- Indian Railway Library
The Indian Railway Library was an enterprise conducted in
Allahabad from 1888. It was a publishing venture ofA.H. Wheeler & Co , who "had the monopoly on bookstall sales on Indian railway stations" (cite book
last = Lycett
first = Andrew
title = Rudyard Kipling
publisher = Weidenfeld & Nicholson
date = 1999
pages = p. 165
isbn = 0297819070) It was a series of pamphlets intended to catch the interest of railway passengers, and offer cheap 'throwaway' reading material. The series began as a result of an initiative byRudyard Kipling as he sought to assemble funds to return to England from India in 1888: he approached the senior partner of A.H. Wheeler & Co,Emile Moreau , with the proposal to publish his stories in cheap booklet form. The booklets were to have grey-green cards covers, with illustrations by Rudyard's fatherJohn Lockwood Kipling . Six booklets were eventually produced, which sold at the price of one rupee. They were all by Rudyard Kipling, and consisted mainly of reprints of stories that had already appeared in various of the periodicals for which he was already writing in India. They were all published in 1888*No. 1:
Soldiers Three : a collection of stories setting forth certain passages in the lives and adventures of Privates Terence Mulvaney, Stanley Ortheris and John Learoyd done into type and edited by Rudyard Kipling., 97 pp: "Reprinted in chief from the Week’s news"
*No. 2:The Story of the Gadsbys , 100 pp: "Reprinted in chief from the Week’s news"
*No. 3: In Black & White, 108 pp.: "Reprinted in chief from the Week’s news"
*No. 4:Under the Deodars , 106 pp.: "Reprinted in chief from the Week’s news"
*No. 5: The Phantom ’Rickshaw and other tales, 114 pp
*No. 6:Wee Willie Winkie and other child stories, 104 pp.: "Reprinted in chief from the Week’s news"
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