"Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship" by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, translated by Thomas Carlyle, and with an introduction by Franz Schoenberner, features sixteen full-page two-color lithographs and over fifty line illustrations drawn by William Sharp. The lithographs were printed by George C. Miller in New York. The book, designed by Stefan Salter, uses the 14-point size of Intertype Weiss for the text. Composition and printing were done by the Riverside Press in Cambridge, Massachusetts, who also printed both text and line drawings. The paper for this edition is specially made by the Mohawk Paper Mills in Cohoes, New York. The page size is 7 x 10 inches, spanning 632 pages. The binding is a fine quality buckram with an overall gold pattern applied by the silk-screen process. The spine contains a brown leather label with the title stamped in gold.