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Cookbooks

Fabulous Italian by Johna Blinn - 1979

Fabulous Italian by Johna Blinn - 1979

$2.95 15m
Are You Hungry Tonight? by Brenda Arlene Butler (199...

Are You Hungry Tonight? by Brenda Arlene Butler (199...

- $9.99 16m
Pillsbury Classic Cookbooks February 1993 #144

Pillsbury Classic Cookbooks February 1993 #144

$0.99 16m
Meals Fit For Bishops and Acolytes,  Hutchinson,  Kansas

Meals Fit For Bishops and Acolytes, Hutchinson, Kansas

- $4.25 17m
Pillsbury Classic Cookbooks Easy Meals August 2005 #294

Pillsbury Classic Cookbooks Easy Meals August 2005 #294

- $1.99 17m
Making the Most of Your Servel - 1948

Making the Most of Your Servel - 1948

$2.49 17m
Essential Slow Cooker Recipes Delicious Home Cook Meals

Essential Slow Cooker Recipes Delicious Home Cook Meals

1 $0.25 17m
Low-Fat Living by Leslie L. Cooper,  Robert K. Cooper...

Low-Fat Living by Leslie L. Cooper, Robert K. Cooper...

$2.99 17m
Sweet Ideas From Equal Cookbook

Sweet Ideas From Equal Cookbook

$5.00 18m
June Roth's Fast and Fancy Cookbook - Upside Down Pages

June Roth's Fast and Fancy Cookbook - Upside Down Pages

$2.49 19m
Best Recipes of the Great Food Companies Cookbook NEW

Best Recipes of the Great Food Companies Cookbook NEW

$5.00 19m
Better Homes & Gardens Favorite Ways With Chicken  1963

Better Homes & Gardens Favorite Ways With Chicken 1963

$2.95 20m
The Daily Soup Cookbook~1st Edition

The Daily Soup Cookbook~1st Edition

- $9.99 20m
PASTA & ITALIAN (SUPER COOKERY) BY PARRAGON

PASTA & ITALIAN (SUPER COOKERY) BY PARRAGON

- $3.00 20m

News

  • Paperback History
    Inexpensive books bound in paper have existed since at least the 19th century and exist in a number of formats that have specific names, such as pamphlets, cheap editions, yellowbacks, dime novels and railway novels. Today most paperbacks are called either "mass-market paperback" or "trade paperback", the differences of which are described later.

     

    The 20th century mass-market paperback format was pioneered by German publisher Albatross Books in 1931 but the experiment was cut short. In England Penguin Books adopted many of Albatrosss innovations, for instance the conspicuous logo and the color coded covers for different genres, beginning in 1935,and was an immediate financial success. British publisher Allen Lane launched the Penguin imprint in 1935, with 10 reprint titles; this started the paperback revolution in the English-language book market. Number one on the Penguin list of 1935 editions was André Mauroiss Ariel.

     

    Allen Lane intended to produce cheap books. He bought paperback rights from publishers, ordered huge print runs (e.g., 20,000 copies) to keep unit prices low, and looked to non-traditional book selling retail locations. Booksellers were initially reluctant to buy his books. But Woolworths, placed a large order on the books, and the books sold extremely well. After this initial success, booksellers were no longer reluctant to stock paperbacks. The word Penguin became closely associated with the word paperback.

     

    Robert de Graaf, in 1939, issued a similar line in the USA, partnering with Simon & Schuster to found the Pocket Books imprint. The term pocket book became synonymous with paperback in English-speaking North America. In Québec, the term "ivre de poche was used, and continues to be used today. De Graaf, like Lane, negotiated paperback rights from other publishers, and produced large print runs. His practices contrasted with those of Lane in his adoption of illustrated covers, aimed at the North American market. In order to reach an even larger market than Lane had, he went the mass market route, through distribution networks of newspapers and magazines, which had a lengthy history of being aimed (in format and distribution) at mass audiences. This was the beginning of mass market paperbacks.

     

    Because of its position as Number One in what became a very long list of Pocket editions, James Hiltons Lost Horizon is often cited as the first American paperback book, which is not correct. The first mass-market, pocket-sized, paperback book printed in America was an edition of Pearl Bucks The Good Earth, produced by Pocket Books as a proof-of-concept in late 1938, sold in New York City, and now very collectible.