19th C. British Meets the New Top 1000

How is my line of work doing in the new OCLC Top 1000? (Note: I've only counted books published during the nineteenth century, not nineteenth-century authors per se.  Hence, for example, no Hound of the Baskervilles.) 

Some observations:

  • Only six books of poetry made the list, of which two (A Child's Garden of Verses and The Owl and the Pussycat) are children's verse.  E. B. Browning,  Housman, Scott, and Tennyson are represented by one volume each; no sign of the Romantic Big Six (Coleridge is aboard for The Rime, which came out in 1798), while Arnold and R. Browning are similarly absent at the Victorian end. 
  • Darwin contributed two of the five nonfiction works to make the list, with the other three supplied by Carlyle, Mill, and Newman.  Much to my bemusement, the Carlyle in question is The French Revolution.  Again, no Arnold.
  • Not surprisingly, the Victorians dominate the novel selections, with the only Romantic novelists on offer being Austen, Scott (only one novel), and M. Shelley.  Also not surprisingly, Dickens leads the way with sixteen novels, although Austen is represented by the entirety of her adult output.  Some very popular Victorian novelists, like Trollope and Bulwer-Lytton, manage a single novel apiece.