The Hills of Lakeland by W. Heaton Cooper and William Heaton Cooper, First Edition with Dust Jacket
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| Book Number | B0009200 |
|---|---|
| Title | The Hills of Lakeland |
| Author(s) | Author: Heaton Cooper, W. Illustrator: William Heaton Cooper William Heaton Cooper (1903 to 1995)—English landscape artist, son of the landscape artist Alfred Heaton Cooper, best known for his Lake District watercolour landscapes in an impressionistic style. He exhibited at the Royal Academy, the RBA and the Royal Institute and was president of the Lake Artists Society |
| Edition and Format | First Edition, [First Printing] —Book edition identified by: Publisher's imprint information states 'COPYRIGHT LONDON 1938' and no later editions or printings stated in the publisher's imprint information. Dust jacket edition identified by: Blurb and priced '17/6 net' on the front flap Hardcover, Octavo (20-25 cm high). Xviii and 126 printed pages in publisher's original light blue cloth with gilt 'The Hills of Lakeland Cooper', 'WARNE' on the spine, blue 'The Hills of Lakeland' and 'W. Heaton Cooper' on the upper board, in dust jacket. Contains sixteen colour plates, thirty six black and white illustrations and two maps by William Heaton Cooper. ISBN 0950473049 [9780950473048] |
| Publisher(s) | Frederick Warne and Co. Limited, London, 1938 Frederick Warne and Co—(Founded in 1865) A British publishing firm famous for children's books, particularly those of Beatrix Potter along with Edward Lear, Kate Greenaway Walter Crane. and Observer Books. Warnes became a limited company in 1918 and were absorbed Into the Penguin Group in 1983. Note on identifying first editions: Warne's method of identifying first editions appears to be somewhat haphazard, especially on high volume titles such as Potters and Observers books. The presence of 'Ltd' in the company name, indicates 1918 or later and from about 1940 until their absorption into the Penguin group they used a system of printers codes to indicate the printer, month and year. Other than that carefully checking of bibliographical information on a book by book basis is required. Just to ensure confusion, they do often state the copyright date e.g. A Tale of Two Bad Mice will state 'Copyright 1904 by Frederick Warne and Co', but this appears a every copy printed until at least 1940!. [McBride page 107] [Zempel and Verkler page 484] . |
| Series | No |
| Content | Content A mix of personal stories and detailed descriptions, illustrated with both colour and black and white plates based on the author's drawings. |
| Download Link | Download Printable Details |


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