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How to read books (and write them, too) in 1893

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  old magazines, The Cosmopolitan    Posted date:  July 28, 2013  |  No comment


Earlier this month, I shared with you a bunch of typewriters you could have bought in 1893. So let’s say you had bought one of them … what then?

Well, if you were a writer, surely you didn’t expect to publish your stories without a little editorial supervision. That’s where Dr. Titus M. Coan’s New York Bureau of Revision came in. His advertisement in the January 1893 issue of The Cosmopolitan promised that he’d provide “unbiased criticism of prose and verse.”

NewYorkBureauofRevision

Would love to know exactly which “leading authors” endorsed his services, though.

And at the other end of the publishing food chain, readers need help, too. That’s what the Holloway Reading Stand and Dictionary Holder were all about.

HowtoReadBooks

Because reading a book while letting it rest in one’s lap is so old-fashioned!





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