The Idler. Seven Volumes. 1892 to 1895.

Printed: 1892-1895

Publisher: Chatto & Windus. London

Dimensions 15 × 22 × 4 cm
Language

Language: English

Size (cminches): 15 x 22 x 4

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Description

Green cloth binding with gilt title on the spine and front board. Dimensions are for one volume.

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Hardcover. Condition: Good. Jerome, Jerome K. and Robert Barr, editors. The Idler magazine : an illustrated monthly. Bindings are good overall. Authors include Twain, Bret Harte, Conan Doyle, Maupassant and many others. 

The Idler was an illustrated monthly magazine published in Great Britain from 1892 to 1911. It was founded by the author Robert Barr, who brought in the humorist Jerome K. Jerome as co-editor, and its contributors included many of the leading writers and illustrators of the time. The Idler generally catered to the popular taste, printing light pieces and sensational fiction. The magazine published short stories, serialized novels, humour pieces, poetry, memoirs, travel writing, book and theatre reviews, interviews and cartoons. It also included a monthly feature called ‘The Idlers’ Club,’ in which a number of writers would offer their views on a particular topic. 

Most of The Idler‘s contributors were popular and prolific writers of the time. Some of them, such as Rudyard Kipling, Mark Twain and Ernest Bramah, are still read today.

Jerome Klapka Jerome (2 May 1859 – 14 June 1927) was an English writer and humorist, best known for the comic travelog Three Men in a Boat (1889). Other works include the essay collections Idle Thoughts of an Idle Fellow (1886) and Second Thoughts of an Idle Fellow; Three Men on the Bummel, a sequel to Three Men in a Boat; and several other novels. Jerome was born in Walsall, England, and, although he was able to attend grammar school, his family suffered from poverty at times, as did he as a young man trying to earn a living in various occupations. In his twenties, he was able to publish some work, and success followed. He married in 1888, and the honeymoon was spent on a boat on the Thames; he published Three Men in a Boat soon afterwards. He continued to write fiction, non-fiction and plays over the next few decades, though never with the same level of success.

Robert Barr (16 September 1849 – 21 October 1912) was a Scottish-Canadian short story writer and novelist who also worked as a newspaper and magazine editor. Barr was born in Glasgow, Scotland to Robert Barr and Jane Watson. In 1854, he emigrated with his parents to Upper Canada. His family settled on a farm near the village of Muirkirk. Barr assisted his father with his work as a carpenter and builder and was a teacher in Kent County, then in 1873 entered the Toronto Normal School.

After graduating, he taught in Walkerville and in 1874 became headmaster of the Central School at Windsor in 1874. During the 1870s, he wrote humorous pieces for various publications, including the Toronto Grip, under the pseudonym “Luke Sharp”, which he took from an undertaker’s sign. After the Detroit Free Press serialized his account of a boating trip on Lake Erie, in 1876 he changed careers and became a reporter there, then a columnist. Two of his brothers followed him to the newspaper.

In 1881, by which time he was exchange editor of the Free Press, Barr decided to “vamoose the ranch” and relocated to London to continue his fiction writing career while establishing a weekly English edition of the newspaper. The magazine was very successful. In 1892 he founded the magazine The Idler, choosing Jerome K. Jerome as his collaborator (wanting, as Jerome said, “a popular name”). This was also very successful. Barr stepped down as co-editor in 1894, but in 1902 became the sole proprietor and returned as editor.

In London in the 1890s, Barr began writing crime novels and became more prolific, publishing a book a year. He also wrote stories of the supernatural.Detective stories were much in vogue because of the popularity of Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes stories; Barr published the first Sherlock Holmes parody, “Detective Stories Gone Wrong: The Adventures of Sherlaw Kombs” (also known as “The Great Pegram Mystery”) in The Idler in 1892, and followed it in 1894 with “The Adventure of the Second Swag”. His 1906 novel The triumphs of Eugène Valmont parodies Holmes and other “gentleman detectives” whose pompous sleuth is a possible antecedent of Agatha Christie’s Hercule Poirot.

Barr socialized widely with other best-selling authors. In 1903, despite initial reservations about taking on the project, he completed The O’Ruddy, a novel left unfinished by his recently deceased friend Stephen Crane. Despite his Holmes satires, he remained on very good terms with Conan Doyle, who described him in the 1920s in his memoir Memories and Adventures as “a volcanic Anglo—or rather Scot-American, with a violent manner, a wealth of strong adjectives, and one of the kindest natures underneath it all”. Barr himself wrote several humorous articles about being a writer, including in 1899 “Literature in Canada” , where he described it as a country whose “average citizen … loves whiskey better than books”.

Barr’s short stories usually feature a witty narrator and an ironic twist. His novels tend to be episodic, the chapters often linked only by the central character. His work featured a wide range of protagonists, but his characters are often stereotyped. His narration often includes moral and other asides.

In August 1876, when he was 27, Barr married Ontario-born Eva Bennett, who was 21. They had either two or three children.

The 1911 census places Robert Barr, “a writer of fiction”, at Hillhead, Woldingham, Surrey, a village southeast of London, living with his wife, Eva, their son William, and two female servants. He died there from heart disease on 21 October 1912.

Condition notes

Headbands worn, bindings scuffed.

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