• Lackington, Hughes, Harding, Mavor, & Jones

    Percy Bysshe Shelley, feigning the author's being abroad, handled the negotiations
    for a contract to publish Frankenstein, thus preserving Mary Shelley's anonymity.
    That he first sought out John Murray, Byron's publisher, may indicate that Byron himself
    suggested such an avenue to the Shelleys. Whatever the case, Murray declined the manuscript,
    upon whose refusal Shelley reverted to his own publisher Charles Ollier. When Ollier,
    too, declined to accept the book, the Shelleys were in something of a quandary. They
    resolved it by turning to a publishing house—Lackington's—that had a large inventory
    and specialized somewhat in sensational materials. In the two-page advertisement sheet
    accompanying the novel when it was published in 1818 are representative works that
    the Lackington firm apparently thought might interest the reader of the novel: these
    include Francis Barrett, The Magus; or Celestial Intelligences; a complete System
    of Occult Philosophy, being a Summary of all the best Writers on the subjects of Magic,
    Alchymy, Magnetism, the Cabala &c. (1801); Francis Barrett, Lives of the Alchemystical
    Philosophers with a Critical Catalogue of Books on Occult Chemistry (1815); Thomas
    Heywood, The Life, Prophecies, and Predictions of Merlin Interpreted (1813); Joseph
    Taylor, Apparitions; or, the Mystery of Ghosts, Hobgoblins, and Haunted House (1814);
    John Toland, A Critical History of the Celtic Religion and Learning; containing an
    account of the Druids (1815); and—though officially published by another house, White,
    Cochrane, & Co.—Sarah Utterson, Tales of the Dead (1813), the English translation
    of Jean Baptiste Benôit Eyriès's Fantasmagoriana, the volume of ghost stories that
    served as pretext for the ghost-story contest from which Frankenstein eventually came
    into being (see 1831:I:Intro:6 and note).