Thursday, May 7, 2026

The Lost Planet Libraries

As well as their textual content, I often find a delight in the incidentals of second-hand books, including not only ownership signatures, inscriptions and marginalia, but the chance workings of time and wear, the preserved signs of the volume’s history. Here is a book, for example, which has been stamped on its top page edges with the legend ‘PLANET LIBRARIES/STREATHAM HILL’ .

This name is at once alluring. You imagine one library for each of the luminaries in the solar system, perhaps even themed for their tutelary deities. Looking for romance? Troll along to the Venus Library. Want a war book? Off to Mars. In the mood for melancholy? Riffle the shelves at Saturn. After the uncanny? Make your way to the Pluto Institute. I picture Streatham Hill harbouring within its purlieus all these edifices in suitably arcane architecture, embellished with astrological signs, the sort of peculiar temple some Machenesque wanderer might encounter. 


Possibly the residues of Planet Libraries on and in this book are one of the few surviving souvenirs of its existence. Alas, at some point its label has been inexpertly torn out, and the stock transferred, it would appear from rubber stamp imprints, to the more prosaically named Link Libraries Ltd of Epsom and Surbiton in Surrey. Even so, the result of this banishing of the planetary influences has created, on the fixed front endpaper, a remarkable work of abstract art, looking like some burst of exotic blooms. 

The book in question is Goring’s First Case (1936) by Peter Kippax, a decent enough Golden Age detective yarn set in Norwich, and in particular around the Cathedral Close. The character of the city is conveyed well. The author’s name sounds vaguely Wellsian, as if he might indeed be an interplanetary emissary. But in fact Kippax was one of the pen-names of W.F. Morris, later the author of the First World War thriller Bretherton (1938), and similar imaginative yarns featuring questions of identity and allegiance. It is quite a scarce title and I would want it even if it was in impeccble condition, but all these markings greatly add to my pleasure in this particular copy of the book.

The Planet (and Link) Libraries are examples of the many private lending libraries which flourished in Britain particularly in the interwar period. Most settlements of any size had at least one, even moderate-sized villages. Golden Age crime fiction novels, and tales of village life, occasionally feature characters changing their books. There is an aside in a Saki story, though I forget which, where his peevish female protagonist is irritated because her page has brought back from the lending library, not the racy and somewhat scandalous latest novel en mode, but a much worthier and duller book of a similar title.

Despite the advent of public libraries and of mass-produced, and cheaper, paperbacks, some of these private circulating libraries were still in business in the Nineteen Sixties and even into the Seventies. I have another book with a label from the New Era (Fiction) Lbraries, which has its first issue date in 1967 and the last that is clearly identifiable in 1970.

As far as I know, these provincial and suburban libraries have never been fully studied, but they are an interesting aspect of social, cultural and commercial history. There were big chain store libraries too, but probably the majority were these much smaller affairs, run by a sole proprietor, with occasional assistance. Fiction and the Reading Public by Q.D. Leavis (1932) discusses the reading tastes of those who use such libraries, in a rather haughty fashion, but is not directly about the actual purveyors.  As well as providing a rapid flow of literature, particularly novels, they were also a meeting place and gossip corner. It would be an enjoyable if elusive pastime to track down their histories, and locate their premises, or whatever is left of those.

(Mark Valentine)


Monday, May 4, 2026

Finding Foreign Stations

When I found the battered olive green book in the miscellaneous shelves of The Children’s Society charity bookshop in the Victorian model village of Saltaire,  I was at once intrigued. I thought it sounded like a spy-catcher’s guide, some manual for a secret counter-espionage department out of an Eric Ambler or Graham Greene thriller. Finding Foreign Stations it was called, by R.W. Hallows M.A. (Cantab), who sounded like he ought to be a county parson with antiquarian interests, not a chap involved in sinister clandestine operations. Perhaps, though, English parsons often being keen train buffs, it was about a tour of overseas railway stations? The sub-title, Long-Distance Wireless Secrets, gave some of the game away, while still promising a certain element of mystery and adventure.

In fact, the 1932 book was a practical guide for Thirties radio hams seeking out signals from overseas wireless broadcasts. A former owner had annotated the endpapers with notes of places to get equipment. Britannia Works (Dept W) of 25-21 St Pancras Way London N.W.1 could supply Flexible Remote Control outfits. The Ever Ready Company (GB) Ltd Sales Dept (Technical) of London N7 offered a Comprehensive List of their Power Pack Range. Hivac Ltd of Stonefield Way South Ruislip Middlesex were the place to go for DC Subminiature Valves. These could of course all be code names, or their recondite equipment might prove to have murky uses.

I liked the photographs of European wireless stations and their transmitters, nearly all of them modern and art deco in style, pleasingly angular and streamlined in form. At the same time, there was a sort of grey melancholy about the monochrome images. I hope at least some of these structures have been preserved.

R.W. Hallows turned out in the library catalogues to be Ralph Watson Hallows. He was born in Doncaster on 12 June 1885 and died in Suffolk on 16 August 1962. He also wrote books on radar and atomic energy, so was evidently a well-informed scholar at the cutting edge of the most contemporary developments in science and technology.

Much of the book comprises the sort of technical detail that has me scratching my head and murmuring “Hmmm, yes, is that so?”, but on the other hand there are some splendidly weird diagrams and jargon and there is no mistaking the earnest enthusiasm to reach out to overseas transmissions to hear what the rest of the world is saying, in a highly cosmopolitan, League-of-Nations sort of way. ”It has often seemed to me,” says Hallows, “that foreign listening should be warmly encouraged by those responsible for broadcasting in this country, since it provides the owner of a receiving set with a ‘change of station’ which is just as valuable in its way as the change of air that we enjoy when taking a holiday.” Furthermore, “there are times when the home station is silent” (the BBC usually closed for the night around midnight) and “many foreign stations are ready to fill the gap.”

In an illustration at Figure 1, the author gives “An Evening’s Wireless Tour of Europe.” At 7.30, his intrepid listener can tune in to ‘Viola d’amore. Recital’ at Oslo; at 7.45 they may skip across to ‘Viennese Folk Music’ at Frankfurt-am-Main, at 8 o’clock the restless digits find an Orchestral Concert at Langenberg (Germany), but do not pause too long with the Mendelssohn etc before flitting at 8.30 to a Singing Programme at Berlin, at 9 o’clock to an opera in Milan and finally, in this sortie, to ‘Dance Music and Light Music’ at 10.30 from Warsaw, where we may leave them foxtrotting and tangoing away into the rapidly darkening hours.

(Mark Valentine)