(Out of print)
June 2005
$39.95
296pp, Paperback
228 x 152 mm
ISBN 1-877257-32-X
This groundbreaking account of New Zealand’s most famous publishing house, A. H. & A. W. Reed, traces its evolution from a Dunedin mail-order supplier of Sunday school supplies into a dynamic business that dominated indigenous book publishing. This is in particular the story of a series of remarkable relationships: between A. H. Reed – one of the best-known New Zealanders of his time, his nephew A. W. (Cliff) Reed, the innovative young ex-servicemen who, in the years following the Second World War, expanded the firm, and the host of memorable writers, photographers and artists whose books they published.