Details supplied by Lorna Toolis. |
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Appears to be another attempt at a hero pulp, but the magazine only lasted for a single issue. |
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The Anglo-Saxon Review—UK; Jun. 1899-Sep. 1901 (10 issues); John Lane, London; quarterly; hardcover format, circa 250pp, price one guinea (i.e. 21/-); editor Lady Randolph Spencer Churchill; not, as it sounds to modern ears, a journal devoted to Old English, but an opulently-produced miscellany (including fiction) which used the term “Anglo-Saxon” in the Churchillian sense (the editor was Winston’s American-born mother) to denote the English-speaking peoples; an overpriced folly, but it published stories by Henry James, Stephen Crane, George Gissing, H. de Vere Stacpoole, Robert Barr, H. D. Traill /Sullivan, Brit. Lit. Mags. 1837-1913 |
Issued in leather binding, ribbed on spine with gilt lettering. Ornately decorated in gilt on front and rear cover with a facsimile of a 1604 binding used for a volume in the library of King James I. Details supplied by John Eggeling. |
Details supplied by Denny Lien from an online copy at the Internet Archive. |
Details supplied by Denny Lien from an online copy at the Internet Archive. |
Details supplied by Denny Lien from an online copy at the Internet Archive. |
A Quarterly Miscellany. |
A Quarterly Miscellany. Details supplied by Denny Lien from an online copy at the Internet Archive. |
Issued in leather binding, ribbed on spine with gilt lettering. Ornately decorated in gilt on front and rear cover with a facsimile of a 1609 Italian binding used on a folio edition of Soriano’s Masses. Details supplied by John Eggeling. |