First Constable edition, 1897 |
Thanks to newly-available resources from the University of Toronto Library, which were digitized by the Internet Archive in 2012, I believe I've unearthed a forgotten Canadian edition of Dracula, which was published in Toronto by The William Briggs Publishing Co., in July 1900.
Hutchinson's Colonial Edition of Dracula (courtesy of Robert Eighteen-Bisang) |
I found additional proof of this Canadian colonial edition in the October, 1897 issue of Bookseller and Stationer, a trade journal from McLean Publishing. A listing of new books from Copp Clark included Dracula--selling for the low, low price of $1.25 for the cloth cover, and 75¢ for paper!
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Now, onto the heart of the matter, which took place three years later. Another prolific Toronto publisher from that era, The William Briggs Publishing Co., released a significant number of Canadian books, and often reprinted British and American works. It seems they also printed a Canadian edition of Dracula!
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As it turned out, this edition wasn't officially available until July, which was announced in that month's issue of Bookseller and Stationer. In a survey of William Briggs' new books, there's a mention of Dracula, which was available "in a Canadian edition in very pretty covers." The writer added, "It is a story of dramatic power that will at times make the reader's flesh creep. The scene for the most part is laid among the Carpathian Mountains." (The exact date of publication is up for debate, but it must have been sometime between May and July.)
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The writer then pointed out that "Canadian editions, on the contrary, are turned out with bright covers, usually in colors, which look well on the counter and attract the eye." This is a very important piece of the puzzle, because the writer also noted that this year's Canadian book covers were "decidedly the prettiest we have seen," adding that the covers of Dracula, and a handful of other new stories, "are all exceedingly tasteful and pretty."
I've not yet been able to uncover any other information about the William Briggs edition of Dracula, and it goes without saying that no physical copy has ever been noted previously--but I believe there's enough information provided in these issues of Bookseller and Stationer to prove that such an edition did exist. As such, there are many questions that need answering--the most important being what plates were used. Since William Briggs Publishing was involved in reprinting books from both the United States and Britain, their version of Dracula could have been based on the first American edition (Doubleday & McClure, 1899), or one of the later versions from Constable & Co.--which by this point had already printed several editions in England. This may even have been another version of the Hutchinson colonial edition. One question that has been answered, I believe, is that this was likely bound in a paper cover. (Which also precedes the 1901 Constable paperback!)
A "tasteful and pretty" Canadian edition of Dracula? From 1900? Could this possibly still exist somewhere, perhaps tucked away on a dusty bookshelf in Cabbagetown, or at the bottom of an old trunk in Roncesvalles? The forgotten Briggs Dracula edition could be anywhere, so check the attic! Talk to your grandparents! Hit the Goodwill store! There's got to be a surviving copy out there, somewhere.
And don't forget to keep an eye out for those two versions from Copp Clark, as well.
Works Cited
"New Books." Bookseller and Stationer 13.10 (1897): 7. Stationery & Office Products 1896-1897. Internet Archive. Web. 9 Jan. 2014. <https://archive.org/details/stationeryoffic189697toro>.
"Books and Periodicals." Bookseller and Stationer 16.5 (1900): 7. Stationery & Office Products 1900. Internet Archive. Web. 9 Jan. 2014. <https://archive.org/details/stationeryoffice1900toro>.
"Colonial Editions Decline." Bookseller and Stationer 16.7 (1900): 1. Stationery & Office Products 1900. Internet Archive. Web. 9 Jan. 2014. <https://archive.org/details/stationeryoffice1900toro>.
"Wm. Briggs' New Books." Bookseller and Stationer 16.7 (1900): 2. Stationery & Office Products 1900. Internet Archive. Web. 9 Jan. 2014. <https://archive.org/details/stationeryoffice1900toro>.
Eighteen-Bisang, Robert. "Hutchinson’s Colonial Edition of Dracula." All Things Dracula. Ed. J. Gordon Melton. Transylvanian Society of Dracula, 2003. Web. 9 Jan. 2014. <http://www.cesnur.org/2003/dracula/>.
Background Information
- Copp Clark Limited: Our History
- Dictionary of Canadian Biography: William Briggs
- The Internet Archive
- Dracula: A Century of Editions, Adaptations and Translations (WorldCat)
- Dracula in Visual Media (WorldCat)
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