919. 8vo, cloth; 431 pages, frontispiece; $3.50.
E. L. GRANT WATSON
WHERE BONDS ARE LOOSED. A Novel. 1917. 12mo, boards; 304 pages; $2.00.
THE MAINLAND. A Novel. 1917. 12mo, cloth; 311 pages; $2.00.
DELIVERANCE. A Novel. 1920. 12mo, cloth; 322 pages; $2.25.
ALDEN W. WELCH
WOLVES. A Novel. 12mo, cloth; 236 pages; $1.40.
LOUIS WILKINSON
THE BUFFOON. A Novel. 1916. 12mo, cloth; 428 pages; $2.50.
A CHASTE MAN. A Novel. 1917. 12mo, cloth; 338 pages; $2.50.
BRUTE GODS. A Novel. 1919. 12mo, cloth; 355 pages; $2.00.
CORA LENORE WILLIAMS
CREATIVE INVOLUTION. Introduction by Edwin Markham. 1916. 12mo, cloth; 222 pages. [Now published by Miss Williams.]
HAROLD WILLIAMS
MODERN ENGLISH WRITERS: A Study of Imaginative Literature 1890–1914. 8vo, 534 pages; $6.00.
POSTSCRIPT
A number of books are scheduled for publication in October. Some will doubtless be delayed, as manufacturing conditions are still difficult and transportation none too certain. However, I am bound to have out before the holidays three unusually charming gift books.
Van Vechten’s “The Tiger in the House” is the only complete account in English of the domestic cat. It is Carlo’s _magnum opus_ and I have made in it, I think, quite the handsomest of all my books. A large octavo bound in half canvas with purple Japanese Toyogami sides stamped in gold. The text is set in Caslon old style type, and printed on India Tint Art Craft laid paper and since no more of this is to be manufactured till the indefinite future—if then—the edition for 1920 consists of only two thousand numbered copies. The book runs to almost four hundred pages, with bibliography and index and there are thirty-two full pages of the most charming cat pictures you ever saw. The price should be seven-fifty.
I am peculiarly proud to offer “Seven Men” by Max Beerbohm—the “incomparable Max.” These five stories were published in London last year by William Heinemann, but my edition will be different. For “Max” has given us an inimitable appendix and six drawings to illustrate it and neither text nor pictures have ever been printed before. Thus the Borzoi “Seven Men” becomes a real “first” and an item for collectors. On this account and because in order to give the book the odd shape (square octavo) I wanted I had to have the paper specially manufactured, the first printing consists of just two thousand numbered copies. It will probably be impossible to make further copies before next year. The probable price—four dollars.
W. H. Hudson’s “A Little Boy Lost” is now accepted, I fancy, as a classic for children of all ages. Dorothy P. Lathrop, whom many of you will remember for her delightfully imaginative pictures done last year for Walter de la Mare’s “The Three Mulla Mulgars,” has illustrated the Hudson book _con amore_. The result is a singularly fine large octavo—wholly successful, I think, as to paper, printing, and binding. I hoped this would not cost more than five dollars, but I fear the price must be set at six.
(By the way, I should like readers to realize this: that I try to make Borzoi Books as well as I know how. Then I base the price on what they cost to make. I do not fix the price first and then try to trim the quality so as to come within that price.)
Joseph Hergesheimer’s “San Cristobal de la Habana” is not fiction. It is about Havana—full of the colour he loves and of which he is a master—and Joe himself. It will please and interest his friends; it will probably enrage his enemies. But so engaging and candid a book will certainly be read. The first edition at any rate will be printed on Warren’s India Tint Olde Style paper and bound in half black cloth, with Chinese Orange board sides spattered with gold. Three fifty is the price and there will be a hundred numbered copies printed on Strathmore Laid paper, specially bound and autographed at seven-fifty.
I planned Mencken’s “Prejudices” to be an annual affair and the second series will be ready in October. It will be as provoking (and I hope and believe as popular) as its predecessor, though it will deal less with books and more with the ideas underlying them. The price will remain, for the moment anyway, two dollars.
“The Gate of Ivory” is Sidney L. Nyburg’s latest and by far his most ambitious novel. The scene is the Baltimore of not so many years ago, and the story of Eleanor Gwynn, irresponsible, but brimful of audacity and charm, and Allen Conway, is close enough to the facts of a famous Maryland scandal to start it fairly on the way to the success I think it deserves. Two twenty-five, but as is likely to be the case with many books, the price will have to go up with subsequent editions, as a considerable increase in binding costs is expected this fall as well as some increase in printing.
I have the greatest confidence in Floyd Dell. He’s a different fellow, though, and doesn’t seem to have anything like the same kind of confidence in himself. But anyway last year I got him to write “Were You Ever a Child?”—essays on education as charming as their title, and now—at long last—I have his first novel. “Moon-Calf” is a real book or I’m sadly mistaken. It’s by far the best first novel by an American that has ever been offered me. The scene is our Middle West, and the story—obviously autobiographical—shows the influence of H. G. Wells in a way that marks, I think, a new note in our literature. Anyway I recommend “Moon-Calf” to every reader who cares a damn for my opinion of a novel; I want the book to sell so that Floyd Dell may be amply encouraged to do its sequel (when you read it you’ll see it has to have one). Probable price two-fifty.
André Tridon’s “Psychoanalysis and Behavior” is rather more of a real book than his first. It has a more organic unity—reads easier and is all in all a more finished product. Incidentally—though Tridon told me once that he was going to rewrite his first book every year for a different publisher—“Psychoanalysis and Behavior” duplicates _none_ of the material in “Psychoanalysis.” The price is two-fifty.
_The Atlantic Monthly_ occupies a unique position among our magazines, and most publishers, I think, realize the recommendation that serialization in it carries to readers of books. I am particularly glad, therefore, to say that Mr. Sedgwick printed several instalments of “Letters of a Javanese Princess” by Raden Adjeng Kartini in his magazine, where they aroused a good deal of interest and discussion. The original manuscript was very long and contained much indifferent material, so under our direction the translator, Mrs. Symmers, cut it down and prepared a careful, informing, introduction about Kartini, who, by the way, was the youngest daughter of a Javanese regent and probably the first feminist of the Orient. Then at the suggestion of Mrs. Knopf, whose favourite book this is, I asked Louis Couperus, the great Dutch novelist, to write a special introduction for our edition. His pages, few, but wholly charming, are an interesting feature of the book. A square octavo: probable price, four dollars.
I have reason to believe that “The Foundations of Social Science,” by James Mickel Williams, is a book that one can justly term epoch-making. Anyway, the work represents almost ten years out of the author’s life—years spent teaching in a small college rather than a large one, because only there could he hope to have sufficient time to devote to it. The manuscript was read for the author, and offered me for publication by an authority in whom I have the very greatest confidence—Charles A. Beard, formerly Professor of Politics at Columbia University and now director of the Bureau of Municipal Research in New York. In his book Professor Williams explains the human element in the motives of respect for law and the causes of increasing disrespect; the economic and political attitudes of employers on the one hand and labour on the other; progressive and reactionary judicial attitudes, especially with respect to labour legislation; the causes of national feeling and international rivalry and the difficulties in establishing a League of Nations. Ought not such a work prove of value and interest to intelligent citizens today? It will be a large octavo running to over five hundred pages and the price will probably be six dollars.
Last year Mr. Mencken got for me, and I published in his _The Free Lance Books_, “Ventures in Common Sense,” by E. W. Howe, of Atchison, Kansas. Immediately afterwards most enthusiastic letters reached the author from the big editors in the country—such men as Edward Bok, late of _The Ladies’ Home Journal_, John M. Siddall of _The American Magazine_, Don C. Seitz of _The New York World_, as well as letters from the presidents of very large corporations telling of their admiration for Mr. Howe’s philosophy. It seemed to me then as it does now that whether or not you agree with him—and more than likely you will disagree—Mr. Howe should be more widely known, particularly in the East. His unique little monthly is read almost exclusively by the really important people of the country, but the average man or woman would find it highly entertaining. For “Ed” Howe is the Middle West and the plain American incarnate and in his new book, “The Anthology of Another Town,” he presents a panorama, really, of a typically middle western small town. The price is two dollars.
A very important event in the book world will be, I think, the publication of a translation of Knut Hamsun’s “Hunger.” It is difficult to say why Hamsun is not known, really widely known, in the United States. A translation of one of his books was published a few years ago. But those who know Hamsun in the original seem to agree that “Shallow Soil” was the worst possible novel to select for launching him in America. I have been told of the greatness of Hamsun for a full five years now and at last I am stirred to action. There can be no question whatever that he is far and away the leading Scandinavian writer of the day, and if one may judge from the acclaim with which “Growth of the Soil” has been received in England, one of the very greatest writers of our age. You can read about him in The Encyclopaedia Britannica and you will learn there that “Hunger” is the book that first made him famous—almost a generation ago. This competent translation was first published in England in 1899, but Edwin Bjorkman’s informing, useful introduction, was specially written for me.
Many who read this have doubtless already seen the little printed fall announcements that went out from my office some months ago. In some respects this announcement is inaccurate. For example, I shall not publish de Bekker’s “Cuba.” Mr. de Bekker was delayed in getting the manuscript written and as the book required elaborate and special handling from an advertising point of view—it was to carry much advertising matter—I decided finally that since he was able to get another publisher it would be better so.
Over a year ago I persuaded Dr. A. A. Goldenweiser of The New York School for Social Research to undertake to write a good general introduction to anthropology—for the average reader. This was announced as “The Groundwork of Civilization,” but as Dr. Goldenweiser has only just delivered his manuscript, the book must go over until next year.
* * * * *
And now I would like to say something about my plans for 1921. In a general sort of way I want to give more attention to the work of American authors and publish more American books. American publishers show, I believe, altogether too much deference to work that reaches us from England. Obviously most of the time the young English novelist is a better craftsman than the American, but there are springing up all over the United States—in Detroit, St. Louis and Washington as well as New York, men and women who do know how to write and who have observed to advantage the life about them. To bring forward work of this kind shall be my chief aim. However, we must give the devil his due even if he be a foreigner, and I am quite sure that the feature of our spring list (I cannot be positive of this because at the time of writing negotiations are still in progress) will be our representation in America of the great Danish house of Gyldendal. Gyldendal were established in Copenhagen in 1770 and control today the majority of the best books published in Denmark and Norway. Not long ago they opened a branch in London especially for the publication of English translations of the books they control. I plan next spring to bring out the first of these, as follows:
“Growth of the Soil,” by Knut Hamsun. H. G. Wells has written Messrs. Gyldendal as follows regarding this novel:
_Easton Glebe, Dunmow, June 18, 1920._
_Dear Sirs_:
_I have not yet written to thank you for sending me_ “Growth of the Soil” _and making me acquainted with the work of Knut Hamsun. I am ashamed to say I have never before read a book by this great writer and indeed I did not know of his existence until now. It amazes me that he has so long been kept from the English reading public and the sooner you give us more of him the better I shall be pleased. I do not know how to express the admiration I feel for this wonderful book without seeming to be extravagant. I am not usually lavish with my praise but indeed the book impresses me as among the very greatest novels I have ever read. It is wholly beautiful; it is saturated with wisdom and humour and tenderness; these peasants are a triumph of creative understanding. I have seen no reviews here that do justice to this work. But I find my friends talking of it and, as it were, getting up their courage to appreciate it at its proper value. Give us one or two more books by Hamsun in English and our sluggish but on the whole fairly honest criticism will begin to realize the scale he is built upon—I say as much._
_Very sincerely yours_, (_Signed_) H. G. WELLS.
“The Song of the Blood Red Flower,” by the Finn, Johannes Linnankoski—a poetical tale of love which has created a veritable furor on the continent.
“Grim,” from the Danish of Svend Fleuron, a remarkable nature story—the life of a pike.
“Jenny,” by a Danish woman novelist, Sigrid Undset—to my mind an intensely interesting feminist novel—honest, convincing and moving.
“The Sworn Brothers,” a stirring tale of ancient Iceland, by Gunnar Gunnarsson, the leading Icelandic novelist—and a man who will bear watching. (His “Guest the One-Eyed” will follow.)
Once these books are out I expect that Gyldendal will send me over four or six new ones each season.
There will be two new detective stories by J. S. Fletcher, entitled probably “The Chestermarke Instinct” and “The Borough Treasurer,” as well as “The Wine of Life,” a novel of the studio and the stage by Arthur Stringer, author of “The Prairie Mother,” etc. Late in the season I expect to publish a new book by E. R. Punshon, whose “The Solitary House” was so well received two years ago. “Old Fighting Days” is an exciting tale of adventure and of the ringside in England in the days of Napoleon. These are books for entertainment pure and simple, but the volume of animal stories, by Hal G. Evarts, author of “The Cross Pull,” should be more than just that;—in fact, of universal and compelling interest.
January second should see the appearance of George Jean Nathan’s new book, “The Theatre, the Drama, the Girls.” It will be very similar to his last, “Comedians All,” quite his most successful—so far. At the same time John V. A. Weaver’s book of poems in the American language, should be ready. We are calling it “In America,” and it ought to attract a great deal of attention. The poems tell for the most part, good stories in the fascinating American vernacular.
This will be followed after an interval with a book (as yet unnamed) of characteristic light verse by “Morrie” Ryskind. “Morrie” is one of the best-known contributors to F. P. A.’s famous _The Conning Tower_ in _The New York Tribune_, and F. P. A. himself has had not a little to do with the getting together of this book.
For a great many years all sorts of people whose opinions I respect have been talking to me about the novels of E. M. Forster. Finally Mr. Galsworthy, when he was last over here, told me about “Where Angels Fear to Tread,” which had never been published in the United States. I issued it last year, and although it did not have the sale I had hoped for, I am going right on reissuing Mr. Forster’s novels. The next will be “Howard’s End,” which has been out of print for a number of years. The regard which competent critics have for Mr. Forster’s work is very striking. A number of them, in fact, feel certain that it is only a matter of time before Forster’s work will be revived as has been that of Samuel Butler. We shall see. Meanwhile I have two other novels by Forster in line for publication, one of which has never been published in America.
Early last year I published “The Secret Battle,” a first novel by A. P. Herbert, a young Englishman. The book to me is still, as it was then, the very finest English novel that has come out of the war. Mr. Herbert has written a second novel entitled “The House by the River.” It is not, like “The Secret Battle,” the overflow of an intense emotional experience—it has nothing to do with the war. It is, in fact, a first rate murder story and of a very unusual kind. But the style of the first book is there,—my, how the man can write—the style that _The Westminster Gazette_ said was “in many ways reminiscent of Defoe’s ... the model of the plain tale ... in which no artistic method of purpose obtrudes itself, but which nevertheless makes a single decisive artistic effect on the reader.”
Some other poetry will be Richard Aldington’s “Medallions in Clay,” translations mostly from the Greek; Conrad Aiken’s “Punch: the Immortal Liar”—a splendid title I think—and a volume by Michael Strange to be illustrated by John Barrymore.
André Tridon will have a new volume entitled “Psychoanalysis, Sleep and Dreams,” Joseph Hergesheimer expects to gather into “The Meeker Ritual” those stories which attracted so much attention when they appeared in _The Century_, and H. L. Mencken’s “In Defense of Women,” at present out of print, will be reissued—reset from an entirely revised manuscript. Mencken’s “The American Language,” by the way, greatly enlarged, revised and entirely reset, will be published (probably in two large volumes) in the fall of 1921.
Other books that I expect to have ready in the spring are “Deadlock,” the sixth volume in Dorothy Richardson’s now famous Pilgrimage Series, a fifth volume in Mencken’s The Free Lance Books, “Democracy and the Will to Power,” by James N. Wood, and a unique anthology of Devil Stories for which the editor, Dr. Maximilian J. Rudwin, formerly of Johns Hopkins University, has drawn on the literature of many countries. Dr. Rudwin has planned a series of diabolical anthologies of which this is to be the first.
I could go on, I suppose more or less indefinitely unfolding my plans for the future—they lay, didn’t Clarence Day say earlier in this book, “like onions on rafters”—but one must stop sometime and so I will speak only of two other books, both of them really unusual.
One, “In the Claws of the Dragon,” is a novel dealing with the marriage of an aristocratic young Chinaman—one of the bureaucrats—to a well-to-do French girl. The author, George Soulie de Morant is one of the most famous of French Sinologists, and his book presents as well as a fascinating and exciting story, a striking picture of life and customs in the country of Po-Chui.
The other book, “Children of No Man’s Land,” introduces another young English novelist, G. B. Stern. The manuscript was sent to one of my most trusted and capable readers. Here is his comment: “This book is the most brilliant and perfect study that exists of 1, the ultra-modern studio crowd, and 2, the hyphenate in war time; and it touches with wonderful deftness a variety of other matters—the Jews and Zionism; patriotism and internationalism; marriage and free love; heredity, convention and revolt.” I shall say no more, but I reproduce here a little sketch made by H. G. Wells after reading “Children of No Man’s Land”:
TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES
1. Added ‘my’ on p. 37. 2. Silently corrected typographical errors. 3. Retained anachronistic and non-standard spellings as printed. 4. Enclosed italics font in _underscores_.