Title: No. 19
Title Record # 1242247
Author: Edgar Jepson
Date: 1910-01-00
Type: NOVEL
Language: English
Current Tags: weird (1) Add Tags
Author: Edgar Jepson
Date: 1910-01-00
Type: NOVEL
Language: English
Synopsis:
Reviewed as early as The Scotsman 1910-01-24 p2:
"[T]he suburbs of twentieth-century London ... [feature in] ... Mr. Jepson's accomplished effort in the horrific in fiction. The story of No. 19 is told by a prosaic lawyer's clerk who buys No. 20, and lives there."
User Rating:
This title has no votes.
VOTE
Current Tags: weird (1) Add Tags
Other Titles
Variant Titles | Translations | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
Publications
Not displaying variants or translations • Display all variants and translations • Do not display translations
Title | Date | Author/Editor | Publisher/Pub. Series | ISBN/Catalog ID | Price | Pages | Format | Type | Cover Artist | Verif |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
No. 19 | 1910-01-00 | Edgar Jepson | Mills & Boon | -/6?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). |
vi+ 309 |
hc?Hardcover. Used for all hardbacks of any size. |
novel | |||
No. 19 | 2024-04-07 | Edgar Jepson | Roy Glashan's Library | A$0.00?A$: Australian dollar |
ebook?Used for all electronic formats, including but not limited to EPUB, eReader, HTML, iBook, Mobipocket, and PDF. |
novel |
Reviews
- Review by Joseph H. Crawford, Jr. and James J. Donahue and Donald M. Grant (1953) in '333': A Bibliography of the Science-Fantasy Novel , reprinted in:
- '333': A Bibliography of the Science-Fantasy Novel (1953)
- Review by Everett F. Bleiler (1983) in The Guide to Supernatural Fiction (Pages 145 - 294)
- Review by Douglas Campbell (2004) in All Hallows, June 2004