The authors note in their Foreword that "the idea of choosing one hundred
books from all the superlative books of the twentieth century is
daunting. Can one choose only one hundred
books for their beauty from so many thousands?... The idea of one book a
year, on average,
seems almost presumptuous. Yet one must being somewhere, and celebrate the
chosen,
rather than lament the many left unsung... This survey includes only books
printed from the
roman alphabet in Europe and America... We have, however, considered the
book as a
whole--with all elements from typography and paper through presswork and
binding taken
into account."--p. VII
The following excerpt is taken from the exhibit catalogue by Martin Hutner
and Jerry Kelly: A Century for the Century--Finely Printed Books from
1900 to 1999 (NY: The Grolier Club, 1999), in which Hutner writes on
p. XII:
"Thomas Bird Mosher (1852-1923) began his career as publisher and printer
in Portland, Maine, in 1891, the same year as the founding of the
Kelmscott Press. Mosher had had several careers before settling down
to publishing at the age of thirty-nine. Unlike the works of the
Kelmscott Press, Mosher's books were mostly small, although also
well-designed and well printed, and available to a larger public.
Occasionally, he would produce deluxe volumes in limited editions such as
the Calvert in 1913 (no. 8). In a career that lasted until 1923, Mosher
produced over four hundred books of consistent quality."
Note:
The bibliography at the end of the exhibition catalogue indicates
that the works chosen to reference the books in the Grolier exhibit were
"selected for being the most complete or most recent reference for the
item[s] included in the exhibition." For the Mosher book the authors
missed on both counts with their selection of the Hatch Check
List... to reference Calvert's Ten Spiritual Designs. Hatch was
published in 1966 whereas the
newest and most complete Mosher bibliography
was co-published thirty-two years later in 1998 by Oak Knoll Press and
The British Library.
At the exhibit itself, Mosher's book -- opened to pp. [2 & 3] showing an
Eragny Press design -- was located in the middle of the first showcase, a
position of honor considering its surrounding company. Positioned below it
was the Doves Press edition of The English Bible and the Bruce
Rogers designed Geofroy Tory. To the left appeared the Doves Press
Men & Women by Robert Browning, and to the right was the Eragny
Press edition of Songs by Ben Jonson. The exhibit placard for
Mosher's book read:
- Thomas Bird Mosher; Portland, Maine, 1913
Edward Calvert, Ten Spiritual Designs.
In many way, Thomas Bird Mosher (1852-1923) stands alone in the history of
American printing. In Joseph Blumenthal's estimation, however, "He is the
first American to have established and sustained a program, over
thirty-two years [1891-1923], of splendid literary output in consistently
felicitous typographic form."
Mosher's books were very small in size, and printed in very limited
editions. Edward Calvert's Designs, from copper, wood and stone
originals, is an example of Mosher's work at its best. There is something
very American about almost all of Mosher's output, in its four-square
simplicity and directness.
It is true that, in the years before copyright, publishers like
Mosher for the most part reproduced work without making authorial
compensation -- a practice which earned him the sobriquet of the
Passionate Pirate. Yet Mosher also performed a literary as well as
aesthetic service to book lovers in the first part of this century.