The statistics below count the number of publications for the specified author. They do not include individual titles (stories, poems, etc.) contained in publications. Each edition of a book increments the count. Only the currently selected form of the author's name is counted, e.g. 'Mary Shelley' does not include books published as by 'Mary W. Shelley'.
| Decade | Years | ||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1890s (3) | - | - | - | - | - | - | 1896 (2) | 1897 (1) | - | - | |||
| Title | Date | Author/Editor | Publication series | ISBN/Catalog ID | Price | Pages | Format | Type | Cover Artist | Verif |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| The New Review, January 1896 | 1896-01-00 | ed. W. E. Henley, Editors of The New Review | 1/-?Prior to decimilisation (1968-1971), UK books were priced
in shillings, or shillings and pence, where 20 shillings
equals one pound and 12 old pence equals one shilling.
Shillings were indicated with a variety of suffixes, e.g.
3s, 3', 3", 3/ all mean 3 shillings. Any number after that
is additional pence, usually 6 (half a shilling) but
sometimes 3 or 9 (a quarter of a shilling or three-quarters
of a shilling). |
116 | octavo?5.5" by 8.5" magazine, usually saddle-stapled, instead of side-stapled or glued |
mag | ||||
| The New Review, April 1896 | 1896-04-00 | ed. W. E. Henley, Editors of The New Review | 1/-?Prior to decimilisation (1968-1971), UK books were priced
in shillings, or shillings and pence, where 20 shillings
equals one pound and 12 old pence equals one shilling.
Shillings were indicated with a variety of suffixes, e.g.
3s, 3', 3", 3/ all mean 3 shillings. Any number after that
is additional pence, usually 6 (half a shilling) but
sometimes 3 or 9 (a quarter of a shilling or three-quarters
of a shilling). |
128 | octavo?5.5" by 8.5" magazine, usually saddle-stapled, instead of side-stapled or glued |
mag | ||||
| The New Review, May 1897 | 1897-05-00 | ed. W. E. Henley, Editors of The New Review | 1/-?Prior to decimilisation (1968-1971), UK books were priced
in shillings, or shillings and pence, where 20 shillings
equals one pound and 12 old pence equals one shilling.
Shillings were indicated with a variety of suffixes, e.g.
3s, 3', 3", 3/ all mean 3 shillings. Any number after that
is additional pence, usually 6 (half a shilling) but
sometimes 3 or 9 (a quarter of a shilling or three-quarters
of a shilling). |
116 | octavo?5.5" by 8.5" magazine, usually saddle-stapled, instead of side-stapled or glued |
mag |
