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This volume presents a new aspect in the study of Sir Arthur Conan
Doyle: a case study of the publishing history of his works. Since
Doyle's works before 1890 could not be copyrighted in the United
States, various unauthorized versions of Holmes stories appeared in
print in America from 1890 through 1930. Picking up where other
bibliographers left off, Redmond traces the origins and subsequent
printings and reprintings of these pirated manuscripts, relating
the American editions to their sources and to each other. The
American issues are described in detail, with defects and
inconsistencies clearly documented. More than just a list of
editions, this book is a detective story in the history of Sherlock
Holmes. The author provides extensive descriptive lists of the
American editions of A Study in Scarlet and The Sign of the Four,
raising such questions as who pirated from whom and why textual
mistakes have lasted for ninety years. The study looks at the
copyright background that enabled piracy to occur, the printing
processes that corrupted the text, some of the firms involved in
this piracy, and the various issues of A Study in Scarlet and The
Sign of the Four and the relationships among them. Also included is
a genealogical tree that traces the editions of these novels and
detailed examples of their textual variations. The work provides a
further inquiry into the history of Sherlock Holmes, as well as
serving as a fascinating study of American publishing at the turn
of the century. It will be an invaluable publication for collectors
of Holmes material and students of publishing history, and an
important addition to academic and public libraries.
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