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One of the most interesting publishers of this type of material was Emanuel Haldeman-Julius, a Socialist writer who hit on the idea of packaging pamphlet-size editions of all sorts of public-domain works on controversial subjects and selling them for a nickel apiece by mail order, or in bundles for even less. They were packaged in blue card-stock covers and were advertised in all the popular magazines of the day as "Little Blue Books." No subject was out of bounds for Little Blue Books, from radical politics to human sexuality, and many people got their first introduction to the Facts Of Life in the pages of a Little Blue Book. The peak of their popularity was the Depression, when Haldeman-Julius sold millions of copies a year by mail order, but you could still buy them into the sixties. They make for interesting reading even today.
Yep and ended up killing himself in his swimming pool due to a six-month Federal sentence he had recently received for income-tax evasion. I love hypocrisy.