Home > BOOKS FOR SALE > ALL AVAILABLE BOOKS >

Wild Animal Stories – First Edition Panorama Pop-Up Book by Nister & Dutton (1897)

Wild Animal Stories first edition pop-up book by Ernest Nister and E.P. Dutton, 1897, with 6 panoramic scenes including lions, bears, elephants, and wolves, all pop-ups complete and functional
Nister - Wild Animal Stories - Fine working condition
 
Alternative Views:


Wild Animal Stories – A Panorama Picture Book (Pop-Up Book)

Ernest Nister, London; E. P. Dutton & Co., New York, [n.d., ca. 1898]. Printed in Bavaria.

Text by George Manville Fenn and Arthur J. Daniels; Introduction by George Manville Fenn. Illustrated by E. B. S. Montefiore.

Oblong 4to (10¾ x 14 inches; 273 x 360 mm). Unpaginated. Cloth-backed color pictorial boards. Green backstrip. Floral endpapers. First edition.

Movable Mechanism: Six large, double-page chromolithographed pop-up scenes, each composed of three intricately die-cut tiers that fold out automatically via tab-action when the facing text page is turned. Each scene features animals in dramatic natural habitats with highly detailed foregrounds, midgrounds, and backgrounds designed to create a three-dimensional stage-like panorama.

Contents:

  1. The Lion: A regal lion lounges atop a rocky outcrop, surveying the plains as antelopes pass below. Text page includes three vignette engravings of lions.

  2. The Bears: Two brown bears play in a forest clearing among trees and grasses. Accompanied by two black-and-white sketches in the text margins.

  3. The Elephants: A majestic elephant and its calf dominate the foreground, with a distant herd and spear-wielding hunters hidden in the grass. Vignette illustrations accompany the text page.

  4. The Bison: A powerful bison is surrounded by a pack of wolves. The text page includes scenes of horses, cabins, and additional wildlife.

  5. The Tigers: Fierce tigers prowl through dense jungle foliage, their orange and black stripes boldly rendered. Scene includes tropical flora and prey animals in retreat.

  6. The Wolves: A snarling pack of wolves in winter terrain, framed by barren trees and snow-covered ground. The atmosphere is tense and kinetic.

Condition: All six pop-ups are in excellent condition. A small section of the decorative border was expertly replaced in one scene—see photo. All original pull-tabs are present and functional, reinforced internally to ensure smooth action. Boards show age wear to corners and surfaces consistent with handling. Binding is sound; all pages remain firmly attached. No writing. No repairs aside from the reinforced tabs.

Collector’s Corner:

Wild Animal Stories represents one of Ernest Nister’s most ambitious panorama books. As Peter Haining notes in Movable Books (London: New English Library, 1979), it was “a panorama book of a kind which had been seen before but this one required no work on the reader's part, for the three layers of the picture were linked to the facing page by a tab which automatically pulled them into perspective as the child opened the book.” The stories were authored by George Manville Fenn (1831–1909), one of the most prolific and respected authors of boys’ literature in the late Victorian era.

Illustrated by E. B. S. Montefiore, this edition includes numerous vignette engravings integrated into the text alongside six magnificent chromolithographed scenes, each constructed with engineering precision to showcase animals such as lions, bears, elephants, and wolves in their natural habitats.

This first edition, printed in Bavaria and jointly issued by Nister and Dutton, remains a testament to late 19th-century paper engineering. Large-format and in remarkable condition, it is an especially desirable example of the peak of Nister’s panoramic artistry.

Referenced in:

  1. Haining, Peter. Movable Books: An Illustrated History. London: New English Library, 1979.

  2. British Library General Catalogue, NSTC, entry dated 1897.

  3. Peeps into Nisterland (Private Publication, 1990s) — listing and description.

  4. OCLC WorldCat — first edition entries attributed to Ernest Nister and E. P. Dutton, ca. 1897–1898.

    E. P. Dutton:

    Edward Payson Dutton (1831–1923) was a pioneering American bookseller and publisher who founded E. P. Dutton & Co. in Boston in 1852. Initially a retail bookselling business, Dutton opened a branch office in New York City in 1864 and, by 1869, had relocated his headquarters there and formally entered the publishing industry. Known for his discerning taste and commitment to quality, Dutton quickly became a leading importer and distributor of fine European books, especially for children.

    Beginning in 1888, Dutton established a lasting partnership with the innovative German-British printer and publisher Ernest Nister, whose richly chromolithographed movable and transformation books were printed in Bavaria. Through this collaboration, Dutton became the exclusive American distributor of many of Nister’s works, making some of the most sophisticated mechanical and illustrated children’s books of the Victorian era widely available to American audiences.

    By the early twentieth century, E. P. Dutton had expanded its reach, becoming the exclusive U.S. distributor of the Everyman’s Library series from J. M. Dent and publishing both children’s and adult titles by leading authors of the day. After Dutton’s death in 1923, the firm was reorganized under longtime employee John Macrae, who had joined the company as an office boy decades earlier. In 1928, the publishing and retail divisions were split into separate entities, with Macrae continuing to operate the publishing arm as E. P. Dutton and Company, Inc.

    The firm launched its Unicorn imprint for children’s books, which continued through the 1990s, and became one of the oldest continuously operating children’s publishers in the United States. Over the following decades, Dutton published works by an impressive roster of literary voices including John Irving, Joyce Carol Oates, Gavin Maxwell, and Françoise Sagan.

    In 1975, E. P. Dutton was acquired by the Dutch publisher Elsevier, and the following year the company expanded by acquiring Hawthorn Books. After several ownership changes, including a sale to Dyson-Kissner-Moran in 1981 and an acquisition by New American Library in 1985, Dutton was ultimately folded into Penguin Group in 1986. It was then split into two imprints—Dutton and Dutton Children’s Books—both of which continue today under Penguin Random House.


    Ernest Nister (1841–1906): Innovator of Movable Books

    Ernest Nister was a pioneering German-born publisher and printer whose influence on late 19th-century children’s books—particularly movable and transformation books—was both artistic and technical. Born in Darmstadt, Nister established a major chromolithographic printing operation in Nuremberg, where he developed new standards for illustrated and mechanical books for children.

    In 1888, Nister opened a London branch at 22 St. Bride Street, allowing him to distribute his Bavarian-printed works throughout Britain and the United States. His English-language books were known for their high production values, narrative whimsy, and mechanical ingenuity—qualities that helped transform children’s publishing during the Victorian era. Nister is often credited as one of the first to engineer true automatic pop-ups that sprang into shape as the page was opened, rather than requiring manual activation.

    He specialized in chromolithographed illustrations, many of them delicately die-cut and tiered in layers. He frequently collaborated with artists like E. Stuart Hardy and writers like L. L. Weedon. His books included dissolving images, revolving mechanisms, transformation scenes, and intricate pull-down panoramas. Rather than relying solely on fantasy, many of his titles embraced moral, educational, or domestic themes meant to appeal to middle-class Victorian sensibilities.

    Nister’s dual operations in Nuremberg and London allowed him to merge German printing excellence with English literary traditions. Many of his works were also distributed in America by E. P. Dutton, giving his books a transatlantic reach. Though he died in 1906, Nister’s publishing house continued under his name until roughly 1916.


    References

    Haining, Peter. Movable Books: An Illustrated History. London: New English Library, 1979.
     — Offers a historical overview of movable and pop-up books, including Ernest Nister’s role in popularizing mechanical children's books in the late 19th century.

    Peeps into Nisterland: A Guide to the Children's Books of Ernest Nister. Private publication, 1990s.
     — A collector’s guide documenting titles published by Ernest Nister, including The Land of Long Ago, and dating it to 1898. Exact bibliographic details may vary depending on the edition.

    Syracuse University Libraries. “E. P. Dutton Papers.” Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University. Accessed July 10, 2025. https://library.syracuse.edu/digital/guides/e/ep_dutton.htm
     — Archival source detailing the history of E. P. Dutton as a publishing house and its distribution relationship with Ernest Nister.

    University of Virginia. “Pop Goes the Page: Ernest Nister.” Pop Goes the Page Exhibit. University of Virginia Special Collections, 2015. Accessed July 10, 2025. https://explore.lib.virginia.edu/exhibits/show/popgoesthepage/walkthrough/nister
     — Offers scholarly commentary on Nister’s use of narrative framing, design elements, and historical printing practices.

    Royal Academy of Arts. “Ernest Nister (1841–1906).” Accessed July 10, 2025. https://www.royalacademy.org.uk/art-artists/name/ernest-nister
     — Brief biography of Nister with focus on his publishing career and significance in 19th-century book arts.

    Wikipedia contributors. “E. P. Dutton.” Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Last modified July 3, 2025. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E._P._Dutton
     — General overview of E. P. Dutton’s publishing history, including its acquisitions, imprints, and legacy in children’s literature.

Questions? Email us at [email protected]

$480.00


Free Shipping
Product Code: N-6

Features