The Eyes of the World (novel) explained

Author:Harold Bell Wright
Illustrator:Frank G. Cootes
Country:United States
Language:English
Published:August 1914
Publisher:A.L. Burt Co./The Book Supply Company
Media Type:Print
Pages:464

The Eyes of the World is a 1914 novel by Harold Bell Wright, and the bestselling novel in the United States for that year.

Wright's works by this time were all very popular, though this was his first and only to be ranked as the most popular seller for a given year. Nevertheless, Wright's moralistic tales were critically scorned. Owen Wister’s comments are representative: “I doubt if the present hour furnishes any happier symbols [of the quack novel] than we have in Mr. Wright [and ''The Eyes of the World'']. It gathers into its four hundred and sixty pages all the elements ...of the quack-novel. It is,” Wister says, “stale, distorted, a sham, a puddle of words,” and “a mess of mildewed pap.”

This novel is set in "Fairlands", which is based on Redlands, California, and revolves around several artists and art patrons.[1]

The Eyes of the World was released in August 1914, with an advertising budget of $100,000 to promote it. By the end of September 1914, it was claimed that 750,000 copies had been sold, and in November that 8,000 copies were being bought daily. By Wright's own calculations in 1942, the novel had sold 925,000 total copies, the fifth-most among his output, all of which therefore would rank as "top bracket" best-sellers for their times.[2]

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Notes and References

  1. Forbes, Shari (15 April 2021). Early Redlands was setting for best-selling novel of 1914, Redlands Community News
  2. Mott, Frank Luther. Golden Multitudes The Story Of Best Sellers In The United States, p. 231 (1947)