TheBestseller
Observatory

Best Sellers

Hardcover Fiction

Week of November 4, 1956

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Historical Note

The I, Libertine Hoax

In 1956, radio personality Jean Shepherd orchestrated one of the most audacious cons in publishing history. He instructed his late-night listeners to walk into bookshops and libraries and ask for a nonexistent book: I, Libertine by the equally nonexistent "Frederick R. Ewing." Demand reports from booksellers were enough to land it on regional bestseller lists — and eventually get it noticed by the NYT. Publisher Ian Ballantine called Shepherd's bluff and commissioned the book for real, hiring science fiction writer Theodore Sturgeon to write it in a weekend. It was published later that year, making the hoax self-fulfilling.

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TOLBECKEN
Samuel Shellabarger
Cover of TOLBECKEN

TOLBECKEN

by Samuel Shellabarger · Little, Brown and Company

7 wks on list

For five generations the ancestral home of the Tolbecken family had grown, but as their land and fortune dwindles, the Tolbecken family faces the loss of their home as well as a way of life. A well-characterized, well-written novel about life in America at the turn of 19th century.

14
NEW
THE NINTH WAVE
Eugene Burdick
Cover of THE NINTH WAVE

THE NINTH WAVE

by Eugene Burdick · Houghton Mifflin

19 wks on list

The rise and near-success of Mike Freesmith, who tries to gain control of California politics by exploiting the fears and hatreds of voting groups.

Historical bestseller data sourced from the New York Times Book Review, archived by Hawes Publications.