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ESSAYS IN BIBLIOGRAPHY, TEXT, AND EDITING.
Bowers, Fredson
First edition, second printing. With a foreword by Irby B. Cauthen, Jr. and a "Note to the Second Printing". Major sections in this important book are The Bibliographical Way, Descriptive Bibliography, Analytical Bibliography, Textual Criticism and Editing, and a checklist of Bowers' writings to 1976.
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Books of related interests - -
> Roth, Barry, ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY OF JANE AUSTEN STUDIES, 1973-83.
> Tanselle, G. Thomas, TEXTUAL CRITICISM SINCE GREG, A CHRONICLE, 1950-2000.
> Vander Meulen, David L. (editor), BIBLIOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA: THE FIRST FIFTY YEARS.
> Tanselle, G. Thomas, TEXTUAL CRITICISM AND SCHOLARLY EDITING.

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THE TWO FORGERS, A BIOGRAPHY OF HARRY BUXTON FORMAN & THO...
by Collins, John
First edition, one of 57 special numbered and signed copies (50 for sale) bound thus and containing additional material and available exclusively from Oak Knoll and Maggs. In an introductory note John Collins describes the additional material in this special edition as follows: (1)The life of Alfred Forman by his brother, written in 1926 but hitherto unpublished. In 1973 (Quartich Catalogue 926) Graham Pollard christened Alfred Forman the `third conspirator'. This was on the basis of his initials on the proofs of two chimerical wrappers for Morris pamphlets. Later that year, staying at Waddesdon with Graham, I upbraided him and suggested that initials on two proofs of a wrapper were an uncommonly slender thread on which to convict. Graham agreed and I think we must remove Alfred from his position as third man. (2)Alfred's previously printed sonnet AT BROWNING'S GRAVE 1899. This is without imprint: who printed it? There was a copy in the Forman sale (Sotheby's 10 April 1972, lot 200: £35) described as printed on John Dickinson paper while the B.M. copy was cited as one of five on Whatman. Our copies have only the watermark and seem therefore to be a third variant. Sold with the 1972 lot was a letter from Alfred to his nephew Maurice stating of the leaflet, `It is very scarce indeed and I have only 2 copies that I know of...'. The present bundle comprised 66 copies, and each one is meticulously costed in pencil by Maggs. (3)A colophon claiming a limitation of 50 copies, perhaps from the Browning bibliography of 1897. The fact that 64 copies were in the bundle may be thought to throw some doubt on the limitation.

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