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Acknowledgments
Introduction
A Note on Victorian Publishing
A Note on Incomes
George Gissing: A Brief Chronology
A Note on the Text
New Grub Street
Appendix A: Gissing on Writing
1. From George Gissing’s Diary
2. From Charles Dickens: A Critical Study (1898)
3. From The Private Papers of Henry Ryecroft (1903)
Appendix B: Grub Street Old and New
1. From Samuel Johnson, A Dictionary of the English Language (1755)
2. From Nathaniel Bailey, A Universal Etymological Dictionary (1782)
3. From Samuel Johnson, An Account of the Life of Mr. Richard Savage (1748)
4. From Isaac D’Israeli, The Calamities of Authors (1812)
5. Thomas Macaulay on Samuel Johnson (1831)
6. From Henri Murger, Scènes de la vie de Bohème (1851)
7. A Description of the Reading Room at the British Museum (1867)
8. From Walter Thornbury, Old and New London (1872)
9. From James Payn, Some Literary Recollections (1884)
10. From H. D. Traill, "Author and Critic," Literature (1897)
11. Differing views of Grub Street and New Grub Street, from The Author (1891)
Appendix C: The Profession of Authorship
1. From Thomas Carlyle, "The Hero as Man of Letters" (1841)
2. From Anthony Trollope, An Autobiography (1883)
3. Walter Besant and the Society of Authors
4. Edmund Gosse Writes a Book Review
5. From Leopold Wagner, How to Publish a Book or Article and How to Produce a Play. Advice to Young Authors (1898)
6. Arnold Bennett on the Writing Profession
Appendix D: Early Reviews
1. Contradictory notices from the Saturday Review (1891)
2. Anonymous, Court Journal (25 April 1891)
3. L.F. Austin, Illustrated London News (2 May 1891)
4. Anonymous, Spectator (30 May 1891)
Selected Bibliography and Recommended Reading
Overview
New Grub Street (1891), generally regarded as Gissing's finest novel, is the story of the daily lives and broken dreams of men and women forced to earn a living by the pen. With vivid realism it tells of a group of novelists, journalists, and scholars caught in the literary and cultural crisis that hit Britain in the closing years of the nineteenth century, as universal education, popular journalism, and mass communication began to leave their mark on the life ofintellectuals.
Projecting a strong sense of the London in which his characters struggle, Gissing also illuminates 'the valley of the shadow of books', where ...