An edition of The Dream Merchants (1961)

The Dream Merchants

# 78016

41st printing of Pckt Bk July '61 ed.
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Last edited by ED Power
July 4, 2020 | History
An edition of The Dream Merchants (1961)

The Dream Merchants

# 78016

41st printing of Pckt Bk July '61 ed.
  • 0 Ratings
  • 1 Want to read
  • 0 Currently reading
  • 0 Have read

From the author of the #1 New York Times bestseller The Carpetbaggers comes a novel of passion, intrigue, power, and money. With 11 weeks on the New York Times bestseller list, The Dream Merchants provides a fascinating look at the early days of the world's most glamorous industry Hollywood. It was the latest "gold rush" when ambitious, if unscrupulous, men and women flooded California to turn cinematic dreams into reality, regardless of the moral cost. Johnny Edge, a former carnival barker, schemes and plots his way to the top while Peter Kessler turns his back on a staid life of small-town stability to stake his fortune on the movie business. Beautiful starlet Dulcie Warren is willing to use her sexuality and to play dirty to get to the top, if that's what it takes. When the lives of these three ambitious, determined characters collide, they have the potential to build a dream or shatter one. "He is still recognizable as the playboy-novelist who spurning nice reviews and a different kind of reputation happily wrote about money for money, and about sex for sex." The New Yorker

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
517

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Edition Availability
Cover of: The Dream Merchants
The Dream Merchants: # 78016
December 1973, Pocket Book, div. of Simon & Schuster
Paperback in English - 41st printing of Pckt Bk July '61 ed.
Cover of: The Dream Merchants
The Dream Merchants
1970, Pocket Books
Paperback in English
Cover of: The dream merchants
The dream merchants
1961, Pocket Books
in English

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Book Details


Edition Notes

*Manufactured in the USA* /Orig. ed. published by Alfred A. Knopf, Inc., 1949 /Other system no. OCoLC)2876

Published in
New York, USA
Series
Pocket Books 78016 [$1.25]
Copyright Date
1949 by Harold Robbins

Classifications

Library of Congress
PZ3.R53564 Dr PS3568.O224

Contributors

Designer
Lockart
Photographer
Ivan Nagy

The Physical Object

Format
Paperback
Pagination
[8p] 517p., [3p] :
Number of pages
517
Dimensions
7 x 4.13 x 1 inches
Weight
1 pounds

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL28305137M
ISBN 10
0671780166
ISBN 13
9780671780166
LCCN
49006577
OCLC/WorldCat
1968853
Library Thing
828268
Goodreads
1630260

Work Description

“The Dream Merchants” is the first novel in Robbins’ movie trilogy written in 1949 to be followed by “The Carpetbaggers” in 1961 and “The Inheritors” in 1969. It is one of his earliest novels, and it shows. Whilst the book has a good story line, charting the rise of its main protagonist Johnny Edge and the birth of the motion picture industry, the plotting and story telling is clunky and meandering, unlike the tightly written narratives of the novels which were to follow.

However many of the elements which Robbin would later use in his novel structures are present – the switching between first and third person and the books within books which go backwards and forwards in time. “The Carpetbaggers” is arguably Robbins’ best novel, and if you compare it to “The Dream Merchants”, you can see just how much he developed as a writer during the ten years between the two novels. Interestingly, unlike his later novels, there is very little sex and the book is probably more sentimental than his other novels. Robbins clearly made a decision at a point in his career to write novels which were more sexualised.

“The Dream Merchants”, like “A Stone for Danny Fisher”, falls into the category of his earlier writing which is more sentimental, less tightly written and with few sexual references. It is probably the weakest of the trilogy, and Robbins, no doubt drawing heavily on his experience in finance at Universal Pictures, populates the novels with numerous financial dealings and machinations, on an almost too frequent basis to the detriment of the plot.

If you are a fan of Robbins, read “The Dream Merchants”, but accept that you are reading an early book of a novelist who is still learning his craft and yet to write at his best. Perhaps what impresses most, is just how much he developed between this novel and his best.*--Amazon customer review Michael C Davies* (Reviewed in the United States, January 9, 2018 - 3 of 5 stars): Early Harold Robbins kicks off the first book in his movie trilogy.

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Download catalog record: RDF / JSON / OPDS | Wikipedia citation
July 4, 2020 Edited by ED Power corrected author name
July 4, 2020 Edited by ED Power Newly added ed.
July 4, 2020 Edited by ED Power Added new cover
July 4, 2020 Created by ED Power Added new book.