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Published by British Library/Oak Knoll., 2006
ISBN 10: 1584561912ISBN 13: 9781584561910
Seller: Powell's Bookstores Chicago, ABAA, Chicago, IL, U.S.A.
Book First Edition
Condition: Used - Like New. First Edition. 2006. Hardcover. Fine. Dust Jacket is Fine.
Published by Oak Knoll Pr, 2009
ISBN 10: 1584562668ISBN 13: 9781584562665
Seller: Powell's Bookstores Chicago, ABAA, Chicago, IL, U.S.A.
Book
Condition: Used - Like New. 2009. Hardcover. Cloth. 8vo. 251 pp. Fine. Dust Jacket is Like New.
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Published by Oak Knoll Press, New Castle / The British Library, London, 2006
ISBN 10: 1584561912ISBN 13: 9781584561910
Seller: Better World Books: West, Reno, NV, U.S.A.
Book
Condition: Good. Former library book; may include library markings. Used book that is in clean, average condition without any missing pages.
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Published by Oak Knoll Press and The British Library New Castle, DE, 2008
ISBN 10: 1584562293ISBN 13: 9781584562290
Seller: Cronus Books, Carson City, NV, U.S.A.
Book
Hardcover. Condition: New. ~ NEW Inside and Out! Clean & Crisp Pages. (E-mail for more info./pics).
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Published by Oak Knoll & British Library, New Castle, DE & London, 2006
ISBN 10: 0712349375ISBN 13: 9780712349376
Seller: Abstract Books, Indianapolis, IN, U.S.A.
Book
Hardcover. Condition: Fine. Dust Jacket Condition: Near Fine. 240 pp, index, few b/w illustrations; black cloth, 8vo, fine; near fine dust jacket.
Published by Oak Knoll Press, New Castle, 2006
First Edition
octavo, boards in dust jacket. First Edition. First Edition. octavo, boards in dust jacket. 224 pp. Oak Knoll Press, Volume 8 in the Print Networks series. Presented at the 2004 Conference on the History of the British Book Trade, these papers focus on the infinite variety of people and places in the British Isles and the wider colonial world whose lives revolved around the book trade. They reflect these complex networks, focusing on the people involved in the creation of the book, from author to agent, publisher to printer, bookseller to reader. Topics range from Scotland's earliest printers to late 20th century global marketing strategies, and explores books in and about central America, New Zealand, Australia, and the UK, among other diverse locations. Illustrated in black and white. A very fine copy, without flaw.
First Edition. First Edition. octavo, cloth in pictorial dust jacket. 240pp. The British Library, This Print Networks volume is a collection of essays presented at the 2002 Conference on the History of the Book Trade. The theme reinforces the importance of studying specific local factors along side the wider picture of printing history. These scholarly essays are wide-ranging, from the book trade in Britain, including links with the former colonies, in early modern and modern times. This collection of essays clearly reflects the book-trade history and is a lively engagement with other historical approaches: cultural, social, economic and intellectual. New. octavo, cloth in pictorial dust jacket.
Published by British Library Board, 2005
ISBN 10: 1584561653ISBN 13: 9781584561651
Seller: Better World Books, Mishawaka, IN, U.S.A.
Book
Condition: Very Good. Former library book; may include library markings. Used book that is in excellent condition. May show signs of wear or have minor defects.
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Published by The British Library - Oak Knoll Press, 2005
ISBN 10: 0712349065ISBN 13: 9780712349062
Seller: Eastleach Books, Newbury, BER, United Kingdom
Book First Edition
Condition: Fine. 1st edition. Cloth, dj, F/F. xvi+208pp, occasional b/w illustration, index, a fine copy. A collection of 14 essays presented at the 2002 Conference of the Book Trade. Contains : The Tavistock Boethius : One Of The Earliest Examples Of Provincial Printing By Lucy Lewis - The Bookseller And The Pedlar : The Spread Of Knowledge Of The New World In Early Modern England, 1580-1640 By Catherine Armstrong - Norwich 'publishing' In The Seventeenth Century By David Stoker - James Tytler's Misadventures In The Late-Eighteenth-Century Edinburgh Book Trade By Stephen Brown - The Geographies Of Promotion : A Survey Of Advertising In Two Eighteenth-Century English Newspapers By Ian Jackson - Medical Advertising In The Wrexham Press, 1855-1906 By Lisa Peters - Self-Interested And Evil-Minded Persons : The Book-Trade Activities Of Thomas Wilson, Robert Spence And Joseph Mawman Of York And The Mozleys Of Gainsborough By David Hounslow - Lounging Places And Frivolous Literature : Subscription And Circulating Libraries In The West Country To 1825 By K.A. Manley - The Production And Publication Of Topographical Prints In Devon, C.1790-1870 By Ian Maxted - John Murray Ii And Oliver & Boyd, His Edinburgh Agents, 1819-1835 By Peter Isaac - John Murray, Richard Griffin And Oliver & Boyd : Some Supplementary Observations By Iain Beavan - Confessions : The Midlands Execution Broadside Trade By Alice Ford-Smith - Station To Station : The Lnwr And The Emergence Of The Railway Bookstall, 1840-1875 By Stephen Colclough - Imagined Local Communities : Three Victorian Newspaper Novelists By Graham Law. 525 grams.
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Published by Oak Knoll Press / The British Library 2009, Delaware, 2009
Seller: Brattle Book Shop [ABAA, ILAB], Boston, MA, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: LikeNew. Hardcover. 8vo. Cloth in green dust jacket. As New. ISBN:9781584562665.
Published by Oak Knoll Press & The British Library, [New Castle, DE], 2005
Seller: Main Street Fine Books & Mss, ABAA, Galena, IL, U.S.A.
First Edition
Hardcover. 8vo. Black cloth, pictorial dust jacket. xii, 208pp. Illustrations. Fine/fine. Superb first edition, tight and pristine, of these papers from a 2002 scholarly conference.
Published by Oak Knoll Press, New Castle, DE, 2006
ISBN 10: 1584561912ISBN 13: 9781584561910
Seller: Main Street Fine Books & Mss, ABAA, Galena, IL, U.S.A.
Book First Edition
Hardcover. 8vo. Black cloth with gilt spine lettering, pictorial dust jacket. xiii, 240pp. Illustrations. Fine/fine. Tight, pristine first edition. Sixteen essays by noted book historians -- the eighth volume in the "Print Networks" series. Co-published by the British Library. Press release laid in.
Published by British Library Publishing Division, 2008
ISBN 10: 0712350640ISBN 13: 9780712350648
Seller: The Secret Book and Record Store, Dublin, DUB, Ireland
Book
Hardcover. Condition: As New. Dust Jacket Condition: As New. Slight shelf wear only.
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Published by Oak Knoll Press, New Castle, 2009
ISBN 10: 0712350748ISBN 13: 9780712350747
Book First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: Fine. Dust Jacket Condition: Fine. First Edition. Print Networks; 9.21 X 6.22 X 0.94 inches; 251 pages.
Published by New Castle Delaware: Oak Knoll Press / London: The British Library, 2008
Seller: Aquila Antiquariaat, Lochem, GLD, Netherlands
8vo, 22.5cm. Pp. xiv,265, few illustr., notes & refs., index. Hardbound, boards in pict. dust-jacket. Fine, as new.
Published by Oak Knoll Press, New Castle, DE, 2008
ISBN 10: 1584562293ISBN 13: 9781584562290
Seller: Main Street Fine Books & Mss, ABAA, Galena, IL, U.S.A.
Book First Edition
Hardcover. Small 4to. Black cloth with gilt spine lettering, pictorial dust jacket. xiii, 265pp. Illustrations. Fine/fine. A pristine first edtion of this essay collection, ninth volume in the "Print Networks" series -- papers presented at the 22nd "Print Networks Conference on the History of the British Book Trade" held in Birmingham in 2005. Press release laid in.
Published by London: British Library, 2009
Seller: Barry McKay Rare Books, Appleby-in-Westmorland, CUMBR, United Kingdom
Association Member: PBFA
8vo, (208x149mm), xii,251p. 13 illustrations and 9 distribution maps. A fine copy in original hardback boards, dustjacket . This volume in the Print Networks series contains eleven original contributions by scholars working on periodicals and newspaper in the British Isles, outside London. The essays include case studies of individual publishers and their experiences in the print market and demonstrate the cultural and political significance of newspapers and periodicals and their producers. A new theme emerging from the essays is the range of relationships between producers and consumers of print who lived and worked in the provinces and their connections with London. Examination of the question of 'provinciality' sheds considerable new light on the connections between book trade people in all parts of the British Isles. Containing: Iain Beavan Forever provincial? a North British lament, Stephen Brown The market trade for murder and Edinburgh's eighteenth-century book trade, Stephen Colclough 'The retail newsagents of Lancashire are on strike': the dispute between the Lancashire retail newsagents and the 'Northern wholesalers', February-September 1914, Victoria Gardner Humble pie: John Fletcher, business politics and the Chester Chronicle, Graham Hogg Latter struggles in the life of a provincial bookseller and printer: George Miller of Dunbar, Scotland, Maire Kennedy William Flyn (1740-1811) and the readers of Munster in the second half of the eighteenth century, Jennifer Moore John Ferrar 1742-1804: printer, author and public man, Lisa Peters & Kath Skinner Selling the news: distributing Wrexham's newspapers 1850-1900, Michael Powell & Terry Wyke Manchester men and Manchester magazines: publishing periodicals in the provinces in the Nineteenth century, Ria Snowdon, Sarah Hogdson and the business of print 1800-1822, and Elizabeth Tilley National enterprise and domestic periodicals in nineteenth-century Ireland.
Published by New Castle: Oak Knoll Press; London: British Library, 2005
Seller: Barry McKay Rare Books, Appleby-in-Westmorland, CUMBR, United Kingdom
Association Member: PBFA
8vo (217mm), xiv,208p. 9 illustrations. A fine copy in original black hardback boards, dustjacket. The seventh volume of the Print Networks series of papers delivered at the annual conference on British book trade history. Containing: Catherine Armstrong, The bookseller and the pedlar: the spread of knowledge of the new world in early modern England, 1580-1640; Iain Beavan, John Murray, Richard Griffin and Oliver & Boyd: some supplementary observations; Stephen Brown, James Tytler's misadventures in the late eighteenth century Edinburgh book trade; Stephen Colclough, Station to station: the LNWR and the emergence of the railway bookstall, 1840-1875; Alice Ford-Smith, Confessions: the midlands execution broadside trade; David Hounslow, Self-interested and evil-minded persons: the book trade activities of Thomas Wilson, Robert Spence and Joseph Mawman of York and the Mozleys of Gainsborough; Peter Isaac, John Murray II and Oliver & Boyd, his Edinburgh agents, 1819-1835; Ian Jackson, The geographies of promotion: a survey of advertising in two eighteenth-century newspapers; Graham Law, Imagined local communities: three Victorian newspaper novelists; Lucy Lewis, The Tavistock Boethius: one of the earliest examples of provincial printing; K.A. Manley, Lounging and frivolous literature: subscription and circulating libraries in the west country to 1825; Ian Maxted, The production and publication of topographical prints in Devon, c.1790-1870; Lisa Peters, Medical advertising in the Wrexham press, 1855-1906 and David Stoker, Norwich `publishing' in the seventeenth century.
Published by Cambridge Scholars Publishing, U. K., 2017
ISBN 10: 1443843881ISBN 13: 9781443843881
Book
Hardcover. Condition: Near Fine. No jacket as issued. A bright, clean copy. ; 8.2 X 5.9 X 0.6 inches; 190 pages.
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Published by LONDON OAK KNOLL PRESS, 2005
Seller: Hawkridge Books, Bakewell, United Kingdom
Art / Print / Poster First Edition
1ST EDITION. A FINE COPY IN A FINE DUSTWRAP.
Published by Oak Knoll Press and The British Library, New Castle, Delaware and London, England, 2008
ISBN 10: 0712350640ISBN 13: 9780712350648
Seller: Oak Knoll Books, ABAA, ILAB, NEW CASTLE, DE, U.S.A.
Book First Edition
Hardcover, dust jacket. 6 x 9 inches. Hardcover, dust jacket. 281 pages. Delivered at the Twenty-second Conference on the History of the British Book Trade Birmingham, July 2005. First edition. This ninth volume of the Print Networks series contains twelve exciting chapters from scholars working on the connections between the parties involved in the production of print artifacts; from author to printer, publisher, bookseller and reader. Chronologically, the offerings range from the seventeenth to the twentieth century as they track the developing trade in England, Scotland, Wales and Ireland. Publishers and readers who spent part of their lives in North America are also featured in several of the chapters. The main theme emerging from this volume is the significance of cheap print, including newspapers and journals. The social, cultural, political and economic significance of these artifacts is highlighted by an in-depth examination of the lives of those men and women who participated in the book trade.
Published by Oak Knoll Press and The British Library, New Castle, Delaware, 2009
ISBN 10: 0712350748ISBN 13: 9780712350747
Seller: Oak Knoll Books, ABAA, ILAB, NEW CASTLE, DE, U.S.A.
Book
hardcover, dust jacket. 6 x 9 inches. hardcover, dust jacket. 256 pages. This tenth volume of the Print Networks series contains eleven original contributions by scholars working on periodicals and newspapers in the British Isles, outside London. The essays focus on the period between 1740 and 1914, including some case studies of individual publishers and their experiences in the print market. This volume demonstrates the cultural and political significance of newspapers and periodicals and their producers. A key theme emerging from the essays is the range of relationships between producers and consumers of print who lived and worked in the provinces and their connections with London. Examination of the question of "provinciality" sheds considerable new light on the connections between book trade people in all parts of the British Isles. Dr. John Hinks is an Honorary Fellow at the Centre for Urban History, University of Leicester, where he is researching networks and communities in the British book trade. At the University of Birmingham he is an Honorary Research Fellow in English and a Visiting Lecturer in History, where he teaches early modern cultural history. Dr. Catherine Armstrong is lecturer in American History at Manchester Metropolitan University. Her research interests include the cultural connections between Britain and North America during the colonial period, especially the ways in which the American landscape is portrayed in print on both sides of the Atlantic. Dr. Matthew Day is Head of English at Bishop Grosseteste University College, Lincoln. He has research interests in print culture and early modern travel, and their intersection. He has published on censorship, paratexuality and the reception of early modern travel narratives in the eighteenth century.
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Published by London: British Library, 2008
Seller: Barry McKay Rare Books, Appleby-in-Westmorland, CUMBR, United Kingdom
Association Member: PBFA
Art / Print / Poster
8vo, (208mm), 282p. A fine copy in original black hardback boards, gilt lettered, dustjacket. This ninth volume in the Print Networks series of papers from the annual seminar on British book trade history contains twelve essays, mainly on the theme of cheap print, including newspapers and journals, from the Seventeenth to the Twentieth centuries. The social, cultural, political and economic significance of these artefacts of a literate society is highlighted by examination of the lives of those men and women who participated in the book trade. Contains: Johanna Archbold, Periodical reactions: the effect of the 1798 rebellion and the 1800 Act of Union on the Irish monthly periodical; Stephen Brown, Indians, politicians, and profit: the printing career of Peter Williamson; Eddie Cass, The printing history of the Peace Egg chapbooks; James Caudle, Young Boswell and the London stationers: the authorial collaboration of James Boswell with William Flexney, bookseller and Samuel Chandler, printer, 1763; John Feather, Some reflections on book trade history; Frank Felsenstein, What Middletown reads: print networks in the Nineteenth-century Mid-West; Victoria Gardner, John White and the development of print culture in the North East of England; Elaine Jackson, Sievier's Monthly (1909): pseudonyms and readership in early Twentieth century popular fiction; Angela McShane, Typography matters: branding ballads and gelding curates in Stuart England; Lisa Peters, 'Welsh obscurity to notoriety' - Lloyd George, the Boer War, and the North Wales press; Paul Smith, The chapbook mummers play: analysing ephemeral print traditions and Susannah Randall, Newspapers and publishers during the Popish plot and Exclusion crisis.
Published by Oak Knoll Press, New Castle, DE, 2008
Seller: Kay Craddock - Antiquarian Bookseller, Melbourne, VIC, Australia
First Edition
Pp. xiv+266(last blank), text illustrations (some full page), index; dust wrapper; Oak Knoll Press/British Library, New Castle, DE., 2008. First edition. Print Networks series. *Papers presented at the twenty-second Print Networks Conference on the History of the British Book Trade, University of Birmingham, July 2005. 'The main theme emerging from this volume is the significance of cheap print, including newspapers and journals. The social, cultural, political and economic significance of these artefacts is highlighted by an in-depth examination of the lives of those men and women who participated in the book trade' [wrapper blurb].
Published by Oak Knoll Press, New Castle, DE, 2006
Seller: Kay Craddock - Antiquarian Bookseller, Melbourne, VIC, Australia
First Edition
Diversity in the book trade. Pp. xiv+240, text illustrations and figures, index; demy 8vo; black boards, spine lettered in gilt; dust wrapper; ISBN sticker on verso of title page; Oak Knoll Press/British Library, New Castle & London, 2006. First edition. Print Networks series. *Papers delivered at the twenty-first Print Networks Conference on the History of the British Book Trade - reflecting 'the complex networks that existed between book trade people in the British Isles and the wider colonial world, focusing on the people involved in the creation of the book, from author to agent, publisher to printer, bookseller to reader' [wrapper blurb]. Includes a chapter on Cole's Book Arcade, Melbourne.
Published by Oak Knoll Press, New Castle, DE, 2009
Seller: Kay Craddock - Antiquarian Bookseller, Melbourne, VIC, Australia
First Edition
nttbl{fromanfprq2fcharset0 Garamond;}{fnilfcharset0 Garamond;}} {*generator Riched20 6.3.9600}{*mmathPrmdispDef1mwrapIndent1440 }viewkind4uc1 dnowidctlparbfs24 Hinks (John) , Catherine Armstrong, & Matthew Day. Editors. PERIODICALS AND PUBLISHERS: The Newspaper and Journal Trade, 1740-1914. Pp. xii+252(last blank), text illustrations and maps, index; med. 8vo; black cloth, spine lettered in gilt, top fore-corner of upper board slightly bruised; dust wrapper; Oak Knoll Press/British Library, New Castle, DE., 2009. First edition. Print Networks series. *Articles include The market for murder and Edinburgh's eighteenth- century book trade, by Stephen Brown; and Selling the news: distributing Wrexham's newspapers, 1850-1900, by Lisa Peters & Kath Skinner.
Published by Oak Knoll Press, New Castle, DE, 2005
Seller: Kay Craddock - Antiquarian Bookseller, Melbourne, VIC, Australia
First Edition
Locations of book production & distribution since 1500. Pp. xiv+208, text illustrations, index; dust wrapper; Oak Knoll Press/The British Library, New Castle & London, 2005. First edition. Print Networks series. *Papers presented at the 2002 Conference on the History of the Book Trade. Includes Lounging places and frivolous literature: subscription and circulating libraries in the West Country to 1825, by K. A. Manley; and John Murray II and Oliver & Boyd, his Edinburgh Agents, 1819-1835, by Peter Isaac.
Published by London: British Library & New Castle DE: Oak Knoll Books, 2006
Seller: Barry McKay Rare Books, Appleby-in-Westmorland, CUMBR, United Kingdom
Association Member: PBFA
8vo, (217mm), xiv,240p, illustrations. A fine copy in original black hardback boards, dustjacket. The eighth volume in the Print Networks series containing: Catherine Armstrong, 'A just and modest vindication': comparing the responses of the Scottish and English book trades to the Darien Scheme, 1698-1700; Giles Bergel, William Dicey and the networks and places of print culture; Stephen Brown, Scottish Freemasonry and learned printing in the later eighteenth century; Sarah Miley Cooney, William Somerville Orr, London publisher and printer: The skeleton in W. & R. Chambers's closet; Jane Francis, Changing perspectives in a journey through personal, parochial and schoolmasters' libraries 1600-1750; David L. Gants, Lists, inventories and catalogues: shifting modes of ordered knowledge in the early modern book trade; Brian Hillyard, David Steuart and Giambattists Bodoni: on the fringes of the British book trade; Caroline Viera Jones, A Scottish imprint: George Robertson and The Australian Encyclopaedia; Wallace Kirsop, Cole's Book Arcade: Marvellous Melbourne's 'Palace of Intellect'; Lucy Lewis, Chapman and Myllar: the first printers in Scotland; Nicole Matthews, Collins and the Commonwealth: publisher's publicity and the twentieth-century circulation of popular fiction titles; Frederick Nesta, Smith, Elder & Co. and the realities of New grub Street; Michael Powell, Do the dead talk?: The Daisy Bank Printing and Publishing Company of Manchester; David Shaw, Retail distribution networks in East Kent in the eighteenth century; Jane Thomas, 'Forming the literary tastes of the middle and higher classes': Elgin's circulating libraries and their proprietors, 1789-1870 and Noel Waite, The octopus and its silent teachers: A New Zealand response to the British book trade.
Published by Oak Knoll Press and British Library London 2009, 2009
Seller: Andrew Barnes Books / Military Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC, Australia
First Edition
1st edition hardback with dust jacket New Book large octavo vi + 251pp., b/w ills., figs., diags., index,