The Mysteries of Berlin, from the Papers of a Berlin Criminal Officer.
Translated from the German, by C.B. Burkhardt.
New York, William H. Colyer, 1845
'The German language responded more vigorously to the new genre: Paul Thiel's Die Geheimnisse von Berlin ("The Secrets of Berlin," 1844) was immediately translated in New York as The Mysteries of Berlin (1845) with the business like subtitle From the Papers of a Berlin Criminal Officer. This was issued in ten parts at twelve and a half cents, and at a full 300,000 words was better value than Judson—it is also a strongly developed multi-stranded story with its own confidence. Several survivors head off to New York at the end and the cover blurb asserts the book has been "universally pronounced far superior to M. Sue's Mysteries of Paris."' Stephen Knight, The Mysteries of the Cities: Urban Crime Fiction in the Nineteenth Century, 2012.
First edition in English; 8vo; 10 engraved plates by P.Habelmann, some minor offsetting and very occasional spotting, but overall internally very good; contemporary half sheep, rebacked with later cloth, edge wear; 291pp.; 10 plates.
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