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Okay, this is a theory on my part ... and
so far, it hasn't been disproved.
The question was: Why did Avon stamp its
name on some of their books? I believe that it was due to an on-going lawsuit.
Let me quote a paragraph from Piet Schreuders' 1981 book Paperbacks,
U.S.A. :
"Shortly after their first releases hit the
stands, Avon found itself embroiled in what turned out to be a lengthy lawsuit
with Pocket Books. Avon was accused of having stolen Pocket Books' format and
page-edge coloring ("stain"), as well as the term "Pocket-size book." On January
19, 1942, a judge ruled in Avon's favor, stating that it was improbable that any
consumer would be confused by the appearance of an Avon Book and would buy it
thinking that it was a Pocket Book. Pocket Books appealed this decision and, on
November 2, 1942, the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of
New York ruled AGAINST Avon, finding them guilty of unfair competition because
of their deliberate imitation of Pocket Books' style and format. The court
decided that only Pocket Books would be allowed to sell paperbacks with a red
stain and the word "pocket" on the cover, and issued an injunction to that
effect. Avon immediately bought a different color ink for its page edges, made
sure that the word "Avon" appeared clearly on every cover, and kept right on
publishing. And in January of 1944 the Court of Appeals reversed the decision
again: from that point on, it has been officially acceptable for any company to
publish paperbacks using the Pocket Books format."
And so, assuming that my theory about the
stamp is correct, it was only used during the 14 months between November 1942
and January 1944. Due to wartime paper shortages, that would be a relatively
small number of books. But Avon didn't annotate printing dates, and so that's
pretty hard to prove. If I'm right, the stamp would ONLY appear on the first 23
Avon books (they would all be no-number books). AND, it would only appear on
books that referred to themselves as "Pocket Size" books, OR it would lack any
publisher's name at all.
Vintage paperback enthusiasts, please let me
know if you observe the stamp on any Avon book that is outside of these
parameters.
At the left, the scans of the books by
Sinclair Lewis and John Rhode were contributed by Curt Phillips.
The scan of the book edges shows three
different copies of Avon (nn) #1, Elmer Gantry, from my collection. The red edge
is assumed to be a first printing, with globe end papers. The green edged book
lists 16 Avon titles on the back cover. The yellow edged book lists 28 titles on
the inside front cover. None of those three bears the "AVON" stamp. Later, in
the late 40's and into the 50's, Avon changed edge colors often.
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