"Squibob" (a pseudonym for George Horatio Derby) was one of the most talented American humorists of the nineteenth century, and probably the first significant literary talent produced by the new state of Caloifornia. Unfortunately he died young, but he left enough work behind him to keep us laughing for another century and a half. He changed his pen name to "John Phoenix" when a much inferior California writer began publishing under the name "Squibob"; we therefore list the original "Squibob" under both P and S.
Phoenixiana; or, Sketches and Burlesques. By John Phoenix. Eleventh edition. New York: D. Appleton and Company, 1856.
Laurence Sterne (attributed)
The Koran: or, Essays, Sentiments, Characters, and Callimachies, of Tria Juncta in Uno, M. N. A. or Master of No Arts. Vienna: Printed for R. Sammer, Bookseller, 1798. —This supposed posthumous work of Sterne was actually put together by one Richard Griffith, or possibly by his son Richard Griffith, but appears in a collected edition of Sterne’s works from 1798.