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The Literary Shop, and Other Tales

Chapter 2: PREFACE TO NEW EDITION.
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About This Book

This collection offers humorous, nostalgic sketches and short stories about the world of periodical literature and the daily lives of literary workers. Extended essays examine popular weeklies and serials, detailing editorial practices, readership tastes, and the sentimental fiction and verse that circulated in country garrets. Several pieces satirize a model literary colony and a magazine syndicate, portraying contributors’ routines, ambitions, and the economics shaping their work. Interspersed comic tales follow poets, reporters, and other literary figures through domestic moments and professional foibles, blending affectionate mockery with practical observations about publishing and literary commerce.

PREFACE TO NEW EDITION.

The Literary Shop was first printed in book form in the fall of 1894, nearly five years ago. Some of its constituent papers had already appeared in the pages of Truth and Puck. To the present edition have been added the sketches that deal with life and letters in the McClure village of Syndicate. This model literary community was established about four years ago, on a convenient and healthful rise of ground overlooking the Hackensack River, which is navigable at that point. It has a population of several hundred poets and prose hands, all of whom are regularly employed on the magazine and the newspaper syndicate controlled by Mr. S. S. McClure. These sketches are reprinted by permission from the New York Journal and the Criterion.

New York, March 8, 1899.

J. L. F.