Celebrating John Dough and the Cherub
This will be JOHN DOUGH WEEK at Oz and Ends, celebrating the arrival of the 102nd-anniversary edition of L. Frank Baum's John Dough and the Cherub from Hungry Tiger Press. Yes, it's fully baked at last!
L. Frank Baum started to write John Dough on spec for Edward Bok, editor of The Ladies' Home Journal, as I'll discuss later in the week. After Bok declined to publish the story, Baum rethought and finished it for the publishing firm of Reilly & Britton, founded to issue his Marvelous Land of Oz in 1904. As with Land, Reilly & Britton commissioned John R. Neill to illustrate the book. Baum, Neill, and the firm went on to collaborate on twelve more Oz novels and many other books.
The first printings of John Dough had three-color artwork: black, red, and either yellow, green, or blue, depending on the signature. Eventually Reilly & Britton (which became Reilly & Lee) stopped printing the colored inks, and sometime in the mid-1900s let the book go out of print.
John Dough was unavailable for decades. In 1966, March Laumer's Opium Press in Hong Kong issued a small edition with new illustrations in a modern cartoony style by Lau Shiu Fan. Then in the 1970s Dover released a paperback reprint of the first printing with an introduction by Martin Gardner; that's how I first read the book. That paperback went out of print years ago. Project Gutenberg makes the text of John Dough available for free, but Neill's delightful artwork has not been republished in years.
The new Hungry Tiger Press edition of John Dough and the Cherub offers these features:
Finally, while this edition doesn't include the insights of Martin Gardner, you get to read me discoursing on the book's historical roots and narrative structure. I used some of that material in a 2006 article for The Baum Bugle, but other parts are available only in the introduction to this Hungry Tiger Press edition.
5 comments:
I think your foreword to the book is excellent, J.L.
Thanks, Eric! I really appreciate that.
(There you have it, folks! A completely unbiased opinion from the book's volunteer proofreader!)
AUGH! I can't wait until my copy arrives!!! (I ordered it last July.)
Hooray for JOHN DOUGH week! One slight correction to today's posting... The original pictorial endpapers were retained (albeit in black and white) in at least some Reilly and Lee printings.
bon appetit -
David M.
www.hungrytigerpress.com
I'm being lazy and using "Reilly & Britton" to mean both that firm and its successor "Reilly & Lee."
Post a Comment