Jump to content

Bertha M. Clay

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is the current revision of this page, as edited by Citation bot (talk | contribs) at 09:26, 29 January 2022 (Add: title. Changed bare reference to CS1/2. | Use this bot. Report bugs. | Suggested by BrownHairedGirl | Linked from User:BrownHairedGirl/Articles_with_bare_links | #UCB_webform_linked 1955/2173). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.

(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Cigar box promoting the novels of Bertha Clay.

Bertha M. Clay is a literary pseudonym first used by Charlotte Mary Brame (based on the reversal of the initials).[1]

After Brame's death on 25 November 1884, Brame's daughter began to write under the name.

At the same time the pseudonym became a house name of Street & Smith, where "a dozen male writers" including John Russell Coryell and Frederick Merrill Van Rensselaer Dey wrote under the name.

Other authors known to have used the name are Gilbert Patten, William J. Benners, William Wallace Cook, Frederick Dacre, Charles Garvice, Thomas C. Harbaugh, and Thomas W. Henshaw.[1]

"Between 1876 and 1928, twenty-seven different publishers issued titles under the name Bertha M. Clay. Six novels were translated into other languages. Bertha M. Clays appeared in fourteen different series and eleven different 'libraries'." Books could appear under different titles, some staying in print for 47 years.[2]

Street and Smith's "new Bertha M. clay Library" ran to more than four hundred volumes.[2]

Eighty-eight Clays are known to be extant.[2]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b "Bertha M. Clay".
  2. ^ a b c Miriam Gogol (1995). Theodore Dreiser: Beyond Naturalism. NYU Press. pp. 209–215. ISBN 9780814730744.
[edit]