• BLOG
  • ON WRITING
  • INDEX
  • TUMBLR
  • BOOKS
  • DEFENDING JACOB (ON SALE NOW)
  • THE STRANGLER
  • MISSION FLATS
  • ABOUT
  • CONTACT
  • MAILING LIST
  • PRESS KIT

Apr. 28, 2010

Not-So-Random House

"Candide" colophon by Rockwell Kent, #83 of a limited edition of 95 hand-painted in Kent's studio

What is that little house in Random House’s logo? The New York Public Library explains (via):

In 1928, Random House commissioned the great American artist Rockwell Kent (1882–1971) to illustrate Voltaire’s Candide as the first book under its imprint. The volume’s colophon page contains the image of a house — intended to be where Candide and his companions lived and where they cultivated the final garden of the tale — which became the company’s logo, still in use today. Kent’s Candide is one of the landmarks of the American illustrated book, with specially made paper from France, a new typeface from Germany, and multiple illustrations, all exquisitely integrated. Random House issued a limited edition of 1,470 copies and another 95, these hand-colored in the artist’s studio.

Now, about that Bantam rooster…

Image: Kent’s colophon page for the 1928 Candide, number 83 of a limited edition of 95 copies hand-colored in Kent’s studio. Approximate value of the rare hand-colored books: $25,000. Image source: Felt & Wire.

Read more on Candide, including the Rockwell Kent edition, at the NYPL’s site for the recently closed exhibit on the book. About Voltaire himself, look here.

+ Share this post     Categories: Publishing    Tags: Candide · logo · Random House · Rockwell Kent · Voltaire

« Previous Post
Next Post »
  • Facebook

  • Subscribe

      Close
  • Random Posts

    • Best Boston Movie Ever: “The Friends of Eddie Coyle”
    • “Next”
    • Inside “The Strangler”: Angiulo, Barboza and fictionalizing the Mob
    • Creating Writers: Do MFA Programs Produce Dull Writers?
    • “Little Dorrit”: Dickens’ Teeming World
    • Why authors should (and shouldn’t) blog
    • “Free” and the Future of Publishing
    • A Lesson from Dickens
    • The View from Below: A midlist author watches the ebook wars
    • The Way We Write Now: Novelists and Their Blogs
  • Blog Roulette

    • Show me a random post
  • Recommended Reading

    • A Perfect Spy by John le Carré
      A Perfect Spy
      John le Carré
      My favorite le Carré novel.…
      The Orphan Master's Son by Adam Johnson
      The Orphan Master's Son
      Adam Johnson
      The best thing I've read in a long, long time. North Korea is a complete mystery to most Americans,…
  • Books & Arts

    • About Last Night
    • Advice to Writers
    • Arts & Letters Daily
    • Book Bench
    • Book Cover Archive
    • Book Forum
    • Commonplace Blog
    • Critical Mass
    • George Orwell Web Source
    • Guardian Books Blog
    • Moby Lives
    • New York Times
    • NYRblog
    • Second Pass
    • Steamboats Are Ruining Everything
    • The Book
  • Classics

    • Gould: "Nonmoral Nature"
    • James: "The Art of Fiction"
    • Orwell: "A Hanging"
    • Orwell: "Politics and the English Language"
    • Orwell: "Shooting an Elephant"
  • Design

    • Aisle One
    • Coudal
    • Creative Journal
    • Frank Chimero
    • Quipsologies
    • Site Inspire
    • Subtraction
    • Swiss Miss
    • Thinking for a Living
    • Visuelle
  • Diversions

    • Big Think
    • Brain Pickings
    • Exit Lines
    • Iconic Photos
    • Letters of Note
    • Shorpy
    • The Browser
  • Other

    • Anil Dash
    • Crooked Timber
    • Frontal Cortex
    • James Fallows
    • Rough Type
Powered by WordPress | Sitemap

Creative Commons License