Page:Marie Corelli - the writer and the woman (IA mariecorelliwrit00coat).pdf/64

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well or for ill—and Miss Corelli's career is a striking proof of the soundness of this statement. The public recognized the power of the new writer, and the "Romance" sold by thousands; the press went out of its way to condemn the works that followed it, and thereby advertised them. "If you can't praise me, slate me," said an author once to an editor; and he spoke sagely. Luke-warm reviews are the worst enemies a writer can have; favorable reviews impress a certain number of book-buyers, book-sellers, and librarians; but bitingly hostile criticisms—tinged, if possible, with personal spite—are frequently quite as helpful as columns of eulogy.

In the case of "A Romance of Two Worlds," the press did not help one way or the other, however. The public discovered the book for themselves, and letters concerning its theories began to pour in from strangers in all parts of the United Kingdom. At the end of its first twelve months' run, Mr. Bentley brought it out in one volume in his "Favorite" series. Then it started off round the world at full gallop.

It was, as Miss Corelli has already related in a very frank magazine article, a most undoubted success from the moment Bentleys laid it on their counter. It was "pirated" in America; chosen out and liberally paid for by Baron Tauchnitz for the