Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Note on Sources
- Note on Dates and Places
- Abbreviations
- Chapter 1 London and the Country
- Chapter 2 A Century of Growth
- Chapter 3 The Market for Books
- Chapter 4 The Distribution System
- Chapter 5 The Bookselling Business
- Chapter 6 The Printing Office
- Conclusion
- Appendix I Ellen Feepound's Book Stock
- Appendix II William Seale's Paper Stock
- Appendix III John Cheney's Printing Equipment
- Appendix IV The Universal British Directory
- Appendix V Subscribers to Thomas Hervey's The Writer's Time Redeemed
- Appendix VI Subscribers to Elisha Coles's Practical Discourse
- Appendix VII Subscribers to Job Orton's Short and Plain Exposition
- Notes
- Index of the Provincial Book Trade
- General Index
Chapter 4 - The Distribution System
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Note on Sources
- Note on Dates and Places
- Abbreviations
- Chapter 1 London and the Country
- Chapter 2 A Century of Growth
- Chapter 3 The Market for Books
- Chapter 4 The Distribution System
- Chapter 5 The Bookselling Business
- Chapter 6 The Printing Office
- Conclusion
- Appendix I Ellen Feepound's Book Stock
- Appendix II William Seale's Paper Stock
- Appendix III John Cheney's Printing Equipment
- Appendix IV The Universal British Directory
- Appendix V Subscribers to Thomas Hervey's The Writer's Time Redeemed
- Appendix VI Subscribers to Elisha Coles's Practical Discourse
- Appendix VII Subscribers to Job Orton's Short and Plain Exposition
- Notes
- Index of the Provincial Book Trade
- General Index
Summary
The size of the provincial market, and its rapid expansion, were among the most compelling reasons why the London trade defended their historic position so vigorously. Their success, however, would have been in vain if they had been unable to supply that market. The failure of the London chapbook printers to retain their national market, exemplified by the vast provincial production of chapbooks, could have been an augury for the whole trade. It is true that for less popular literature the changeless economics of printing worked in favour of the Londoners; demand may have been national, but it was limited, so that for many books a single print run of 2,000 copies could satisfy the entire demand. On the other hand, to justify such print runs, and hence to achieve the cost benefits of mass-production, the London publishers had to reach a non-metropolitan audience as well as their local customers. This chapter investigates that process, central to an understanding of the country book trade. We shall follow a book from its publication and marketing to its arrival in the provincial shop, and seek to answer five basic questions. How did the provincials, booksellers and book buyers alike, discover what books were available? How and from whom were such books ordered, and on what terms were they supplied? Was there any mechanism for the central supply of books through wholesalers or others? How were books actually transported, and at whose expense? And, finally, how did books reach the country bookshops and their customers?
ADVERTISING
Advertising is the key to the widespread marketing of any product; books were, and are, no exception.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Provincial Book Trade in Eighteenth-Century England , pp. 44 - 68Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1985