The Franco-American book trade played a vital role in the struggle for mutual understanding during the late eighteenth and
early nineteenth centuries. That trade is exemplified by the work of three colorful individuals: Joseph Nancrede (1761–1841),
who left his native France and became a publisher in Boston; John Hurford Stone (1763–1818), English supporter of the French
Revolution who set up his English Press in Paris, issuing works of American interest; and Nicholas Gouin Dufief (1776–1834),
who fled the French Revolution and set up as bookseller in Philadelphia. Thanks to the efforts of Nancrede and Dufief, the
writings of French thinkers were made available to American readers, and thanks to the presswork of John Hurford Stone, the
writings of Barlow, Paine, Jefferson and others were circulated in France. As publisher, printer, and bookseller, these three
bookpeople reflected the ups and downs of Franco-American relations and became instruments of international understanding.
Madeleine B. Stern, partner in the rare book firm of Leona Rostenberg and Madeleine Stern, has written numerous books on publishing
and bookselling history, includingImprints on History: Book Publishers and American Frontiers. She is the editor ofPublishers for Mass Entertainment in 19th-Century America and is currently completingStudies in the Franco-American Book Trade in the Late 18th and Early 19th Centuries