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Description:Good in good dust jacket. Good, In good dust jacket. 190 p....Good in good dust jacket. Good, In good dust jacket. 190 p. illus. 23 cm. Previously published under title: Mrs. Beeton and her husband. Previous Owner's Inscription.
Description:This book has hardback covers. Ex-library, With usual stamps and...This book has hardback covers. Ex-library, With usual stamps and markings, In fair condition, suitable as a study copy. No dust jacket., 550grams, ISBN:
Description:Very Good in Good+ jacket. 8vo-over 7¾"-9¾" tall. First printing...Very Good in Good+ jacket. 8vo-over 7¾"-9¾" tall. First printing. Worn at the spine ends and corners. Faint erasure on the front free endpaper. Small spots of foxing to the endpapers. The dust jacket is price-clipped; worn and frayed at the spine ends; a few short tears. Minor soiling to the back panel.
Description:Used-Very Good. VG hardback in VG dustjacket. Dust jacket spine...Used-Very Good. VG hardback in VG dustjacket. Dust jacket spine slightly faded. First published by Collins as 'Mrs. Beeton and her husband'.
Publisher: Ward, Lock & Co. Ltd, London, first edition, 1956
Description:Very Good in used and price-clipped dustwrapper. Cloth, 8vo, 23...Very Good in used and price-clipped dustwrapper. Cloth, 8vo, 23 cm, 190 pp, [8] pp of plates. From the blurb: "Who was the real Mrs. Beeton-and, for that matter, Mr. Beeton? ...Mrs. Isabella Beeton was a handsome and talented young woman in her twenties, who perceived a national need and wrought an amazing transformation in the English domestic scene-though this she did not live to see. Isabella Mayson was born in 1836, at 24 Milk Street, Cheapside, and spent her first seven years amid the bustle of the City. Then came a great change; from 1843 to 1856 she lived at Epsom, where her stepfather was Clerk of the Course. At twenty, she married Samuel Beeton, an enterprising young publisher, already making his way in the world. The Beetons were no humdrum Darby and Joan, as this story tells. Their energy and activity-and especially Isabella's stupendous achievements during the brief eight years of her married life-reflect notably not only on them but also on the prosperous Victorian age of which they were an integral part."