Browse Items (3304 total)

Second Page of the Table of Contents for the 1883 James Nisbet & Co. "New Edition" Reprint

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Subjects: Table of Contents

Identifier: 2nd page of Table of Contents

Title Page of the 1904 Hutchinson and Co. Reprint

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In the title page for Hutchinson & Co.'s 1904 edition of the novel, the title is printed in the top quarter of the page followed by a period. The author's pseudonym Elizabeth Wetherell is printed in the page's middle. Below the pseudonym is a list of eight seperate works by the author. Hutchinson & CO.'s address is listed as "London 34, Paternoster Row."

Subjects: Title Page

Third Page of the Table of Contents for the 1883 James Nisbet & Co. "New Edition" Reprint

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Third Page of the Table of Contents of of the 1883 James Nisbet and CO. "New Edition"

Subjects: Table of Contents

Identifier: 20DES_23_001L

The Literary World,
December 28, 1850

Reviewer compliments The Wide, Wide World for standing out among the "now common class of religious novels"; offers an excerpt illustrating the novel's "agreeable style"; concludes with a complaint about the author's "diffuseness" (novel mistakenly attributed to "Emily" Wetherell)

Subjects: Dedicated Review, Mixed Stance

Identifier: rev01

The Dollar Magazine,
March 01, 1851

Reviewer acknowledges the book's good intentions; points negatively to its overt didacticism; makes fun of the author's overreliance on tears

Subjects: Dedicated Review, Mixed Stance

Identifier: rev04

Zion's Herald and Wesleyan Journal,
August 27, 1851

Reviewer admires the novel's exemplary religious lessons; recommends the book to Christian families

Subjects: Dedicated Review, Postive Stance

Identifier: rev08

Godey's Lady's Book,
September 1851

Reviewer appreciates The Wide, Wide World, especially as a book for children; mistakenly exposes the novel's Scottish authorship ("appears as an American book, but it is utterly deficient in American spirit")

Subjects: Dedicated Review, Mixed Stance

Identifier: rev10

The National Era,
October 16, 1851

Reviewer praises The Wide, Wide World for its verisimilitude and its heroine's religious journey; appreciates the novel's ending

Subjects: Dedicated Review, Postive Stance

Identifier: rev11

The Independent,
May 6, 1852

Reviewer of Warner's Queechy discusses the fame of its author and the literary success of The Wide, Wide World

Subjects: Authorship/Celebrity, Postive Stance

Identifier: rev18

The North American Review,
January 1853

Reviewer investigates the current state of the novel as compared with its eighteenth-century forebears; considers contemporary tendencies toward moral argumentation; expresses mixed feelings about the genre's evolution; discusses The Wide, Wide World, Queechy, and Dollars and Cents as positive examples of a new class of American novel, "having a character of their own--humane, religious, piquant, natural, national"

Subjects: Literary Field, Mixed Stance

Identifier: rev33