“The Moneychangers,” a novel dealing with[with] the causes of the panic of 1907.
“The Journal of Arthur Stirling,” which is my favorite among my early books.
“Jimmie Higgins,” a novel of the war, published in 1918, and already out of print.
It is my wish to reprint these six books in a uniform edition, both cloth-bound and paper-bound. The price will be 60 cents a copy paper and $1.20 a copy cloth. In order to obtain the necessary capital for this publication I wish to hear from those who will agree to take the six volumes, in sets put up in a box. The price will be $2.50 per set paper-bound and $5.00 per set cloth-bound. You need not send the money; all I want is to know how many of my readers will take these books when they are published. If a sufficient number of guarantees are received the books will be issued in the summer of 1923. The very low price in sets is intended only for advance orders, and will not be repeated.
UPTON SINCLAIR,
Pasadena, California.
Who Owns the Press, and Why?
When you read your daily paper, are you reading facts or propaganda? And whose propaganda?
Who furnishes the raw material for your thoughts about life? Is it honest material?