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Captain Caution

Page 27

by Kenneth Roberts


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  * * *

  ,~luFeSe Ae3 we I leq~L IpuaFI~ poo3 11ews AW 'alow aono Ae3 we I ~eq,L" AIIeaF~e~saa qaaqa s~uo~aN paqauFd neapuebly 'laSuyalo~ pue qwnq~ S'q q~l~

  ,~d~eqA~ lo '3 l aq~ uF ~a3 o:~ snoFxue os al~no~{ aael aq~ ~F SI ~OI,OW ~ IF~un ~Fe~ o~ aAeq ll~no~ uFqua aq~ 0~ ~F ~oo~ aH AeP ~ 3 l aq~ 3uF~F~ s~uFe~deo aq,I,,, pFes uo~aN ``'~`uplnoqs ~F AeP ~ ~ N"

  ``'AIuFe~laa '3 l a~ UIn paleloap neapueSly ``'3 l aq~ uF ~nd aq plnoqs ~L pa~se uo~aN ``dAss noA ~e~ s`~eq'~" pala~nw pue poadF~s aq 'pa~eAs aq sy pug o~ padlaq peq aq amssa~ ale awos pa~sal ~F q~eanaq ~F se ssel3 pa~sol~ 3UFuFqs s~F je 3u.lle~s'al~nos uFquo aq~ punole aoF~ pa~le~ neapuchly '~aap-lallenb aq~ uo ~ala 3UFUUFht aq~ ~o laqwaw qaea pleA`al plno~ ~e~ wm ~ nF3 aq~ UFAs o~ 'uaweas pela-uAsolq aloasoA~ ~o suoF~epoqxa asleoq aq~ pFwe '3uFael '^oq aq~ pleANO] sun3 3uol aq~ palpun~ sA`ala un3 o~ 'uaAa~S 'ueFpuI aq~ ~o aAa n~qa~e~ aq~ lapun sape~ ~seaq~lou aq; ~o q~aa~ aq~ o~uF 'palneq NOILL1VO NIV`LdYO t6t

  For the aid so freely given him in the writing of this book and the obtaining of information on seamanship, gunnery, ship-design and the Gangway Pendulum, the author is profoundly grateful to

  Anna Mosser Roberts Booth Tarkington R. E. Gould, Anson, Maine W. H. Stone, Patton, California Howard Irving Chapelle, Assistant Editor, "The Mariner" Harry A. McBride, Department of State

  P. V. H. Weems, Lt. Commander, U. S. N.

  Holden C. Richardson, Capt., U. S. N. (Retired) Marion Cobb Fuller, Maine State Library The Library of Congress

  ARUNDEL

  "When I think of the thin, tinny novels which tumble from the press today, to be forgotten within a few months, I feel that Arundel is a permanent contribution to the literature of this country. I go around telling people to read it; but I despair until they have read it of making them realize its quality. It seems to me like a perfectly splendid plum pudding! No, I think it is more than that; I think it is brown bread, and roast beef, and beerl It is the real stud, and while I congratulate the author upon having written it, I congratulate all of us novel-reading folk even more heartily. How anybody can lap up whipped cream when he can get Arundel, I don't understand!"

  MARGARET DEEAND PRINTINGS

  First published..... ........ November 18, 1929

  Revised, replated end reprinted .... . June, 1933, October, 1956 U.S., 1931 twice; 1933 twice; 1934 four times; 1935; 1936 three times; 1937 three times; 1938 three times; 1939; 1940; 1941; 1942; 1943; 1944; 1945 twice; 1946; 1947; 1949; 1953; 1955; 1956

  Braille, Library of Congress..........January, 1934

  Family Reading Club. .... . November, 1956

  Doubleday Dollar Book Club................December, 1956 International Collectors LibraryApril, 1958 England (Bodley Head) .September, 1936 Germany (Holle & Co.) ..October, 1936 Germany (Buchgemeinschaft). January, 1937 England (Readers Union)December, 1938

  Sweden ( Bonniers ) ......... .... . March, 1939 Denmark (Aschehoug) . November, 1939 Italy ( Mondadori ) .. September, 1940 Armed Services Edition May, 1945

  Spain ( Janes ) ....................... . . May, 1946

  France (Editions de la Paix) Details unobtainable Czechoslovakia (Borovy) . October, 1947

  Arundel 300th Anniversary.... .... June, 1953

  German Book Society ( Koch, Darmstadt )January, 1955 England (Collins Fontana)September, 1956

  RABBLE IN ARMS

  "Rabble In Arms is magnificent. In both the beauty and the horror of his story, Kenneth Roberts reaches supreme heights and can defy comparison with any author that ever lived and wrote in any language I ever read in the original or in translation. They talk big talk of Tolstoi, Victor Hugo, Stephen Crane and a few others, but I put Kenneth Roberts up with the best of them. He is a great author who has actually written great novels."

  RUPE:RT HUGRES PRINTINGS

  First published ........November 2, 1933

  U.S., 1933 twice; 1935; 1936; 1937 three times; 1938 twice; 1939 twice; 1940;194~;1943;1944;1945;1948;1950;1953;1956

  Braille, Library of CongressJanuary, 1934 Talking Books, Library of Congress1945 Illustrated Edition October, 1947 International Collectors LibraryNovember, 1955 Family Reading Club June, 1957 Doubleday Dollar Book ClubApril, 1958 Reprinted September, 1958 Germany (Hone) October, 1936 Germany (Book Society)January, 1937 England (Collins) January, 1939

  Australia ( Collins ) ........................ January, 1939

  England ( National Library for Blind) March, 1939 England ( World Books ) . April, 1940

  Italy ( Mondadori ) .........................June, 194 Czechoslovakia (Borovy) July, 1941

  Sweden (Bonniers) February, 1945

  Spain ( Janes ) . ....................... September, 1946

  Republished Czechoslovakia ( Odeon )January, 1949 Republished Sweden ( Bonniers, Folkbibliotek)May, 1955

  NORTHWEST PASSAGE

  "Towering above all else in the swirling 700 pages of North west Passage is that indestructible giant, Robert Rogers, a prodigious creation, a character bristling and sounding with life, a vivid portrait for your literary gallery. Northwest Passage will give you three novels' worth of entertainment."

  -CHARLES LEE, Minneapolis bourn`] P BIN TIN GS

  First published...... .. June 25, 1937

  U.S., 1937 fifteen times; 1938 eight times; 1939 four times; 1940 three times; 1942; 1943; 1944; 1945; 1946; 1947; 1948; 1950; 1952;

  1954; 1956; 1957 Book-of-the-Month Club . . .......................July, 1937

  Braille, Library of Congress September, 1937 Talking Books, American Foundahon for Blind January, 1949

  England ( Collins ), Book Society; Daily Mail Book-of-the-Month

  January, 1938 Australia (Angus & Robertson) February, 1938 Sweden ( Bonniers ) April, 1938 Germany ( Paul List ) September, 1938 Denmark ( Jespersen ) September, 1938 Norway (Cappelens) October, 1938 Finland (KirJa) . November, 1938 Holland ( Torrentrans ) December, 1938 Japan (Mikasa Shobo) December, 1938 Italy ( Mondadori ) . March, 1939 England (Foyle's Book Club) May, 1939 Hungary ( Revai ) . May, 1939 Czechoslovakia ( E.L.K. ) June, 1939 Continent of Europe (Albatross Giant) June, 1939

  Poland ("Roj") ...July, 1939

  Rumania ( Ciornei )... ..............November, 1939

  France (Editions Stock: 338 printings ) February, 1940 Brazil (Companhia Editora Nacional) July, 1941 Spain ( Janes ) . June, 1946 Yugoslavia ( Athenaeum ) Details unobtainable British Broadcasting Co., 8 instals July-Sept., 1947 Czechoslovakia ( Podrouzek ) January, 1948 Sweden ( Bonniers, Folkbibliotek ) November, 1953 Germany (Europaischer Book Club) March, 1953 England (Collins Fontana) November, 1953 Italy ( Mondadori ) 4 Vol. Pavone Edition January, 1955 Yugoslavia (Kosmos, Belgrade) May, 1955 Finland ( Otava, Helsinki ) December, l 956

  OLIVER WISWELL

  "The story of the Royalists in the American Revolution has never been adequately told in fiction form. Now, after 160 years, Kenneth Roberts has undertaken this herculean task in Oliver Wiswell. No one excepting a man of Mr. Roberts' stature as a writer could lay before us the case of the American Royalists. It takes industry and unending research to accomplish the bare skeleton of such a book; it takes a high form of imagination, finished technique, and courage to carry the task to a successful conclusion. Yes, courage; for even after the passing of centuries, old prejudices still persist and cloud issues. It requires something greater than good writing and technique to hold up for examination a lost cause, and turn the dead past into a living present. This Kenneth Roberts has done. He has given life to people who were only names on a page of history, and summed up a case for Americans whom we had forgotten were Americans."

  -INGEIS FLETCHER, San Francisco Chronic P BIN TIN GS

  First published November 22, 1940 Reprinted twice before publication U.S., 1940 twice, 1945;1946;1948;195~j1957 Braille, Library of Congress January, 1941 Australia ( Angus & Robertson ) Januar
y, 1941 Sweden (Bonniers) February, 1941 Switzerland (Humanitas; Zurich) April, 1941 Brazil(CompanhiaEditoraNacional) July, 1941

  England ( Collins ) . . August, 1943

  England (National Library for Blind)November, 1943 Czechoslovakia (Thalia) May, 1946 France (Editions de la Paix)September, 1947

  Spain ( Janes ) ..May, 1949

  Italy (Mondadori) September, 1949 Switzerland ~ Germany jig (Diana; Zurich)November, 1953 Austria

  LYDIA BAILEY

  "Lydia Bailey is a rich, long, never lagging book, triumphantly ranging over half the world and more than half of human hopes and follies. It shows Kenneth Roberts' special power of bringing the past to full and unforgettable life; and in its anger at political selfishness and stupidity it has a harsh, barbed meaning for today. If 1947 produces a better novel, it will be a notable year for American fiction."

  WALTER HAVIGEIURST, Chicago Tribune PRINTINGS

  First published January a, 1947 U.S., 1947 three times; 1956

  Literary Guild........................January, 1947

  Braille ( Library of Congress )June, 1947 Book-of-the-Month Club .July, 1947 Braille (Clovernook; Library of Congress)January, 1948 Argentina (Rueda; Spanish)October, 1947 Brazil (Instituto Progreso; Portuguese)November, 1947

  Norway ( Cappelens ) ................... Deeember, 1947 England (Collins)January, 1948 Australia ( Collins ) January, 1948 Sweden (Bonniers) May, 1948 Switzerland (Diana; Zurich)June, 1948 Denmark ( Asehehoug ) ........................ June, 1948

  Holland (Breughel)....................... August, 1948 Finland (Aura) Oetober, 1948

  France ( Editions de la Paix ) November, 1948 Hungary (Konyvkiado) Deeember, 1949

  Spain ( Janes ) .. July, 1950 Italy (Mondadori) November, 195z

  England ( Collins Fontana ).....................1954 Yugoslavia (Kosmos; Belgrade)May, 1955

  BOON ISLAND

  "Once you've read this powerful story, the barren rocky island will become a part of your inner consciousness. You'll never forget it."

  W. P. BURNETT, Saturday Review of Literature

  "Boon Island is one of those experiences in reading which, like Robinson Crusoe, The Journal of the Plague Year or The Admirable Crichton, can never be forgotten. It is a book you feel in your bones and in your stomach. Kenneth Roberts has added a dimen- sion of his own to the old theme of men against the sea."

  BRADFORD SMITH, New York Herald Tribune

  PRINTINGS

  First published January 2, 1956 Reader's Digest Book Club April, 1956 Book-of-the-Month Club August, 1957 England ( Collins ) September, 1956 Denmark (Aschehoug) September, 1956 France ( Denoel ) November, 1956

  Sweden ( Bonniers ) ....January, 1957 Argentina ( Jackson )February, 1957 Mexico ( Cumbre )........................ February, 1957 Italy ( Mondadori ) ............July, 1957

  TO BE PUBLISHED

  Finland Werner Soderstrom Germany Diana Verlag

  THE BATTLE OF COWPENS

  "The last work of the late Kenneth Roberts is a small volume that looms big in the mind and heart of this nation. For the Battle of Cowpens was really the turning-point in the American Revolution, when Morgan's rough and ready raiders took on Tarleton's veteran troops in a South Carolina meadow and in less than an hour showed the way that Yorktown would go This is a diorama of the battle done with the unfailing skill of Roberts at his best though his last. It is a gem of historical re-enactment."

  Charles A. Wagner, New York Mirror

  "With scrupulous fidelity to fact, Mr. Roberts has illumined one of our 'greatest hours' and given it dimension, significance and literary immortality."

  Alice Dixon Bond, The Boston Herald

  Published April 3, 1958

  OTHER BOOKS BY KENNETH ROBERTS

  TRENDING INTO MAINE (published Little Brown, 1938: Doubleday, 1944)

  'Kenneth Roberts takes you into the kitchen, sits you down by the stove, hands you a doughnut, and stuffs you full of Arundel, Maine traditions, Maine smells, Maine people, the hardships of soldiering, the pleasures of ducks' breasts, the bravery of sea captains' daughters." E. B. WHITE, Saturday Review of Literature

  MARCH TO QUEBEC (published 1938: revised 1940)

  "Bringing together, in March to Quebec, the journals of the Quebec Expedition is an exceedingly valuable contribution to the Americana of the Revolution.. Many have been practically inaccessible.... Only a few libraries in the country have them all, and he who would buy them for himself would be obliged to spend a large sum of money and wait for a year or so before some dealer in rare books could accumulate all of them." Boston Evening Transcript

  MOREAU DE ST. MERY'S AMERICAN JOURNEY ( 17g3-l798) (published 1g47: a translation by Kenneth and Anna Roberts)

  "Here is a cross-section of a nation in the process, to use Moreau's apt phrase, of being born." New York Times

  I WANTED TO WRITE (published 1g49)

  "The record of the reading, the assimilation, the eternal tracking down of details, the enormous correspondence, and the starts and stops of a historical novel in progress. Here is the reason why it took three years to write Oliver Wiswell and five years to complete Lydia Bailey. Here is what you go on doing, once you have learned to write."

  Atlantic Monthly HENRY GROSS AND HIS DOWSING ROD (published 1951)

  "In October, 1949, Henry Gross dowsed a fresh-water dome at Clayhouse on a map of Bermuda, an island on which no potable spring water supposedly existed. The Clayhouse well was drilled and, on April 27, 1950, flowed 44 gallons a minute, a daily 63,360 gallons 'wasting its sweetness on the desert air.' It is the greatest Bermuda story ever told." PACK BRECK, Mid-Ocean (Bermuda) News

  THE SEVENTH SENSE (published 1g53)

  "The Seventh Sense is Roberts' answer to the volleys of his critics the account of the first year's operation of Water Unlimited Inc. whose aims are to insure an adequate supply of water for the world's people, and to obtain for I leery Gross a steady income."

  ALAN N^sn, Rochester Times-Union WATER UNLIMITED (published 1957)

  "The earlier books [Henry Gross and His Dowsing Rod and The Seventh Sense] convinced me of the authenticity of Roberts' reports, and of his theories about the circulation of subterranean water.... I recommend this volume and the two earlier ones to any person not blinded by unshakable prejudgments as offering a major contribution to the world's vital need for water resources."

  EDMHND FUEEER, Chicago Tribune

 

 

 


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