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Benjamin Franklin: Writer And Printer

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Benjamin Franklin, Writer and Printer begins by focusing on Franklin's career as a printer, from his apprenticeship to his retirement in 1748, by which time he had created the largest printing business in colonial America. His success as a printer was based not only on his newspaper and the popular almanacs he published, but also on his own writings, first for his brother's press in Boston and then for his own press in Philadelphia. Most of his early writing took the form of compiling and editing, as in the case of the proverbs that he collected from a variety of sources for his Poor Richard's Almanack and reused for The Way to Wealth, his most frequently reprinted work. Much of what we know about Franklin as a writer and printer comes from his autobiography, the focus of the last part of this book. Left unfinished at his death in 1790, the autobiography was known to the world for nearly eighty years only in translations, fragments, paraphrases, and, in English, from retranslations of a 1791 French translation. The posthumous publishing histories of the autobiography and of The Way to Wealth illuminate the transformation of Benjamin Franklin from a youthful printer into the most famous American writer of the eighteenth century. Co-Published with the Library Company of Philadelphia and The British Library.

192 pages, Hardcover

Published January 1, 2006

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James N. Green

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191 reviews2 followers
December 7, 2020
A book that I've seen many times and thought, "eh maybe", this book has exceeded my expectations. It documents Ben Franklin's life as a printer and the necessary attachment of his role as a writer. This book is essential for Franklin nerds, even as it is more a about book and printing history than anything else. This is not the biography you want if you are just want to learn about his life in general, although Stallybrass and Green make some important observations. All in all, a good, accessible scholarly book, with lots of gorgeous pictures and useful images of old books.
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