Dover and Colette
Aug 15
2006
You know what I want? I want a copy of Colette's Gigi that isn't stuck in a collection alongside The Cat, or Julie de Carneilhan and Chance Acquaintances, 'cause let's face it: those stories are depressing as hell. Why hasn't anyone published Gigi by itself since the seventies? Wouldn't it make a lovely Dover Thrift edition? Colette died in 1954, so the copyright should have lapsed by now, right?
This question has bothered me enough to e-mail Dover and ask if they have any plans in that direction. We'll see what they say.
Note: However, in Dover's defense, I see that this week they're releasing a copy of What Katy Did, which is a nice choice. I hate the cover art, but that's a post for another day. (Maybe tomorrow, if I let myself get worked up enough about it.)
This question has bothered me enough to e-mail Dover and ask if they have any plans in that direction. We'll see what they say.
Note: However, in Dover's defense, I see that this week they're releasing a copy of What Katy Did, which is a nice choice. I hate the cover art, but that's a post for another day. (Maybe tomorrow, if I let myself get worked up enough about it.)
Posted by: Julianka
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Comments
The Tattooed Librarian
I believe that copyright extends 70+ years past the author's death. And if she had any living relatives the copyright could have passed them which extends it even further.
Yulianka
Man... imagine being related to Colette! She'd be the ultimate salty grandmother.