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Oscar Wilde classic returned to Chicago library 78 years overdue - late fines waived

Woman who thought she would be jailed for late return has $6,000 waived


A limited edition Oscar Wilde book has been returned to the Chicago Library 80 years late
A limited edition Oscar Wilde book has been returned to the Chicago Library 80 years late
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A limited edition copy of Oscar Wilde’s “The Picture of Dorian Gray” was returned to the Chicago Public Library as part of a rare amnesty program. The library, which is the third largest in the United States had not noticed the old book had been missing for the past 78 years.

The book had been checked out in 1934 but Harlean Hoffman Vision had decided not to return the book to the library for fear of hefty fine or even jail time. The apologetic vision told the Chicago Tribune her mother, Sylvia Hoffman, had been gifted the Oscar Wilde book by a childhood friend. Vision only discovered the special edition copy printed in London’s Edinburgh Society, in her mother’s attic, after her death, in 1993.

According to the Library’s marketing director Ruth Lednicer “She kept saying, 'You're not going to arrest me?' and we said, 'No, we're so happy you brought it back'."

Brian Bannon, the commissioner of the Library said Vision brought the book back because of their unusual amnesty program.

Reuters calculated that if Vision was charged for late fees her bill would run to $6,000.

Earlier this year a Eucharistic Congress book was returned to library in Ireland after 80 years.
Their fine of over $5,144 was also waived.

The edition of “Dorian Gray” returned to the Library was part of the 14-volume set of writings published by the Edinburgh Society in London in 1911. Only 480 copies were printed.

The book also includes a pencil portrait of Oscar Wilde from 1881, which originally belonged to his friend, Robert Ross.


Nster.com


2 Comments

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I THINK IT IS GREAT THAT THIS BOOK WAS RETURNED.
Wilde's novel, "Dorian Gray" was considered a classic, but the Dublin writer is also known for his homosexual relationship for which he was convicted of "gross indecentcy" in the 1890s. While in Reading Jail he wrote a poem that includes lines like these" "Whether the law be wright or wrong, the prison walls are stout and strong and every hour seems a week long". These may not be Oscar Widle's exact words but they are very similar to what he wrote.
 




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