BOOK
REVIEW
Lovell
Augustus Reeve
(1814-1865):
malacological
author and
publisher
By Richard
E. Petit.
Published
in Zootaxa,
Magnolia Press,
Auckland,
New Zealand.
28 November
2007, pp.
120, ISSN
1175-5326
(print edition).
ISSN 1175-5334
(online edition)
Richard Petit
has once again
provided the
conchological
community
with an important
publication.
His most recent
work is a
biography
of Lovell
Augustus Reeve
that not only
recounts the
life of this
luminary of
the shell
world, but
also, and
perhaps more
importantly,
lists and
dissects Reeve’s
conchological
publications.
In recounting
Reeve’s
life and times,
Richard Petit
goes beyond
the normal
dry discourse
of facts one
would expect.
In the words
of COA member
Harry Lee,
“The
man’s
personal,
family, and
professional
life is explored
in detail
including
lots of previously
unpublished
archival correspondence
and notes.
The grand
master is
not canonized;
foibles, idiosyncrasies,
successes,
and failures
alike are
bared.”
(Conch-L,
subj. “All
About (Re)
eve,”
5 Jan 2005)
Petit also
provides the
reader with
corrected
publication
dates and
a complete
collation
of Reeve’s
works. Much
of this detail
is provided
for the first
time and must
have involved
an almost
unimaginable
depth of research.
Providing
(and proving)
the correct
date for 200-year-old
publications
that were
printed with
the incorrect
date or with
no date is
certainly
no easy task,
but a necessity
with more
than one of
Reeve’s
publications
and provided
here as almost
a matter-of-course.
Publication
details include:
co-authors,
contemporaries,
illustrators,
dates of serial
publications,
newly introduced
taxa (not
given for
Conchologia
Iconica),
reviews, errors,
and (perhaps
most interesting)
little known
facets of
the publication
process for
the major
works by Reeve.
Lovell Augustus
Reeve (1814-1865)
“…was
a major figure
in 19th Century
malacology
in England”
and is well
known today
to almost
every shell
collector
as the author
of many mollusk
species. (He
was also a
publisher
with his own
printing firm.)
Students and
professionals
in malacology
and conchology
will perhaps
best know
him as the
author of
the Conchologia
Iconica, a
mammoth work
begun in 1843
and terminated
in 1878 (13
years after
Reeve’s
death). It
was designed
as a series
of monographs
that would
eventually
illustrate
all mollusk
species. To
this end it
consisted
of 20 volumes
(14 of which
, plus parts
of vols. 15
&16 were
written by
Reeve; the
others were
written by
G.B. Sowerby
II), 2,727
plates (all
but 5 hand-colored),
and it remained
in print until
the mid 20th
century. Reeve
published,
authored,
and co-authored
many other
books and
articles (the
count is over
100), but
it is the
Iconica for
which he is
best known.
Other important
works by Reeve
that are thoroughly
covered by
Petit include:
Elements of
Conchology,
the Conchologia
Systematica,
The Land and
Freshwater
Mollusks Indigenous
to, or Naturalized
in, the British
Isles, and
The Zoology
of the Voyage
of H.M.S.
Samarang.
This monograph
is not intended
for the casual
reader or
someone looking
for help in
identifying
shells. On
the other
hand, anyone
who has a
copy of Reeve’s
Iconica, as
well as conchologists
and malacologists
interested
in taxonomy
or the history
of conchology
would certainly
be well served
by either
purchasing
a printed
copy from
the publisher
or downloading
a copy. The
wonderful
thing about
Zootaxa publications
is that you
can access
many of them
online and
determine
if it is a
volume that
should be
added to your
library. Zootaxa
is online
at: http://www.mapress.com/zootaxa/index.html
Other works
by Petit available
at Zootaxa
include: George
Perry’s
molluscan
taxa and notes
on the editions
of his Conchology
of 1811 and
Catalogue
of the superfamily
Cancellarioidea
Forbes and
Hanley, 1851
(Gastropoda:
Prosobranchia)
(2nd edition).
He is also
a coauthor
(along with
Eugene Coan
and Alan Kabat)
of 2400 years
of Malacology.
--Thomas
E. Eichhorst
Albuquerque,
NM, USA
thomas@nerite.com