Sure, you can work on that. Vince has given you guidance on the edition
question. As he noted typically we prefer the latest possible edition,
however if there's research to suggest a different edition is better,
then we can go that route too. It just depends. For a book like this
which is the pulp of its era, latest edition probably works fine.
In Gil Blas we modernized the dialog so that there is one speaker per
paragraph, instead of vast paragraphs where multiple people speak. If
this book is like that, we should do the same thing. It's quite a bit of
work.
If you want to take it on, please send a link to your repo once you start.
On 11/10/25 3:16 PM, 'bak' via Standard Ebooks wrote:
> I really enjoyed the sebooks production of Gil Blas last year and so I
> figured I'd look at the picaresque novel written by that novel's English
> translator, Tobias Smollett. I think it's fairly well-known; he also
> later wrote a few more alliteratively titled picaresques in with the
> translations and nonfiction work.
>
> Searching the group, I haven't seen any discussions of this one, and I
> suppose it makes sense as it's not currently in the Wanted List.
>
> Here's the PG production:
https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/4085
> <
https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/4085>
>
> I don't think it's a PGDP production, based on reviewing their Gold
> List:
https://www.pgdp.net/c/list_etexts.php?
> x=g&per_page=50&offset=49750 <
https://www.pgdp.net/c/list_etexts.php?
> x=g&per_page=50&offset=49750>
>
> This novel has a ton of transcripts on hathitrust and
archive.org
> <
http://archive.org>. I have found first/second/third/fourth edition
> scans that look to be from around its initial publication in 1748-1750,
> and scans from editions printed as late as 1920. After looking at The
> Mummy! as a production last year and noting quite a few changes between
> the first and second editions in that novel, I figured it might be wise
> to nail down a definitive version to work on.
>
> According to a review in MUSE, the 4th edition of 1755 is the last one
> Smollett had a hand in revising:
https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/427/
> article/822526/pdf <
https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/427/article/822526/pdf>
>
> Is there somewhere worthwhile to see if I could get a more definitive
> answer on "Where was this produced from?" Or is the next step just to
> compare PG production and a 4th edition scan and see if I can make it out?
>
> Appreciate any help/advice/thoughts. Thanks!
>
>
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