A Publisher and His Friends

audiobook

A Publisher and His Friends

by Samuel Smiles

EN·~15 hours·125 chapters

Chapters

125 total
1

A PUBLISHER AND HIS FRIENDS - MEMOIR AND CORRESPONDENCE OF JOHN MURRAY - WITH AN ACCOUNT OF THE ORIGIN AND PROGRESS OF THE HOUSE, 1768-1843 - BY THE LATE SAMUEL SMILES, LL.D. - CONDENSED AND EDITED BY THOMAS MACKAY - WITH PORTRAITS

0:15
2

PREFACE

3:53:18
3

MEMOIRS OF JOHN MURRAY - CHAPTER I - JOHN MACMURRAY OR MURRAY

2:24
4

DEAR WILL,

9:33
5

DEAR JACK,

10:42
6

CHAPTER II - JOHN MURRAY (II.)—BEGINNING OF HIS PUBLISHING CAREER—ISAAC D'ISRAELI, ETC.

3:52
7

MR. HIGHLEY,

0:58
8

JOHN MURRAY.

5:48
9

MY DEAR SIR,

0:18
10

I. D'I.

5:52

Description

These memoirs trace the remarkable rise of a man who turned a modest shop on Fleet Street into one of England's most influential publishing houses. Born into a Scottish family with a colorful military past, John Murray left a brief career in the Royal Marines to pursue bookselling after marrying Nancy Wemyss. His early letters reveal a practical ambition and the confidence that drove him to acquire William Sandby's shop in 1768, setting the stage for a lifelong partnership with the literary world.

The volume offers vivid correspondence with poets, novelists, and statesmen who would shape the nineteenth‑century cultural scene, from Byron to Scott and Disraeli. Readers hear Murray’s candid observations on the business of printing, the challenges of a growing market, and the personal friendships that underpinned his success. The memoir provides a rare, firsthand glimpse into the networks and negotiations that defined a pivotal era in British letters.

Details

Full title

A Publisher and His Friends Memoir and Correspondence of John Murray; with an Account of the Origin and Progress of the House, 1768-1843

Language

en

Duration

~15 hours (869K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2004-01-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Samuel Smiles

Samuel Smiles

1812–1904

Best known for Self-Help, he helped shape the Victorian idea that character, effort, and persistence could change a life. His books mixed moral advice with lively stories of inventors, engineers, and determined ordinary people.

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