No one seems to have a complete list of the books published by C. L. Webster & Company, though by combining _Mark Twain's Letters to His Publishers_ and _Mark Twain, Business Man_ one ends up with a pretty full list. Even the folks in Berkeley don't have a complete list; and Webster apparently never published any catalogue to help future scholars. The Mark Twain Papers does have quite a few sales books -- prospecti, I suppose -- as do most archival libraries of Americana. By the bye, much has been made of the failure of the biography of Pope Leo XIII in the failure of Webster & Co., but it was the multi-volume set, _The Library of American Literature_, which sank the place. Charley Webster's final acquisition would have made nearly as much money as Grant's memoirs, in time, but the payment plan Webster set up for the sets meant an interim drain on the company's resources. Fred Hall had to borrow to cover the short-fall -- from a bank instead of SLC, who had no cash left after the typesetter -- but Webster's friend Daniel Whitford arranged the loan, probably so that he could call it in later, and thereby avenge the by-then-dead Charley Webster's memory. It's a sordid and ugly tale, but someone's got to tell it. Andy Hoffman