100 résultats
1935WRCLIT75715London: Victor Gollancz 1935. Black cloth. Spine slightly cocked front free endsheet neatly excised usual modest tanning otherwise a good sound copy. First UK edition of the author's second book preceded by the 1934 US edition. This edition consisted of 2500 copies plus a second printing of 500 copies but is somewhat less common than the US edition 2000 copies. Orwell modified the text for this edition and added an Author's Note in an effort to avoid the possibilities of any libel action a fear on the part of prospective British publishers that had led to its first appearing in the US. FENWICK A2.c. Victor Gollancz hardcover books
1956WRCLIT46354London: Associated British Picture Corporation Ltd. 1956. 1114 leaves foolscap. Mimeographed typescript printed on rectos only punched in left margin and string-tied into plain wrappers with typed label. Wrappers a bit sunned and used at overlap edges with a bit of loss at toe of spine and ragged tear at one punch-hole internally about fine. A post-production release script for the 1956 British film adaptation of Orwell's novel recording the dialogue timing and cinematic details of the final version of the film. Directed by Michael Anderson and starring Edmond O'Brien Jan Sterling Michael Redgrave Donald Pleasance et al this b&w adaptation captured the dingy bleakness of Orwell's vision of the future and served its origin well. The film is itself rather elusive these days and any scripts and publicity paper associated with it even more so. This is denoted "Copy No. 38" of the release script. Associated British Picture Corporation Ltd. unknown books
1933140941404New York: Harper & Brothers 1933. First Edition. Very Good. First American edition first printing. Publisher's mauve cloth with black and purple spine decorations; lacking the dust jacket. Very Good with boards lightly splayed. Cloth toned worn and soiled. Pages toned. Orwell's first published novel a semi-autobiographical work which much as the title promises details hunger and poverty in two major European capitals. Harper & Brothers unknown books
1946140940089New York: Harcourt Brace and Company 1946. Advance Reading Copy. Hardcover. Near Fine. Advance reading copy of the first American edition. Review copy with publisher's ink stamp to front cover. Bound in publisher's original wraps printed in black. Toning and light staining to wraps erased pencil notation to rear cover. A nice copy of this uncommon format preceding the publication of the first American edition. Harcourt, Brace and Company hardcover books
1947019563Munich: Prometheus; Prometej 1947. Book. Very Good condition. Paperback. First thus edition. Octavo 8vo. 91 pages. Original paperback binding with minimal shelfwear including minor scuffing to the closed page edges; protected in custom-fitted archival mylar. The first page has small tears starting near the staples. Translated by Igor Shevchenko under the pseudonym John Chernyatynskyy. Includes a black and white photographic portrait of George Orwell. In March 1947 Shevchenko printed around 5000 copies to distribute among Ukrainian refugees in the displaced persons camps of postwar Germany and Austria. But only an estimated 2000 books distributed. U.S. Soldiers suspecting the books of being anti-Stalin propaganda confiscated about 3000 and handed them over to Soviet authorities who had them destroyed. The text is clean and unmarked. First edition in Ukrainian. Prometheus; Prometej Paperback books
19341511006Harper and Brothers 1934. 1st Edition. Hardcover. Very Good. A very good first US edition so stated on the copyright page. Short teat on front free endpaper. Housed in a custom-made collector's slipcase. Harper and Brothers hardcover books
1933140940543New York: Harper & Brothers 1933. First American Edition. Very Good. First American edition first printing. Publisher's mauve cloth with black and purple spine decorations; lacking the dust jacket. Very Good with spine faded and lightly worn at ends covers lightly scuffed. Pages toned. A lovely copy of Orwell's first published novel a semi-autobiographical work which much as the title promises details hunger and poverty in two major European capitals. Harper & Brothers unknown books
1946315622New York: Harcourt Brace and Company 1946. First American edition. 118 pp. 1 vols. 4to. Full black gilt morocco by Zaehnsdorf for Asprey a.e.g. Fine. First American edition. 118 pp. 1 vols. 4to. Harcourt, Brace and Company unknown books
1949140940172New York: Harcourt Brace and Company 1949. First Edition. Fine/Near Fine. First American edition. iv 314 pp. Bound in publisher's tan cloth with black and crimson stamping. Fine in Near Fine unclipped $3.00 dust jacket with darkened and lightly stained spine panel lightly worn along edges but generally bright and clean. Faint musty odor. An attractive copy of the first American appearance of Orwell's classic of dystopian literature. Harcourt, Brace and Company unknown books
1946140941035New York: Harcourt Brace and Company 1946. First Edition. Near Fine/Very Good. First American edition first printing. Review copy with letter from the publisher folded in half and tipped in at front free endpaper protruding slightly over the textblock. Bound in publisher's original black cloth with spine lettered in gilt. Near Fine with light wear to cloth. In a Very Good unclipped dust jacket correctly lacking "Printed in the USA" on the rear flap; with light rubbing and edge wear light crease to front panel and front flap. Uncommon with publisher's letter tipped in. Harcourt, Brace and Company unknown books
1947BBO49<p><b>ORWELL</b> George:<br /></p><p><b><i>Kolgosp Tvarin</i></b> <i>Animal Farm</i>.</p><p>Translated into Ukranian by Ivan Chernyatinskii Ihor Shevchenko.</p><p>Munich: Vidavnitstvi Prometei 1947.</p><p>8vo. i901 pp.; printed pictorial wrappers.</p><p>Limited to 2000 copies for distribution to Ukranian refugees. With a newly contributed preface by Orwell addressing the audience of this publication and emphasizing his complicated feelings toward the Soviet regime. QUITE RARE.</p><p><br /></p> Vidavnitstvi Prometei paperback books
198420790EWeston MA: M & S Press 1984. Privately Printed Limited and Numbered Edition. Copy number 9 of fifty-five copies fully bound by Gray Parrot with a special design in royal blue and black Niger goat and housed in a one-quarter leather traycase. The printing and binding were completed in the fall of 1984. Folio10 inches by 14 inches i-xxvi 381 pages comprising a facsimile of the original Nineteen Eighty-Four manuscript on each recto and the edited typescript draft on the facing verso. With gilt-stamping to the front board reading†War is Peace / Freedom is Slavery / Ignorance is Strengthâ€. Beautiful as new condition. One of the only George Orwell manuscripts extant published here in full facsimile with transcript notes by poet publisher and Orwell historian Peter Davison. As Davison notes in his introduction: “This facsimile reproduces all that is known to have survived of the preliminary drafts of Nineteen Eighty-Four that is about 44% of the published text of the novel.†Furthermore he writes: “Despite all the rewriting revealed by this facsimile it is remarkable how closely what has survived adheres to the main sweep of the narrative of Nineteen Eighty-Four. All the principle features except the Appendix on Newspeak are present suggesting that the story had been pretty fully formed in Orwell’s mind by the time he sat down to write it out. What can now be seen for the first time is in Sonia Orwell’s words her husband’s ‘actual working methods’. These are a compelling demonstration of the way Orwell fashioned and refashioned his story perfecting language and thought in order to create one of the most remarkable novels of the twentieth century.†The preface by bookseller rare book collector and ABAA member Daniel Siegel details not only how the manuscript came to be his but offers insight into the art and craft of literary serendipity and is a delight to read. He tells the story of his relationship with the Orwell manuscript beginning with how in late spring of 1969 Harold Graves of Scribner’s rare book department in New York introduced him to the piece about which Siegel notes “The leaves Harold showed me were nondescript handwritten in ink or typed with a great deal of overwriting on the typed pages. Much seemed illegible.†Siegel was obviously intrigued by the manuscript but walked away without it. However as kismet would have it on the following day he telephoned Graves with the news that“It’s a great manuscript and I don’t know why I shouldn’t have it.†And so he did. Eventually Siegel donated the Nineteen Eighty-Four manuscript to Brown University. M & S Press hardcover books
193328480New York: Harper & Brothers. 1933. First US Edition; First Printing. Hardcover. Very good copy with just a trace of wear at spine ends in price clipped dust jacket with ¼" chipping at head of spine not affecting lettering and at bottom of spine obscuring "Harper" and with small chip at head of front panel. The dust jacket was once backed with tape removed by a conservator leaving only slight toning in a few areas and mild Japanese paper strengthening at folds. 1st US edition of the author's first book one of the great hobo novels of our time. ; 8vo 8" - 9" tall; 292 pp . Harper & Brothers hardcover books
140940731First Edition. Very Good. Early unattributed and bibliographically unknown Czech samizdat edition of George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty Four. Carbon copy sheets printed on rectos only bound in cloth covered boards with white plastic brads. 2 2-205 p. 15 mis-paginated: 16. Very Good with light soiling to covers. First and last several pages are worn and damaged with no loss to text. Pages sporadically stained throughout. <br /> <br /> A relic of dissident activity from the Communist-controlled Eastern Bloc wherein individuals reproduced censored and underground makeshift publications or "samizdat" often by hand circulating these documents from reader to reader. The perfect novel to be found in samizdat format: Nineteen Eighty-Four was banned and prohibited to be published in communist countries for its strongly anti-totalitarian message. unknown books
19392011506London: Gollancz 1939. Second edition same month as very rare first edition. Hardcover. Very good/Good. A very good second impression published in the same month June 1936 as the very rare first impression which was published in an edition of only 2000 copies. In the extraordinarily rare dust jacket in the same format as the first edition jacket but with quotes from early reviews and 2nd Edition stated on the front of the jacket. Some repairs to jacket. Housed in a custom-made collector's cloth clamshell case. Gollancz hardcover books
1949GO027London: Secker & Warburg 1949 First edition first printing. Publisher's light green cloth top edge stained red; in the original green dust jacket designed by Michael Kennard issued simultaneously in green without any priority between them lettered in white. Near fine with some light fading along edges and a few minor spots to the fore-edge; in an unclipped jacket with some wear and rubbing to the spine spine chipped with some minor loss several small chips along upper panel edges and rubbing along folds. A very good completely unrestored copy. Fenwick A12.a Nineteen Eighty-Four is a novel about a dystopian future in the year 1984. In the future Orwell has created the totalitarian government controls the civilian population with a detailed system of mental and physical control including omnipresent two-way TV screens that keep the citizens under constant surveillance. Any criticism of the government is strictly illegal and independent thought is persecuted as a "thoughtcrime." Even the newly adopted language "newspeak" which abbreviates many phrases and eliminates words deemed inessential served "not only to provide a medium of expression for the world-view" of the new totalitarian regime but also "to make all other modes of thought impossible . that is a thought diverging from the state approved principles should literally be unthinkable in so far as though is dependent on words." This first British edition was published five days before the first American edition. First Edition. Hard Cover. Very Good/Dust Jacket Included. London: Secker & Warburg hardcover books
1949140938000London: Secker & Warburg 1949. First Edition. Very Good/Very Good. First British edition first printing. Very Good with foxing to cloth and lean to spine; bookseller ticket to front pastedown. In a Very Good dust jacket with publisher's price intact faded at the spine edge worn lightly creased at front panel lightly soiled and tape repairs made to the verso at the spine ends causing a small bit of bleeding to the red ink at the spine joint ends. A lovely copy of Orwell's dystopian classic. Secker & Warburg unknown books
1933140939547New York: Harper & Brothers 1933. First American Edition. Very Good/Very Good. First American edition first printing. Publisher's mauve cloth with black and purple spine decorations. Very Good with lean to spine previous owner address stamp to front free endpaper and toning to pages. In a Very Good unclipped dust jacket with chipping and several short tears at the edges rubbing and several small chips to the folds and light toning to spine. A lovely copy of Orwell's first published novel a semi-autobiographical work which much as the title promises details hunger and poverty in two major European capitals. Harper & Brothers unknown books
19491508141Secker & Warburg; London 1949. 1st Edition. Hardcover. Near Fine/Very Good. A near fine first edition First Published 1949 on the copyright page in a very good green dust jacket with the original price still present and with a wrap-around band advertising the book. Old small bookstore sticker on front free end paper. Housed in a custom-made collector's slipcase. Secker & Warburg; London hardcover books
194597542London: Secker & Warburg 1945. First British edition of Orwell's timeless allegorical novel-- a scathing satire on a downtrodden society's blind march towards totalitarianism. Octavo original green cloth. Near fine in a near fine dust jacket with light rubbing to the extremities. The dust jacket has the Early List for 1945 to the rear panel and the Search light motif in red to the reverse of the jacket. The jacket has a stated price of 6s. Housed in a custom clamshell box. An exceptional example of this classic Orwellian tale. "A political fable that partly recounts in an allegorical mode the aftermath of the Russian revolution and partly illustrates a belief in the universal tendency of power to corrupt" Stringer 22." Animal Farm is Orwells masterpiece" Connolly 93. Time Magazine chose it as one of the 100 best English-language novels 1923 to 2005; it also featured at number 31 on the Modern Library List of Best 20th-Century Novels. It won a Retrospective Hugo Award in 1996 and is included in the Great Books of the Western World selection. Secker & Warburg hardcover books
19451803040Secker & Warburg 1945. 1st Edition. Hardcover. Near Fine/Near Fine. Near fine first edition; "first published" date on copyright page matches date on title page. Light tanning on board edges very minimal browning on top edge of board. Bookseller's stamp on rear free endpaper. In very good dust jacket with original price 6s. on front flap. Wear and chipping at head and tail of spine tiny closed tears on bottom front cover and top back cover. Housed in custom-made slipcase. Secker & Warburg hardcover books
194014507London: Victor Gollancz Ltd 1940. Cloth. Very Good. SIGNED BY GEORGE ORWELL on the front free endpaper. A solid copy to boot of the 1940 true 1st edition of this uncommon collection of Orwell essays consisting of 3 lengthy pieces --"Charles Dickens" "Boys' Weeklies" and "Inside the Whale". Tight and VG in its dark cloth with rubbing to the spine lettering light spotting --and a bit of minor staining-- at the panels and just a touch of foxing to the endsheets. Orwell's signature of course is legendarily elusive and given his relatively short life 1903-1950 and the major impact his career had in the world of 20th century literature is extremely sought-after. Only a very small handful of 20th century authors command comparable respect in the rare book world. <br/><br/> Victor Gollancz Ltd hardcover books
19371906003Gollancz 1937. 1st Edition. Hardcover. Very Good/Very Good. A very good first edition in a complete and slightly restored original and very rare dust jacket. One of only 2150 copies of the first edition. Housed in a handsome clamshell case with leather spine and corners and gold lettering and decoration. Gollancz hardcover books
1934GO016New York: Harper and Brothers 1934 First edition first printing. One of 2000 copies. Publisher's red-orange cloth lettered in black pictorial pale yellow floral endpapers; in the original yellow dust jacket lettered in black and red-orange. Book about fine with only a hint of wear to the extremities else bright and clean; price-clipped dust jacket with some wear and chipping to the extremities minor toning to the spine a hint of light soiling to the otherwise fresh panels. Overall a near fine and very attractive copy of this extremely scarce title very rare in the dust jacket. This first American edition of Burmese Days is the true first printing of Orwell's second work and first novel. Victor Gollancz initially rejected the controversial novel but agreed to publish the first British edition in 1935 after the success of the American edition and making several edits to the text. Notably Orwell would later call the Gollancz edition "garbled" and when Penguin prepared its first edition in 1940 he insisted that the publishers use the American text rather than the English. An extremely scarce title in any condition this copy of Burmese Days is especially rare because of its excellent condition and lack of any repairs or restoration. Based on Orwell's experiences serving in the Indian Imperial Police in Burma from 1922-1927 Burmese Days is set in colonial Burma that the publisher's tout as a "cynical sometimes brutal answer to the Rudyard Kipling 'white man's burden' school of novelists - a caustic portrait of the white man in the East as he really is." Specifically it tells the story of the conflicted timber merchant John Flory who struggles to reconcile his belief in British superior with his appreciation of the Burmese people and culture. Interestingly while English publishers Victor Gollancz Jonathan Cape and William Heinemann all declined to publish Burmese Days for fear of a libel suit from officers in the British colonies American publisher Harper & Brothers flaunted the novel' controversial subject matter. Indeed as the dust jacket boldly proclaims on the front panel "If the prophet is unsung in his own country the truth-teller also is rarely welcome in his home town.". 1st Edition. Hard Cover. Near Fine/Dust Jacket Included. New York: Harper and Brothers hardcover books
193467096New York: Harper & Brothers 1934. First American edition and true first preceding the British edition by one year of Orwell's first novel. Octavo original cloth. Presentation copy inscribed by the author on the verso of the front free endpaper to Mabel Fierz "With very best wishes from Eric Blair." It was Mabel Fierz who introduced Orwell to Leonard Moore who would later become his literary agent after salvaging the manuscript for Down and Out from the writer's discarded papers. After first meeting Orwell in Southwold Suffolk Mabel and her husband Francis became close friends with the writer and often invited him to stay at their house in Golders Green. On one such occasion Orwell gave Mabel the manuscript which had just been rejected by Faber and telling her to save only the paperclips said she should throw it away. Instead she took it in person to Moore who in turn took it to Gollancz. In gratitude thereafter Orwell presented Mabel with signed copies of all his published works. Mabel Fierz authorial inscription typed letter signed by Mabel's son Adrian Fierz loosely inserted. Near fine in a very good dust jacket. Housed in a custom half morocco clamshell box. Burmese Days was several years in the writing. Orwell was drafting it in Paris during the time he spent there from 1928 to 1929. He was still working on it in 1932 at Southwold while doing up the family home in the summer holidays. By December 1933 he had typed the final version and in 1934 he delivered it to his agent Leonard Moore for publication by Victor Gollancz who had published his previous book. Gollancz smarting from fears of prosecution from another author's work turned it down because he was worried about charges of libel. Heinemann and Cape turned it down for the same reasons. After demanding alterations Harpers were prepared to publish it in the United States where it made its debut in 1934. In the spring of 1935 Gollancz declared that he was prepared to publish Burmese Days provided that Orwell was able to demonstrate it was not based on real people. Extensive checks were made in colonial lists that no British individuals could be confused with the characters. Many of the main European names have since been identified in the Rangoon Gazette and U Po Kyin was the name of a Burmese officer with him at the Police Training School in Mandalay. Gollancz brought out the English version on 24 June 1935. Harpers brought out Burmese Days in the US on 25 October 1934 in an edition of 2000 copies. In February 1935 just four months after publication 976 copies were remaindered. The only American review that Orwell himself saw in the New York Herald Tribune by Margaret Carson Hubbard was unfavourable: "The ghastly vulgarity of the third-rate characters who endure the heat and talk ad nausea of the glorious days of the British Raj when fifteen lashes settled any native insolence is such that they kill all interest in their doings." A positive review however came from an anonymous writer in the Boston Evening Transcript for whom the central figure was "analyzed with rare insight and unprejudiced if inexorable justice" and the book itself praised as full of "realities faithfully and unflinchingly realised." On its publication in Britain Burmese Days earned a review in the New Statesman from Cyril Connolly as follows: "Burmese Days is an admirable novel. It is a crisp fierce and almost boisterous attack on the Anglo-Indian. The author loves Burma he goes to great length to describe the vices of the Burmese and the horror of the climate but he loves it and nothing can palliate for him the presence of a handful of inefficient complacent public school types who make their living there. I liked it and recommend it to anyone who enjoys a spate of efficient indignation graphic description excellent narrative excitement and irony tempered with vitriol." Orwell received a letter from the anthropologist Geoffrey Gorer as follows "Will you allow me to tell you how very much indeed I admire your novel Burmese Days: it seems to me an absolutely admirable statement of fact told as vividly and with as little bitterness as possible." It was as a result of these responses that Orwell renewed his friendship with Connolly which was to give him useful literary connections a positive evaluation in Enemies of Promise and an outlet on Horizon. He also became a close friend of Gorer. In 2013 the Burmese Ministry of Information named the new translation by Maung Myint Kywe of Burmese Days the winner of the 2012 Burma National Literature Award's "informative literature" translation category. The National Literary Awards are the highest literary awards in Burma. Harper & Brothers hardcover books