The Bookman (New York)
|
The Bookman was a book review owned by the George H. Doran company of New York, and edited by Arthur Bartlett Maurice (1873-1946) from 1899 to 1916, and John Chipman Farrar (1896 - 1974).
In 1927 it was purchased and then edited by Seward Collins, who continued it until 1933, when it was succeeded by The American Review (1933-1937).
Under the Collins editorship it carried articles in direction conforming to his conservative views, influenced by Irving Babbitt. It promoted a number of points of view, including humanism and distributism. Collins himself was moving towards a far-right and fascist position at the period.