1911 novel by Vaughan Kester
The Prodigal Judge |
Author | Vaughan Kester |
---|
Illustrator | M. Leone Bracker |
---|
Language | English |
---|
Publisher | Bobbs-Merrill Company |
---|
Publication date | March 11, 1911[1] |
---|
Publication place | United States |
---|
Media type | Print (hardcover) (448 p.) |
---|
The Prodigal Judge is a novel written by American novelist Vaughan Kester and published in 1911.[2][3][4][5][6]
Kester wrote the novel while living at Gunston Hall in Virginia. A best-seller, it was the second-best selling fiction book in the United States in 1911.[7][8][9] Kester died in July 1911, but not before enjoying the knowledge his book had reached the top of the bestseller lists.[10]
To promote the book, publisher Bobbs-Merrill Company held a "book review contest", with prizes of $250, $150, and $100 for the first through third best reviews published in the first month of the book's release, judged by a panel consisting of Yale University professor William Lyon Phelps, magazine editor John Sanborn Phillips, and writer William Allen White.[1] Third place went to H. L. Mencken.[11]
- ^ a b (5 March 1911). A Book-Review Contest, The New York Times
- ^ (2 April 1911). "The Prodigal Judge": Mr. Vaughn Kester's Much-Heralded Novel Has a Flavor of All Its Own, The New York Times
- ^ (12 March 1911). A Tale of Early Days, Salt Lake Tribune, p. 21, col. 1.
- ^ (13 March 1911). Among the Books (review), Richmond Times-Dispatch, p. 7 col. 4.
- ^ (11 March 1911). Swift Action Marks 'The Prodigal Judge' (review), New York Herald, p. 16, col. 3.
- ^ Rich, Amy C. (April 1911). Books of the Day (review), Twentieth Century Magazine, pp. 94-95
- ^ Hackett, Alice Payne. Seventy Years of Best Sellers 1895-1965, p. 107 (1967) (the lists for 1895-1912 in this volume are derived from the lists published in The Bookman (New York))
- ^ The "Best Sellers of 1911", in The American library annual 1911-12, pp. 121-24 (1912)
- ^ (1 April 1911). Quotes about book, Publishers Weekly (a multi-page ad with quotes from booksellers about the book)
- ^ In Memoriam, The Bookman (New York) (October 1911), pp. 129-30
- ^ (20 August 2011). A Book Review Contest, Indianapolis Star