Monday, August 25, 2014

Pocket Books at 75

Last June Pocket Books celebrated the 75th anniversary of mass market publishing in North America. The ad in the June 19th NY Times, promoting the first 10 Pocket Books, read:

"Today is the most important literary coming-out party in the memory of New York’s oldest book lover. Today your 25 cent piece leaps to a par with dollar bills….These new Pocket Books are designed to fit both the tempo of our times and the needs of New Yorkers….Never again need you say “I wish I had time to read” because Pocket Books gives you the time….The books you have always meant to read “when you had time” will fill the waits with enjoyment."

I'm surprised by how little press the anniversary received. Pocket Books has done next to nothing to promote, aside from a logo noting the event. Perhaps their embarrassed by the quality of the product. Below is an example. Horrible book. The acknowledgements section names 46 people that helped produce the book. At least Gertrude remains.

Interesting to note that the price of paperbacks has gone up 40 fold in 75 years while the average hardcover's price is up only 10 fold.
 
Pocket - June 2014
 
Pocket June 2014 back
 
June 2014 logo
 
Pocket 16 - September 1939
 
Pocket 16 back
 
Pocket 33 - January 1940
 
Pocket 33 back
 
Pocket 1939 logo

Thursday, August 21, 2014

Nineteen Eighty-Four Part II

In July 1950 The New American Library of World Literature (NAL) published the first American paperback edition of George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four. In 2014 NAL published the 129th "printing" of this book. An amazing record of an average of two "printings" every year for 64 years.

I put the word printing in quotes because the 129 versions are not technically all printings of a single edition. Because the book was reset over the years there are a number of editions each with one or more impressions adding up to 129. Below are printings one and fourteen of the first edition as well as the 129th "printing". I don't know which edition this is. This last version has an afterword from Erich Fromm which first appeared in 1961 with the first printing of the "Signet Classics" edition.

Signet 798 - 1st printing July 1950
 
Signet 798 back
 
Signet S798 - 14th printing May 1956
 
Signet S798 - back
 
Signet - 129th - 2014
 
Signet 129th - back