Mch. 24.1
Dear Dan:
I have just dropped this note to my publisher:
“Friend Bliss—Called twice to suggest that there is money in a book about the Big Bonanza if tackled immediately—& likewise to suggest that Wm H Wright (“Dan de Quille”) of the Virginia City “Enterprise” is the a good man to write a stirring & truthful history of it book about it, because he has been City Editor of that paper more than 14 years, & knows it all—& everybody.
“If you like the idea, drop him a line.”
I gave Bliss the idea, also, that the book ought really to be The Story of the Comstock [ Slv ] Silver Lode, with all the strange & romantic fortunes & incidents connected with it,—& let the Bonanza be the grand climax. It is a superb subject. And I added: “The first big compliment I ever received was that I was almost worthy to write in the same column with Dan de Quille.”
1. In case Bliss writes you, Dan—
2.—And you do not own the Bonanza yourself—
3—And you like the [notion] of writing the book—
I will observe that the usual royalty paid by subscription houses is 4 per cent on the retail price of the book. So you should get that—& one or two per cent more, if you can. The book should be 500 or 600 pages 8vo, & sell for $3.50 up to $5 per copy.
I get 5 per cent on Innocents Abroad & it has paid me $25,000 or $30,000. I get 7½ per cent on Roughing It. It has sold something over 100,000 copies, & consequently has paid me about the same aggregate that Innocents has.2
I make give the above items for your guidance.
If you should write a book will you come & stay in my house while you read your proofs, Dan?
Yrs Ever
Mark.
Explanatory Notes | Textual Commentary
Source text(s):
Previous publication:
L6, 425–426.
Provenance:The De Quille Papers were donated in 1953 by Henry L. Day, through the
courtesy of Joel E. Ferris.
Emendations and textual notes:
Slv • [‘v’ partly formed]
notion • no-| ition