H and S Yellow Jacket series - publisher  
Alternative title: H & S Yellow Jacket
... H and S Yellow Jacket
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Notes

  • Series indicated by yellow backgrounded dust jacket with H & S Yellow Jacket on the spine. Most often no indications on the work that it belongs to the series.

Includes

y separately published work icon Young Man Without Money Maysie Greig , London : Hodder and Stoughton , 1938 Z1071764 1938 single work novel romance Tells with just the right light touch the story of a millionairess who is engaged by a penniless young man as a parloumaid - and of her adventures "below stairs" and elsewhere. She writes pleasantly and her book is excellent entertainment. - back cover, dust jacket London : Hodder and Stoughton , 1938
y separately published work icon A Man to Protect You Maysie Greig , London : Hodder and Stoughton , 1939 Z1071793 1939 single work novel romance London : Hodder and Stoughton , 1942

Works about this Work

y separately published work icon The Culture of Thriller Fiction in Britain, 1898-1945: Authors, Publishers and the First World War Nilan Maxwell Grant Voykovic , Sydney : 1997 Z1307135 1997 single work thesis This thesis considers the relationship between authors, publishers and the First World War and the role they played in the development of mass thriller culture in Britain between 1898 and 1945. As a result of the First World War, the publishing trade altered the way readers consumed mass thriller fiction; in turn, this laid the basis for modern mass media. In the vanguard of these changes was Hodder Stoughton, a foremost British publisher of thriller fiction with its well known Yellow Jacket novels. An analysis of the publishing, sales and advertising records of Hodder Stoughton, and of the novels of its three principal authors, reveals the emergence of distinct genres of fiction and an aggressive approach to advertising that focused on the 'star novelist'. Notably, these thriller novels also had a huge circulation in Australia.
y separately published work icon The Culture of Thriller Fiction in Britain, 1898-1945: Authors, Publishers and the First World War Nilan Maxwell Grant Voykovic , Sydney : 1997 Z1307135 1997 single work thesis This thesis considers the relationship between authors, publishers and the First World War and the role they played in the development of mass thriller culture in Britain between 1898 and 1945. As a result of the First World War, the publishing trade altered the way readers consumed mass thriller fiction; in turn, this laid the basis for modern mass media. In the vanguard of these changes was Hodder Stoughton, a foremost British publisher of thriller fiction with its well known Yellow Jacket novels. An analysis of the publishing, sales and advertising records of Hodder Stoughton, and of the novels of its three principal authors, reveals the emergence of distinct genres of fiction and an aggressive approach to advertising that focused on the 'star novelist'. Notably, these thriller novels also had a huge circulation in Australia.
Last amended 1 Oct 2008 11:29:13
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