Penguin English Library: Difference between revisions
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| [[John Bunyan]] || Roger Sharrock || [[The Pilgrim's Progress]] || 4 || Reprinted with revisions as a Penguin Classic in 1987. |
| [[John Bunyan]] || Roger Sharrock || [[The Pilgrim's Progress]] || 4 || Reprinted with revisions as a Penguin Classic in 1987. |
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| [[Samuel Butler]] || Peter Mudford || [[Erewhon]] || 57 || |
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| [[Samuel Butler]] || [[Richard Hoggart]] (introduction)<br>James Cochrane || [[The Way of All Flesh]] || 12 || |
| [[Samuel Butler]] || [[Richard Hoggart]] (introduction)<br>James Cochrane || [[The Way of All Flesh]] || 12 || |
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| [[Thomas Carlyle]] || Alan Shelston || Selected Writings || 65 || |
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| [[Marcus Clarke]] || [[Stephen Murray-Smith]] || [[For the Term of His Natural Life|His Natural Life]] || 51 || |
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| [[William Cobbett]] || George Woodcock || [[Rural Rides]] || 23 || |
| [[William Cobbett]] || George Woodcock || [[Rural Rides]] || 23 || |
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| [[Daniel Defoe]] || Angus Ross || [[Robinson Crusoe]] || 7 || |
| [[Daniel Defoe]] || Angus Ross || [[Robinson Crusoe]] || 7 || |
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| [[Daniel Defoe]] || Pat Rogers || [[A tour thro' the whole island of Great Britain|A Tour Through the Whole Island of Great Britain]] || |
| [[Daniel Defoe]] || Pat Rogers || [[A tour thro' the whole island of Great Britain|A Tour Through the Whole Island of Great Britain]] || 66 || |
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| [[Thomas De Quincey]] || [[Alethea Hayter]] || [[Confessions of an English Opium Eater]] || 61 || |
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| [[Thomas De Quincey]] || [[David Wright (poet)|David Wright]] || [[Recollections of the Lake Poets|Recollections of the Lakes and the Lake Poets]] || 56 || |
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| [[Charles Dickens]] || [[George Woodcock]] || [[A Tale of Two Cities]] || 54 || |
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| [[Charles Dickens]] || Gordon Spence || [[Barnaby Rudge]] || 90 || |
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| [[Charles Dickens]] || [[J. Hillis Miller]] (introduction)<br>Norman Page || [[Bleak House]] || 63 || |
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| [[Charles Dickens]] || Trevor Blount || [[David Copperfield]] || 8 || |
| [[Charles Dickens]] || Trevor Blount || [[David Copperfield]] || 8 || |
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| [[Charles Dickens]] || [[Raymond Williams]] (introduction)<br>Peter Fairclough || [[Dombey and Son]] || 48 || |
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| [[Charles Dickens]] || [[Angus Calder]] || [[Great Expectations]] || 3 || |
| [[Charles Dickens]] || [[Angus Calder]] || [[Great Expectations]] || 3 || |
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| [[Henry Fielding]] || R. P. C. Mutter || [[The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling|Tom Jones]] || 9 || |
| [[Henry Fielding]] || R. P. C. Mutter || [[The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling|Tom Jones]] || 9 || |
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| [[John Ford (dramatist)|John Ford]] || Stephen Gill || Three Plays (''[['Tis Pity She's a Whore]]''/''[[The Broken Heart]]''/''[[Perkin Warbeck (play)|Perkin Warbeck]]'') || 59 || |
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| [[Elizabeth Gaskell]] || Stephen Gill || [[Mary Barton]] || 53 || |
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| [[Elizabeth Gaskell]] || Dorothy Collin<br>Martin Dodsworth || [[North and South]] || 55 || |
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| [[Elizabeth Gaskell]] || Alan Shelston || [[The Life of Charlotte Brontë]] || 99 || |
| [[Elizabeth Gaskell]] || Alan Shelston || [[The Life of Charlotte Brontë]] || 99 || |
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| [[Thomas Hardy]] || [[David Wright (poet)|David Wright]] || [[Under the Greenwood Tree]] || 123 || |
| [[Thomas Hardy]] || [[David Wright (poet)|David Wright]] || [[Under the Greenwood Tree]] || 123 || |
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| [[William Hazlitt]] || [[Ronald Blythe]] || Selected Writings || 50 || |
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| [[Nathaniel Hawthorne]] || Thomas E. Connolly (introduction and notes) || [[The Scarlet Letter]] and Selected Tales || 52 || The text of ''The Scarlet Letter'' is that of the authoritative Centenary Works edition, published by Ohio State University Press. Connolly's notes and the text are still included in the updated Penguin Classics edition, which has excised the tales and replaced his introduction with one by [[Nina Baym]]. |
| [[Nathaniel Hawthorne]] || Thomas E. Connolly (introduction and notes) || [[The Scarlet Letter]] and Selected Tales || 52 || The text of ''The Scarlet Letter'' is that of the authoritative Centenary Works edition, published by Ohio State University Press. Connolly's notes and the text are still included in the updated Penguin Classics edition, which has excised the tales and replaced his introduction with one by [[Nina Baym]]. |
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| [[Jonathan Swift]] || [[Michael Foot]] (introduction)<br>Peter Dixon and John Chalker (notes) || [[Gulliver's Travels]] || 22 || |
| [[Jonathan Swift]] || [[Michael Foot]] (introduction)<br>Peter Dixon and John Chalker (notes) || [[Gulliver's Travels]] || 22 || |
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| [[William Makepeace Thackeray]] || [[John Sutherland]]<br>Michael Greenfield || [[The History of Henry Esmond]] || 49 || |
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| [[William Makepeace Thackeray]] || [[J. I. M. Stewart]] || [[Vanity Fair (novel)|Vanity Fair]] || 35 || |
| [[William Makepeace Thackeray]] || [[J. I. M. Stewart]] || [[Vanity Fair (novel)|Vanity Fair]] || 35 || |
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| [[Anthony Trollope]] || [[John William Ward (professor)|John William Ward]] (introduction)<br>Robert Mason || [[North America (Trollope)|North America]] || 38 || |
| [[Anthony Trollope]] || [[John William Ward (professor)|John William Ward]] (introduction)<br>Robert Mason || [[North America (Trollope)|North America]] || 38 || |
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| [[Mark Twain]] || [[Justin Kaplan]] || [[A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court]] || 64 || |
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| [[Mark Twain]] || [[Malcolm Bradbury]] || [[Pudd'nhead Wilson]] || 40 || |
| [[Mark Twain]] || [[Malcolm Bradbury]] || [[Pudd'nhead Wilson]] || 40 || |
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| || Keith Sturgess || Three Elizabethan Domestic Tragedies (''[[Arden of Faversham]]''/''[[A Yorkshire Tragedy]]''/''[[A Woman Killed with Kindness]]'') || 39 || |
| || Keith Sturgess || Three Elizabethan Domestic Tragedies (''[[Arden of Faversham]]''/''[[A Yorkshire Tragedy]]''/''[[A Woman Killed with Kindness]]'') || 39 || |
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| || Peter Happé || Tudor Interludes || 62 || |
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| [[Cyril Tourneur]]<br>[[John Webster]]<br>[[Thomas Middleton]] || Gāmini Salgādo || Three Jacobean Tragedies (''[[The Revenger's Tragedy]]''/''[[The White Devil]]''/''[[The Changeling (play)|The Changeling]]'') || 6 || Authorship of ''[[The Revenger's Tragedy]]'' (which was published anonymously) was then attributed to Tourneur; today it is generally thought to have been written by Middleton.<ref name="Maus">{{cite book|last1=Maus|first1=Katharine|title=Four Revenge Tragedies|date=1998|publisher=Oxford World's Classics|location=Oxford|isbn=0192838784|page=i}}</ref> |
| [[Cyril Tourneur]]<br>[[John Webster]]<br>[[Thomas Middleton]] || Gāmini Salgādo || Three Jacobean Tragedies (''[[The Revenger's Tragedy]]''/''[[The White Devil]]''/''[[The Changeling (play)|The Changeling]]'') || 6 || Authorship of ''[[The Revenger's Tragedy]]'' (which was published anonymously) was then attributed to Tourneur; today it is generally thought to have been written by Middleton.<ref name="Maus">{{cite book|last1=Maus|first1=Katharine|title=Four Revenge Tragedies|date=1998|publisher=Oxford World's Classics|location=Oxford|isbn=0192838784|page=i}}</ref> |
Revision as of 17:37, 23 March 2020
The Penguin English Library is an imprint of Penguin Books. The series was first created in 1963[1] as a 'sister series'[2] to the Penguin Classics series, providing critical editions of English classics; at that point in time, the Classics label was reserved for works translated into English (for example, Juvenal's Sixteen Satires). The English Library was merged into the Classics stable in the mid 1980s,[1] and all titles hitherto published in the Library were reissued as Classics.
The imprint was resurrected in 2012 for a new series of titles.[2][3] The present English Library no longer seeks to provide critical editions; the focus is now 'on the beauty and elegance of the book'.[3]
History
1963 to 1986
The Penguin English Library aimed to publish 'a comprehensive range of the literary masterpieces which have appeared in the English language since the 15th century'.[1] All texts in the Library were published with an introduction and explanatory notes written and compiled by an editor; some with a bibliography as well.[2] Editors were also required to provide 'authoritative texts', using their own judgement in printing one, or in some cases creating their own.[2] The series was recognisable chiefly by its distinctive orange spine.[1][3]
Most, if not all, titles were reprinted as Penguin Classics following the merger of the two imprints in the mid 1980s. Some of these editions were superseded in the 1990s or later,[4] while some continue to be reprinted today as Classics. Additionally, the introductions to some titles survive in present-day Penguin Classics as appendices – for example, Tony Tanner's introduction to Mansfield Park.
2012 to present
The imprint was resurrected in name, though not so much in spirit, in 2012. Texts published in the series no longer include critical apparatus; they instead feature an essay by a notable literary figure, usually excerpted from prior work - for example, the essays of Harold Bloom, V. S. Pritchett and John Sutherland have been featured.[3] A portrait or photograph of the author remains printed on the inside of the front cover.[3] The focus is now on cover art, with each title designed by Coralie Bickford-Smith.[3]
List of English Library titles
This is an incomplete list of the titles in the Penguin English Library:[citation needed]
1963 to 1986
All titles listed below are assumed to have lists of further reading appended and/or are no longer in print having been superseded by new editions, unless stated.
2012 to present
Author | Title | Essayist | Essay | Notes |
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Jane Austen | Persuasion | Elizabeth Bowen | Unknown | |
Emily Brontë | Wuthering Heights | Virginia Woolf | Wuthering Heights | |
G. K. Chesterton | The Man Who Was Thursday | Unknown | Unknown | |
Wilkie Collins | The Moonstone | T. S. Eliot | The Moonstone | |
Daniel Defoe | Robinson Crusoe | David Blewett | The Island and the World | The essay is taken from a chapter in Blewett's Defoe's Art of Fiction: Robinson Crusoe, Moll Flanders, Colonel Jack, and Roxana (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1979). |
Henry Fielding | Tom Jones | R. P. C. Mutter | Tom Jones | The essay is a reprint of Mutter's introduction to the original Penguin English Library edition (see above). |
Elizabeth Gaskell | North and South | V. S. Pritchett | The South Goes North | The essay is from Sir Victor's 1942 collection of essays, In My Good Books. |
Nathaniel Hawthorne | The Scarlet Letter | D. H. Lawrence | Nathaniel Hawthorne and The Scarlet Letter | The essay is from Lawrence's Studies in Classic American Literature. |
Mary Shelley | Frankenstein | Paul Cantor | The Nightmare of Romantic Idealism | The text is that of the 1985 Penguin Classics edition, edited by Maurice Hindle, i. e. the 1832 text. The essay is taken from a chapter in Cantor's book, Creature and Creator: Myth-Making and English Romanticism (Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, 1985). |
Laurence Sterne | Tristram Shandy | V. S. Pritchett | Tristram Shandy | |
Bram Stoker | Dracula | John Sutherland | Why Does the Count Come to England? | The essay is taken from Sutherland's Is Heathcliff a Murderer? Great Puzzles in Nineteenth Century Fiction (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998). |
Mark Twain | The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn | Harold Bloom | Unknown | |
Oscar Wilde | The Picture of Dorian Gray | Peter Ackroyd | - | The essay is a reprint of Ackroyd's introduction to the first Penguin Classics edition. |
References
- ^ a b c d Kelly, Stuart. "The new Penguin English Library is a far cry from its 1963 version". The Guardian.
- ^ a b c d "About Penguin Classics". Penguin Classics.
- ^ a b c d e f Akbar, Arifa. "A whole new chapter for the Penguin English Library". Independent.
- ^ Andrew Sanders. Wooten, William; Donaldson, George (eds.). Reading Penguin: A Critical Anthology. p. 112. ISBN 1443850829.
- ^ Keating, Peter. "What's new". Peter Keating: Author and vegetarian cook. Retrieved 23 June 2017.
- ^ "Culture and Anarchy and Other Selected Prose". Penguin UK. Penguin. Retrieved 23 June 2017.
- ^ Austen, Jane (2003). Mansfield Park. Penguin Classics. pp. 440–465. ISBN 9780141439808.
- ^ Maus, Katharine (1998). Four Revenge Tragedies. Oxford: Oxford World's Classics. p. i. ISBN 0192838784.
- ^ Patton, Phil. "Reflections on a Penguin-iversary". AIGA. Retrieved 8 April 2018.
- ^ "Back cover of Three Gothic Novels (Classics, 2003)".