PRINT NETWORKS PUBLICATIONS

ARCHER, CAROLINE & LISA PETERS [EDITORS] Religion and the book trade

Newcastle-upon-Tyne; Cambridge Scholars, 2015. (154mmx212), vii, 210p. 16 illustrations. Hardback, dust jacket.

Containing:

• Eryn M. White, The Bible and the book in early modern Wales 1546-1770 • Caroline Archer & Barry McKay, A black letter volume from the home of the Roman letter: a Venetian Missale Romanum of 1597- a case study of the Archer copy. • Marja Smolenaars, Controversy, contraband and competition: religion and the Anglo-Dutch book trade in the seventeenth century • Cathy Shrank, Mis-en-page, “the author’s genius”, “the capacity of the reader” and the ambition of “a good compositor” • Keith Manley, They never expected the Spanish inquisition! James Kirkwood and Scottish parochial libraries • Toby Barnard, Print and confession in eighteenth-century Ireland • Philip Henry Jones, “Carrying fire in paper”: publishing Nonconformist Welsh sermons in the nineteenth century • Diana Patterson, Bindings as an indication of religious Dissent • Huw Owen, Calvinist Methodists and the visual cultural heritage of Wales.

HINKS, JOHN, CATHERINE ARMSTRONG & MATTHEW DAY [EDITORS] Periodicals and publishers: the newspaper and journal trade 1740-1914.

London: British Library, 2009. 8vo, (208x149mm), xii,251p. 13 illustrations and 9 distribution maps. Hardback, dustjacket. £25.00 (stock reference 16861)

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.http://chesterrep.openrepository.com/cdr/handle/10034/77053 • 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. • Elizabeth Tilley, National enterprise and domestic periodicals in nineteenth- century Ireland.

HINKS, JOHN & CATHERINE ARMSTRONG [EDITORS] Book trade connections from the seventeenth to the twentieth centuries.

London: British Library, 2008. 8vo, (208x149mm), 282p. Hardback, dustjacket. £25.00 (stock reference 16723)

Containing:

• John Feather, Others: some reflections on book trade history. • Angela McShane, Typography matters: brandishing ballads and gelding curates in Stuart . • Susannah Randal, Newspapers and their publishers during the popish Plot and Exclusion Crisis. • Victoria Gardner, John White and the development of print culture in the North East of England, 1711-1769. • James Caudle, Young Boswell and the London stationers: the authorial collaboration of James Boswell with William Flexney, bookseller and Samuel Chandler, printer, 1763. • Johanna Archbold, Periodical reactions: the effect of the 1798 revellion and the 1800 Act of Union on the Irish monthly periodical. • Eddie Cass, The printing history of the peace egg chapbooks. • Paul Smith, The chapbook mummers plays: analysing ephemeral print traditions. • Frank Felstein, What middletown read: print netwroks in the nineteenth- century mid-west. • Lisa Peters, ‘Welsh obscurity to notoriety’ - Lloyd George, the Boer War, and the North Wales press. http://chesterrep.openrepository.com/cdr/handle/10034/22512 • Elaine Jackson, Sievier’s Monthly (1909): pseudonyms and readership in early twentieth century popular fiction.

HINKS, JOHN & CATHERINE ARMSTRONG [EDITORS] Worlds of print: diversity in the booktrade.

London: British Library & New Castle DE: Oak Knoll Books, 2006. 8vo, (217x152mm), xiv,240p, illustrations. Hardback, dustjacket. £25.00 (stock reference 14388)

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'’ 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. • Noel Waite, The octopus and its silent teachers: A New Zealand response to the British book trade.

HINKS, JOHN & CATHERINE ARMSTRONG [EDITORS] Printing places: locations of book production & distribution since 1500.

New Castle: Oak Knoll Press; London: British Library, 2005. 8vo (217x150mm), xiv,208p. 9 illustrations. A fine copy in original hardback, dustjacket. £25.00 (stock reference 13684)

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 activites 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 , c.1790-1870. • Lisa Peters, Medical advertising in the Wrexham press, 1855-1906. http://chesterrep.openrepository.com/cdr/handle/10034/7957 • David Stoker, Norwich ‘publishing'’in the seventeenth century.

MCKAY, BARRY, MAUREEN BELL & JOHN HINKS [EDITORS]. light on the book trade: essays presented at the nineteenth seminar on the British book trade in honour of peter isaac.

London: British Library; New Castle, DE.: Oak Knoll Press, 2004. 8vo, (218x150mm), viii,216p. illustrations. Laminated hardback boards. £25.00 (stock reference 9574)

Containing:

• Caroline Archer, Typography in nineteenth century children's readers: the Otley connection. • Iain Beavan, Staying the course: the Edinburgh cabinet library 1830-1844. • Margaret Cooper, Influential and mysterious: the career of Septimus Prowett bookseller, publisher and picture dealer. • Diana Dixon, Paths through the wilderness: recording the history of provincial newspapers in England. • John Feather, The history of the provincial book trade: a research agenda. • John Gavin, Literary institutions in the Lake counties Part 4: catalogues. • R.J. Goulden, False imprints and the Bridger specimen books. • David N Griffiths, Print privilege and piracy in the Book of Common Prayer. • John Hinks, John Gregory and the ‘Leicester Journal’. • David Hounslow, From George III to : a provincial family and their books. • Philip Henry Jones, Thomas Gee senior. • Wallace Kirsop, Baker’s juvenile circulating library in Sydney in the 1840s. • Lucy Lewis, ‘For no man is an island, divided from the main’ incunable sammelbande. • Warren McDougall, Charles Elliot’s book adventure in Philadelphia, and the trouble with Thomas Dobson. • Barry McKay, Peter Isaac: a landmark removed, and Books in Eighteenth- century Whitehaven. • Michael Powell, Taking stock: the diary of Edmund Harrold of Manchester. • Brenda J. Scragg, James Everett and the sale of Adam Clarke’s library 1833: a newly discovered manuscript. • David Stoker, Freeman and Susannah Collins and the spread of English provincial printing.

ISAAC, PETER & BARRY MCKAY [EDITORS] The moving market: continuity and change in the book trade.

New Castle, Oak Knoll Press, 2001. 8vo, (218x150mm), xiv,201p. 18 illustrations. Laminated hardback boards. £12.00 (stock reference 7720)

Containing:

• Iain Beavan, ‘What Constitutes the Crime which it is Your Pleasure to Punish so mercilessly?’ Scottish Booksellers' Societies in the Nineteenth Century. • Maureen Bell, Reading in Seventeenth-Century Derbyshire: the Wheatcrofts and their Books. • Diana Dixon, New Town, New Newspapers: the Development of the Newspaper Press in Nineteenth-Century Middlesbrough. • John Hinks, The Beginnings of the Book Trade in Leicester. • David Hounslow, A Moving Market: The Influence of London Books of Street Cries on Provincial Editions to c1830. • Peter Isaac, Splendide mendax: Publishing Landscape Illustrations of the Bible. • Philip Henry Jones, The First World War and Welsh-Language Publishing. • Wallace Kirsop, From Curry’s to Collins Street, or how a Dubliner Became the ‘Melbourne Mudie’. • Barry McKay, John Atkinson’s ‘Lottery’ Book of 1809: John Locke’s Theory of Education Comes to Workington. • Lisa Peters, The Troubled History of a Welsh Newspaper Publishing Company: the North Wales Constitutional Newspaper Company Limited 1869-1878. • Janet Phipps, Book Availability in Ipswich over the Years. • Michael Powell & Terry Wyke, ‘Aristotle to a Wery Tall Man’: Selling Secondhand Books in Manchester in the 1830s. • Sydney J. Shep, Mapping the Migration of Paper: Historical Geography and New Zealand Print Culture. • Richard B. Sher & Hugh Amory, From Scotland to the Strand: the Genesis of Andrew Millar's Bookselling Career. • Jeffrey Smith, Books and Culture in Late Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth- Century Newcastle.

ISAAC, PETER & BARRY MCKAY [EDITORS] The mighty engine: the book trade at work.

Winchester: St Paul’s Bibliographies: New Castle DE.: Oak Knoll Press,. 2000. 8vo, (218x150mm), xii,205p. 6 illustrations. Laminated hardback boards. £25.00 (Stock reference 4988) Containing:

• Chris Baggs, The Potter Family of Haverfordwest 1780-1875. • Iain Beavan, Advertising Judiciously: Scottish Nineteenth-Century Publishers and the British Market. • Maureen Bell, Sturdy Rogues and Vagabonds: Restoration Control of Pedlars and Hawkers. • Audrey Cooper, George Nicholson and His Cambrian Traveller’s Guide. • Margaret Cooper, Books Returned, Accounts Unsettled and Gifts of Country Food: Customer Expectations at the Turn of the Eighteenth Century; John Mountford, Worcester Bookseller. • Diana Dixon, Newspapers in Huntingdonshire in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries. • Jim English, Chapbooks & Primers, Piety, Poetry & Classics: the Mozleys of Gainsborough. • Stacey Gee, The Coming of Print to York, c1490-1550. • Sarah Gray, William Flackton 1709-1798: Canterbury Bookseller and Musician. • John Hinks, Some Radical Printers and Booksellers of Leicester c1790-1850. • Philip Henry Jones, ‘Business is awful bad in these parts’: New Evidence for the Pre-1914 Decline of theWelsh-Language Book Trade. • Rheinallt Llwyd, ‘Worthy of the poets and worthy of a gentleman’: Publishing Gorchestion Beirdd Cymru (1773). • Barry McKay, John Ware, Printer and Bookseller of Whitehaven: a Year from His Day-Books 1799-1800. • Brenda Scragg, William Ford and Edinburgh Cultural Society at the Beginning of the Nineteenth Century. • David Shaw, Canterbury’s External Links: Book-Trade Relations at the Regional and National Level in the Eighteenth Century. • David Stoker, Printing at the Red-Well: an Early Norwich Press Through the Eyes of Contemporaries. • Richard Suggett, Pedlars & mercers as Distributors of Print in Early-Modern Wales. • John R. Turner, Book Publishing from the English Provinces in the Late Nineteenth Century: a Report of Work in Progress.

ISAAC, PETER & BARRY MCKAY [EDITORS]. The human face of the book trade: print culture and its creators.

Winchester: St Paul’s Bibliographies, 1999. 8vo, (218x150mm), x,228p. 4 illustrations. Out of print.

Containing:

• Paul Morgan, Henry Cotton and W.H. Allnutt: Two Pioneer Book-Trade Historians. • David Stoker, The Country Book Trade 1784-85. • Stephen W. Brown, William Smellie and the Printer’s Role in the Eighteenth- Century Edinburgh Book Trade. • Richard B Sher, William Buchan’s Domestic Medicine: Laying Book History Open. • Jonathan Sanderson, Medical Secrets and the Book Trade: Ownership of the Copy of the College of Physicians’ Pharmacopeia (1618-50). • Warren McDougall, Charles Elliot and the London Booksellers in the Early Years. • Peter Isaac, Charles Elliot and the English Provincial Book Trade. • Philip Henry Jones, Scotland and the Welsh-Language Book Trade During the Second Half of the Nineteenth Century. • Iain Beavan, ‘Spreading the Hell-hounds of Jealousy and Discord’: the Aberdeen Shaver and its Times. • Brenda Scragg, William Ford, Manchester Bookseller. • Michael Powell & Terry Wyke, At the Fall of the Hammer: Auctioneering Books in Manchester 1700-1850. • Barry McKay , Niche Marketing in the Nineteenth Century: The Shepherds’ Guides of the Northern Counties. • Graeme Forbes, The Edward Clark Collection at Napier University, Edinburgh.

ISAAC, PETER & BARRY MCKAY [EDITORS] The reach of print: making, selling and using books.

Winchester: St Paul’s Bibliographies; New Castle, DE.: Oak Knoll Press 1998. 8vo, (218x150mm), x,228p. 26 illustrations and maps. Laminated hardback boards. £12.00 (stock reference 31)

Containing:

• R. J. Goulden, Print Culture in the Kentish Weald. • David Shaw & Sarah Gray, James Abree: Canterbury’s First ‘Modern’ Printer. • Philip Henry Jones, The Welsh Wesleyan Bookroom. • Margaret Cooper, A Snuff-box for the king of Prussia: the remarkable Career of Benjamin Maund. • Barry McKay, Cumbrian Chapbook Cuts: Some Sources and Other Versions. • John Morris, A Bothy Ballad and its Chapbook Source. • Fiona Black, Book Distribution to the Scottish and Canadian Provinces. • Bill Bell, ‘Pioneers of Literature’: Commercial Travellers in the Early 19th Century. • Michael Powell & Terry Wyke, Penny Capitalism in the Manchester Book Trade: the Case of James Wetherley. • Peter Isaac, Charles Elliot and Spilsbury’s Antiscorbutic Drops. • Sheila Hingley, Elham Parish Library. • Michael Perkin, Parochial Libraries: Founders and Readers. • Iain Beavan, ‘The best Library that ever the North Pairtes of Scotland Saw’: Thomas Reid and his Books.

ISAAC, PETER & BARRY MCKAY [EDITORS] Images & texts: their production and distribution in the 18th and 19th centuries. Winchester: St Paul’s Bibliographies, 1997. 8vo, (218x150mm), xiv,188p. 23 illustrations. Laminated hardback boards. £25.00 (Stock reference 258)

Containing:

• Diana Dixon, Northamptonshire Newspapers. • Martin Holmes, Samuel Gamidge Bookseller in Worcester. • John Gavin, Cumbrian Literary Institutions: Cartmel & Furness. • Barry McKay, Three Cumbrian Chapbook Printers: the Dunns of Whitehaven and Ann Bell & Anthony Soulby of Penrith. • John Morris, Scottish Ballads and Chapbooks. • Brenda Scragg, Some Sources for Manchester Printing in the Nineteenth Century. • Philp Henry Jones, Welsh Language Publishing in the Nineteenth Century. • Iain Beavan, Aberdeen University Press and the Scottish Typographical Association. • Peter Lord, Welsh Images & Images of Wales in the Popular Press.

ISAAC, PETER [EDITOR] Six centuries of the provincial book trade.

Winchester: St Paul’s Bibliographies, 1990. 8vo, (217x152mm), xii,212p. 6 plates. Laminated hardback boards. £18.50 (Stock reference 10259)

The precursor of the Print Networks series containing:

• F.W. Ratcliffe, The Contribution of Book-trade Studies to Scholarship. • A.I. Doyle, The English Provincial Book Trade before Printing. • Paul Morgan, The Provincial Book Trade before the End of the Licensing Act. • David Pearson, Cambridge Bindings in Cosin's Library Durham. • Jeremy Black, The English Provincial Press in the Eighteenth Century. • Ian Maxted, Mobility and Innovation in the Book Trades - Some Devon Examples. • P.J. Wallis, Cross-Regional Connexions. • Eiluned Rees, The Welsh Printing House from 1718 to 1818. • Wesley McCann, Patrick Neill and the Origins of Belfast Printing. • Vincent Kinane & Charles Benson, Some Late 18th- and early 19th- Dublin Printers Accounts Books. Michael Perkin, Hampshire Notices of Printing Presses 1799-1867. • Adam McNaughton, A Century of Saltmarket Literature 1790-1890. • Brian Hillyard, Working Towards a History of Scottish Book Collecting.