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19501391800New York: Harcourt Brace & World Inc 1950. Presumed Second Edition. Hardcover. Octavo 287 pages. In Very Good minus condition with a Very Good dust jacket. Spine green with black lettering. Dust jacket protected with mylar covering price uncut: "$8.95". Slight chipping to edges and corners of dust jacket with small closed tear to rear bottom. Minor foxing to edges of text block. Shelved Case 2. 1391800. Shelved Dupont Bookstore. Harcourt, Brace & World, Inc hardcover
193520224London: Gollancz 1935. A first edition first printing of 'Burmese Days' published by Gollancz in 1935. A very good - spotting to the prelims and to the page edges - some light staining to the boards. No inscriptions - some wear to the corners. Burmese Days is a novel by George Orwell published in 1934. Set in 1920s British-occupied Burma it offers a critique of British colonialism. The story revolves around John Flory a disillusioned British timber merchant who befriends Dr. Veraswami a local Indian doctor. Flory's struggle against the racist attitudes of his fellow Europeans particularly the bigoted U Po Kyin forms the novel's core conflict. Flory's relationship with Elizabeth Lackersteen a young Englishwoman adds personal drama to his ethical dilemmas. The novel portrays the corrupt and oppressive nature of colonial rule highlighting the moral and spiritual decay it causes in both the colonisers and the colonised. Orwell drawing on his own experiences as a police officer in Burma uses Burmese Days to explore themes of power racism and the impact of imperialism on individual lives. Gollancz hardcover
19341394691New York NY: Harper & Brothers 1934. Second American Edition. Hardcover. Octavo 369 pages. In Good condition. Boards wrapped in publisher's orange cloth aged brown along the spine with black lettering along the spine and front cover. Boards have light fraying and bending along the fore corners and spine breaking along the spine head joint corners stains on the front and rear covers and moderate age-toning along the extremities. Textblock is splitting to gutter from title page to page 34 second rear end-page to rear pastedown and along front pastedown has light soiling on few pages mild wear along the edges light foxing along the head edges stains on the fore edges and moderate age-toning along the edges. Contains floral end-pages and pastedowns. DL consignment. Shelved Room C. Stated Second Edition of limited American run of George Orwell's first novel "Burmese Days" 1394691. Special Collections - Upstairs. Harper & Brothers hardcover
193500221523LONDON: VICTOR GOLLANCZ. BOUND IN BLACK CLOTH HARDCOVERS WITH CLEAR GREEN TITLES TO SPINE THIS DATED 1935 FIRST EDITION FIRST PRINTING IS VG. 318pp WITH 25 CHAPTERS. NAME ON FFEP CLAUDE COUCH. LIGHT FOXING TO ALL ENDPAPERS AND HALF TITLE. ODD MARKS TO BOARDS. TOP OF SPINE HAS 4 TINY CHIPS AND THE FOOT OF SPINE ALSO HAS TWO TINY CHIPS. VERY SLIGHT LEAN TO BOOK AND MINOR STAIN TO TOP EDGE. OTHERWISE CLOSE TO VG . Very Good. Hardcover. 1st Edition. 1st Printing. 1935. VICTOR GOLLANCZ hardcover
2001295310The Folio Society 2001. hardcover. Good/No slipcase. 19 to 25 cm tall Octavo 8vo. Devine Steven. No slipcase. Illustrated by Steven Devine. Posted within 1 working day. 1st class tracked post to the UK Airmail tracked worldwide. Robust recyclable packaging. The Folio Society hardcover
1935186134London: Victor Gollancz 1935. His first work of fiction First British edition of the author's first novel and second book following Down and Out in Paris and London 1933. Burmese Days was based on Orwell's service in the Indian Imperial Police in Burma from 1922 to 1927. The work was initially rejected by Gollancz amid concerns that its caustic critique of colonialism might be considered libellous to those portrayed so it was published in America the year previous to its publication in Britain. For the British edition Orwell changed the names of characters based on real people and wrote a new author's note spuriously claiming that "all the characters in this book are entirely fictitious". Cyril Connolly reviewed Burmese Days as "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" New Statesman and Nation p. 18. Octavo. Original black cloth spine lettered in green. Cloth a little rubbed spine leaning extremities slightly bumped with occasional spots of wear ring stains to rear cover: a very good copy. Fenwick A.2c. Cyril Connolly "New Novels" New Statesman and Nation 6 July 1935. hardcover
1986005955Secker & Warburg 1986. Hardcover. Very Good/Very Good. About the book: Hardcover with jacket. Printed in 1986. Both book and jacket are in very good to near fine condition. Plastic protective sleeve has protected the book well keeping all the nasty bits out. Additional photos available upon request. <br/> <br/> Secker & Warburg hardcover
0307595048.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
045150609X.Gmass_market. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. unknown
0848806026.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
1974Q-0156148501Mariner Books 1974-03-20. Paperback. New. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Mariner Books paperback
1982614579.GaudioCD. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. unknown
1934140943128New York: Harper & Brothers 1934. First Edition. Very Good. First American edition first printing. Bound in publisher's original cloth binding with titles printed in black lacking the dust jacket. Very Good with soiling and foxing to cloth fading to spine and a small hole at the front spine joint. Light foxing soiling and wear to textblock edge pages toned. Orwell's first published novel. Harper & Brothers unknown
20111-0307595048Everymans Library 2011. Hardcover. New. 677 pages. 8.50x5.50x1.50 inches. Everymans Library hardcover
193467096New York: Harper & Brothers 1934. First American edition preceding the British edition by one year of Orwell's first novel. Octavo original cloth. Presentation copy inscribed by the author with his given name on the verso of the front free endpaper "With very best wishes from Eric Blair." As explained in the accompanying typed letter signed by Adrian Fierz this copy was presented by the author to Mabel Fierz. 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 telling her to save only the paperclips. Instead she brought the manuscript to Moore who in turn took it to the publisher Gollancz. In gratitude Orwell presented Mabel with signed copies of all of his published works. Typed letter signed by Mabel's son Adrian Fierz 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
1935140938436London: Victor Gollancz 1935. First British Edition. Very Good. First British edition first printing. Publisher's black cloth binding with titles on spine lacking the dust jacket. Very Good. Cloth rubbed and worn bumped at the crown. Rear hinge repaired. Contents toned and foxed. Victor Gollancz originally rejected this novel publishing it only after the success of the American edition the previous year. Victor Gollancz unknown
1950005548Harcourt Brace & World. Clipped DJ in archival cover light wear. . Fine. Hardcover. 1950. Harcourt, Brace & World hardcover
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
12657Original Typescript. undated c.1950's. Typescript. Perfect bound in card wrappers with blue bordered typed label to the upper cover. A play in three acts with character descriptions. 116 mimeographed pages the text on rectos only. Hand corrected / altered in black ink throughout. In very good condition the binding a little rubbed and marked the contents with some silverfish erosion to the edge of the blank front endpaper and tanning to the text block edge otherwise clean. Almost certainly unique. An early adaptation of George Orwell's novel for the stage. We have been unable to find any information pertaining to the author perhaps a pseudonym or evidence of the play in this form ever making it to production. Further details and images for any of the items listed are available on request. Lucius Books welcomes direct contact with our customers. Original Typescript. undated c.1950's unknown
1967R3649Bangkok: White Lotus Press 1967. Paperback. Very Good/no dj. 1.00. Orwell George. Burmese Days White Lotus Press paperback
19581ivAb0014bNew York: Popular Library 1958. Book. Good. Mass Market Paperback. 12mo or 12° Duodecimo: 6¾" x 7¾" tall. 252 pp. Solidly bound copy with minimal external wear crisp pages and clean text. Frayed spine. Creased corners. Previous owner's note written on inside front cover page. Old weak pages. Popular Library Paperback
19582iiiAc0008fNew York: Popular Library / Published By Arrangement with Harcourt Brace And Company 1958. Book. Very Good. Mass Market Paperback. Popular Library Ed Publ. February 1958. 12mo or 12° Duodecimo: 6¾" x 7¾" tall. 252 pp. Solidly bound copy with minimal external wear crisp pages and clean text. Slightly creased spine. Light foxing on pages. Popular Library / Published By Arrangement with Harcourt, Brace And Company Paperback
193543036Gollancz. London. 1935. First edition. No DW. Original black cloth. Sl. lean to spine head and tail of spine crumpled and sl. worn and frayed joints sl. frayed and partially split but cloth holding well corners rubbed. Inner hinge partially visible with small brown stains along split but is still sound. Pages sl. browned pages 12 - 17 are spotted some other occasional light spotting. Please contact us for photographs or more information. VG-. hardcover
9788535916003CIA DAS LETRAS. new. "No sistema capitalista para que a Inglaterra possa viver em relativo conforto 100 milh�es de indianos t�m que viver �� beira da inani��o - um estado de coisas perverso mas voc� consente com tudo isso cada vez que entra num t�xi ou come morangos com creme."" � dessa forma unindo a pegada do inconformista com a mordacidade do literato que George Orwell pinta as rela��es entre a metr�pole imperial brit�nica e suas col�nias na ��sia na segunda parte de O caminho para Wigan Pier publicado originalmente em 1937. � na primeira parte por�m que ele d� conta com seu costumeiro estilo l�mpido ""de vidra�a"" como ele dizia direto e vigoroso de sua visita ��s �reas de minera��o de carv�o em Lancashire e Yorkshire no norte da ilha brit�nica. A pobreza e o sofrimento atroz dos mineiros s�o retratados ali com um grafismo brutal desde as condi��es esqu�lidas de moradia ao medo das frequentes ondas de desemprego que assolavam a regi�o colocando em risco extremo a sobreviv�ncia f�sica dos trabalhadores e de suas fam�lias. Orwell j� havia mergulhado a fundo na experi�ncia da pobreza quase absoluta nos dois anos que viveu perambulando como mendigo e trabalhador desqualificado pela Fran�a e pela pr�pria Inglaterra - experi�ncia narrada em seu primeiro livro Na pior em Paris e Londres. A isso somou-se o impacto desses dias passados lado a lado com os mineiros de carv�o o que resultou n�o s� na pioneira pe�a de new journalism express�o que s� apareceria a partir dos anos 1960 nos Estados Unidos da primeira parte de Wigan Pier como tamb�m na an�lise amarga e muitas vezes sard�nica da estrutura social dos preconceitos de classe brit�nicos e das fragilidades e inconsist�ncias da esquerda intelectual bem-nascida que lemos na segunda parte da obra. Neste livro vemos o futuro e celebrado autor de cl�ssicos universais j� em plena floresc�ncia de seu projeto liter�rio e existencial que o levou a abandonar os privil�gios de sua classe a execrar qualquer forma de imperialismo e a mergulhar de corpo e alma na vida dos trabalhadores pobres e dos exclu�dos sociais. CIA DAS LETRAS unknown
2251451803.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback