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193674579New York:: Random House 1936. First edition. original cloth in dust jacket in a custom clamshell box. Preserved in a custom quarter morocco folding clamshell box. A very fine copy in a very fine dust jacket. Breathtaking. . 8vo. Folding diagram in red and black at rear. Random House, hardcover
192446669Boston:: The Four Seas Company 1924. First edition. original patterned green paper-covered boards with printed paper labels in dust jacket. Preserved in a custom cloth folding box. Very slightly bumped at the top of the spine and upper corner; else a fresh bright copy in a very near fine dust jacket. This very uncommon book is rare in dust jacket. . 12mo. Author's first book. The Four Seas Company, hardcover
195613959JLos Angeles/New York/Oxford Mississippi 1956-1967. This is the approximately 90 page archive file from William Faulkner’s former agents Harold Ober Associates in which they negotiated and sold the motion picture rights to Faulkner’s masterpiece novel “The Sound and the Fury†to Twentieth Century-Fox studios. In 1959 director Martin Ritt produced the acclaimed motion picture starring Yul Brynner Joanne Woodward Stuart Whitman Ethel Waters Jack Warden Albert Dekker. The four contracts signed by Faulkner are described as follows: 1 The Option Agreement Contract to Purchase the Motion Picture Rights to “The Sound and the Fury†10 page contract dated September 1 1956. Signed by William Faulkner and initialed twice by him in the margins. Also signed by Lew Schrieber Executive Manager of Twentieth Century-Fox; 2 The Agreement of Sale Contract to Purchase the Motion Picture Rights 19 page contract dated September 1 1956. Signed by William Faulkner and initialed 15 times by him in the margins as well as on inserted rider clauses. Additionally signed by Lew Schrieber; 3 The Agreement of Sale Contract to Purchase the Motion Picture Rights 12 page contract dated March 22 1957. Signed by William Faulkner; 4 The Exercise of Option Agreement by Twentieth Century-Fox to Purchase the Motion Picture Rights 1 page March 22 1957. Signed by William Faulkner. Additionally signed by Lew Schrieber. The remaining papers are a collection of letters carbon copies of letters to-and-fro among the parties involved interoffice notes and memos and various papers clarifying the relevant issues. There are also additional contracts including four signed by Faulkner’s legendary Random House editor Saxe Cummins acting on Faulkner’s behalf with power of attorney plus one contract signed by Faulkner’s wife Estelle Oldham Faulkner and another signed by his daughter Jill Faulkner Summers. unknown books
195613959JLos Angeles/New York/Oxford Mississippi 1956-1967. This is the approximately 90 page archive file from William Faulkner’s former agents Harold Ober Associates in which they negotiated and sold the motion picture rights to Faulkner’s masterpiece novel “The Sound and the Fury†to Twentieth Century-Fox studios. In 1959 director Martin Ritt produced the acclaimed motion picture starring Yul Brynner Joanne Woodward Stuart Whitman Ethel Waters Jack Warden Albert Dekker. The four contracts signed by Faulkner are described as follows: 1 The Option Agreement Contract to Purchase the Motion Picture Rights to “The Sound and the Fury†10 page contract dated September 1 1956. Signed by William Faulkner and initialed twice by him in the margins. Also signed by Lew Schrieber Executive Manager of Twentieth Century-Fox; 2 The Agreement of Sale Contract to Purchase the Motion Picture Rights 19 page contract dated September 1 1956. Signed by William Faulkner and initialed 15 times by him in the margins as well as on inserted rider clauses. Additionally signed by Lew Schrieber; 3 The Agreement of Sale Contract to Purchase the Motion Picture Rights 12 page contract dated March 22 1957. Signed by William Faulkner; 4 The Exercise of Option Agreement by Twentieth Century-Fox to Purchase the Motion Picture Rights 1 page March 22 1957. Signed by William Faulkner. Additionally signed by Lew Schrieber. The remaining papers are a collection of letters carbon copies of letters to-and-fro among the parties involved interoffice notes and memos and various papers clarifying the relevant issues. There are also additional contracts including four signed by Faulkner’s legendary Random House editor Saxe Cummins acting on Faulkner’s behalf with power of attorney plus one contract signed by Faulkner’s wife Estelle Oldham Faulkner and another signed by his daughter Jill Faulkner Summers. unknown
192459503Boston:: The Four Seas Company 1924. First edition. original patterned green paper-covered boards with printed paper labels in dust jacket. . Front hinge very slightly cracked; else a fine bright copy in a very attractive jacket with a few tiny chips and short tears and some minor wrinkling to the upper portion of the front panel. This very uncommon book is rare in dust jacket. . 12mo. Author's first book. The Four Seas Company, hardcover
195669843Los Angeles / New York / Osford Mississippi 1956-1967. Generally fine. 11 x 8-1/2 inches. In addition to the four contracts there are letters and carbon copies inter-office notes and memos and various papers clarifying issues; plus additional contracts signed by Faulkner's editor Saxe Cummins acting on Faulkner's behalf with power of attorney; one contract signed by Estelle Oldham Faulkner; and one signed by Jill Faulkner Summers. The 1959 acclaimed motion picture was directed by Martin Ritt and starred Yul Brynner Joanne Woodward Stuart Whitman Ethel Waters Jack Warden and Albert Dekker. unknown
1934140100Oxford Mississippi: N/P c. 1934. Rare original carbon typescript of the novel Pylon with title in ink in the author's hand on the first page a few leaves repaginated in the author's hand 344 pages each of the six chapters held together with a paper clip Oxford Mississippi ca. December 1934. Newly discovered by the family and one of only two known typescripts of Pylon it is the only one left entirely as Faulkner wrote it and is the only one in private hands. William Faulkner's retained unedited carbon typescript of his 1935 aviation novel Pylon. This copy corresponds to the typescript setting copy in the collection of the Alderman Library University of Virginia. The present copy is important in that it shows Faulkner's text in its unedited state. In his introduction to the facsimile of the typesetting copy Noel Polk writes "According to Faulkner's date on the final page of the holograph manuscript at the University of Mississippi he completed the writing on November 26 1934; but he had already sent publisher Harrison Smith the typescript of the first chapter before November 5 the second by November 23 and the third by November 30; the fourth bears the editorial date 12/5 the fifth 12/10 and the sixth and seventh 12/15. As was to the case with Absalom Pylon underwent extensive editorial alteration. As the typescript setting copy … demonstrates editors bowlerized and 'normalized' the deliberate strangeness of the syntax and language and made hundreds of other rather arbitrary changes in the text. Smith who spent a week in Oxford with Faulkner going over the galleys had made many further editorial changes on them. The galleys which were set beginning January 8 record both Faulkner's acquiescence to many of Smith's changes his attempts to restore the original wording and punctuation and numerous attempts to repair damage that Smith had done. Pylon was published on March 25 1935."The incomplete 151-page autograph manuscript of the novel is in the collection of the University of Mississippi. The typescript setting copy at the University of Virginia and the present carbon typescript are the only known complete typescripts of the text. Corrected galley proofs are held by the Humanities Research Center at the University of Texas. Noel Polk based his 1985 corrected text Library of America on the Alderman Library typescript. As Faulkner told students at the University of Virginia in the 1960's he wrote Pylon as a respite from the complications involved in writing Absalom Absalom! The novel was written at great speed at the end of 1934. It has been called Faulkner's most self-consciously "modernistic" work abounding in descriptions of aviators and their machines runways and art deco air terminals. Aside from the frequent references to Shakespeare in the novel Faulkner takes pains to pay tribute to his modernist heroes James Joyce in the second chapter "An Evening in New Valois" and T. S. Eliot throughout the novel but especially in the penultimate chapter "Lovesong of J. A. Prufrock". Pylon is one of Faulkner's few non-Yoknapatawpha novels and is based on the festivities and air shows at New Orleans's newly built Shushan Airport held to coincide with Mardi Gras February 1934. In very good condition with the first leaf darkened and with paper loss at edges some text lost in lower right corner rust stain in upper right corner of chapters 1–4 creasing and spotting to scattered leaves. Laid in: 2 British European Airways luggage claim tags. This carbon typescript newly discovered by the family and one of only two known typescripts of Pylon is the only one left entirely as Faulkner wrote it and is the only one in private hands. A novel at once sympathetic and explosive Faulkner's Pylon is inhabited by characters still strange to the world today - a reckless and indomitable group of barnstormers performing in an unconventional flying circus. Set in a fictionalized version of New Orleans the novel became the basis for the sensational 1957 film 'The Tarnished Angels' starring Rock Hudson Robert Slack and Dorothy Malone. N/P unknown
1932135388New York: Harrison Smith & Robert Haas 1932. First edition first issue with first printing statement on copyright page and “Jefferson†for “Mottstown†on page 340 line 1; first-issue binding lettered in blue and orange. Octavo original cloth. Presentation copy inscribed by the author on the front free endpaper "To Eric Dawson William Faulkner Oxford 3 October 1934." Near fine in a near fine dust jacket. Petersen A13a; Howard A13.1a; Massey 103. Housed in a custom half morocco clamshell box made by the Harcourt Bindery. Rare and desirable signed and inscribed with only two examples appearing at auction in the last 90 years. One of William Faulkners most admired and accessible novels Light in August reveals the great American author at the height of his powers. Lena Groves resolute search for the father of her unborn child begets a rich poignant and ultimately hopeful story of perseverance in the face of mortality. It also acquaints us with several of Faulkners most unforgettable characters including the Reverend Gail Hightower plagued by visions of Confederate horsemen and Joe Christmas a ragged itinerant soul obsessed with his mixed-race ancestry. Powerfully entwining these characters stories Light in August brings to life Faulkners imaginary South one of literatures great invented landscapes in all of its unerringly fascinating glory. "No man ever put more of his heart and soul into the written word than did William Faulkner. If you want to know all you can about that heart and soul the fiction where he put it is still right there" Eudora Welty. Harrison Smith & Robert Haas hardcover
1935469253New York: Harrison Smith and Robert Haas 1935. Hardcover. Near Fine/Near Fine. Second printing a month after the first. Touch of foxing to the topedge and hint of wear at the corners near fine in near fine second issue variant dust jacket with new text on front flap and the rear panel and flap unprinted. Faulkner's novel of barnstorming aviation a pursuit which took his brother Dean's life a few months after the book was published. This copy Signed by Faulkner on the title page: "William Faulkner. Sherman Conn. 25 Oct 1945." The ink has smeared a bit but is easily readable. Although not inscribed this was Malcolm Cowley's copy signed by Faulkner at Cowley's home in Sherman Connecticut where he and other important American authors were frequent visitors. <br /> <br /> Cowley was a poet and literary critic and chronicler of the so-called "Lost Generation" of American expatriates in Paris. While probably best known for his book of poetry Blue Juniata his most important work was his editing of the Viking Portable Library where his selections and criticisms fostered the popularization of those American authors whose reputations and fortunes had suffered between the Wars. William Faulkner and F. Scott Fitzgerald both of whom had to some degree disappeared from the landscape of the American literary conversation enjoyed critical resurgences as the result of the Portable editions.<br /> <br /> <br /> Cowley's 1944 Portable Hemingway sold so well that he was able to convince Viking to publish a Portable Faulkner in 1946. William Faulkner was at the time slipping into literary obscurity. By the 1930s he was working as a Hollywood screenwriter and in danger of seeing his works go out of print. Cowley argued for a dramatic revaluation of Faulkner's position in American letters enlisting him as an honorary member of the Lost Generation. <br /> <br /> Robert Penn Warren called The Portable Faulkner the "great watershed" moment for Faulkner's reputation and many scholars view Cowley's essay as having resuscitated Faulkner's career. Faulkner won a Nobel Prize in 1949. He later said "I owe Malcolm Cowley the kind of debt no man could ever repay." A significant association copy. Harrison Smith and Robert Haas hardcover
192689328New York: Boni & Liveright 1926. First edition of Faulkner's first book in the rare first state dust jacket with An American Tragedy as the first of five titles listed on the rear jacket panel. Octavo original cloth. Bookplate near fine in an exceptional dust jacket with light toning and wear. From the library of Virginia bibliophile and historian Christopher Clark Geest with his bookplate. Housed in a custom clamshell box. Scarce in this condition. Faulkner's first novel Soldiers' Pay 1926 is among the most memorable works to emerge from the First World War. Through the story of a wounded veteran's homecoming it examines the impact of soldiers' return from war on the people-particularly the women-who were left behind Boni & Liveright hardcover books
192689328New York: Boni & Liveright 1926. First edition of Faulkner's first book in the rare first state dust jacket with An American Tragedy as the first of five titles listed on the rear jacket panel. Octavo original cloth. Bookplate near fine in an exceptional dust jacket with light toning and wear. From the library of Virginia bibliophile and historian Christopher Clark Geest with his bookplate. Housed in a custom clamshell box. Scarce in this condition. Faulkner’s first novel Soldiers’ Pay 1926 is among the most memorable works to emerge from the First World War. Through the story of a wounded veteran’s homecoming it examines the impact of soldiers’ return from war on the people―particularly the women―who were left behind Boni & Liveright hardcover
1926142531New York: Various Publishers 1926-1962. First editions of each novel by the Nobel Prize-winning author. Octavo 19 volumes bound in full morocco by the Harcourt Bindery gilt titles and tooling to the spine in six compartments within raised gilt bands gilt ruling to the front and rear panels gilt stamped signature to the front panel gilt inner dentelles stamp-signed by the Harcourt Bindery marbled endpapers all edges gilt. In fine condition. An exceptional set rare and desirable. One of the most celebrated writers in American literature William Faulkner became widely know upon his acceptance of the 1949 Nobel Prize in Literature for which he became the only Mississippi-born Nobel winner. Awarded for "his powerful and artistically unique contribution to the modern American novel" Faulkner donated part of his Nobel money "to establish a fund to support and encourage new fiction writers" eventually resulting in the PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction. Various Publishers unknown
193216166JCulver City California: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer June 3 1932. First Edition First Printing. The only original surviving copy of William Faulkner’s original 16 page mimeographed script printed on rectos only. Bradbound in printed blue studio wrappers with the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer film studio production label affixed and with Complete File Copy and Vault Copy stamped in blue ink on the front cover. Formerly in the MGM archives it was part of the material disposed of when MGM was sold in 1986. In 1985 Professor Bruce F. Kawin published the book Faulkner’s MGM Screenplays at the University of Tennessee Press which contained facsimiles of the stories and screenplays Faulkner wrote in his first visit to Hollywood writing for MGM in 1932-1933. It is this single surviving script that is reproduced in full facsimile in the book. This unproduced film project was an aviation picture that was designed for MGM’s stars Wallace Beery Robert Montgomery and Marie Dressler to be the leads. In his Flying the Mail introductory essay Kawin points out elements in Faulkner’s script that are related to Faulkner’s novels The Sound and the Fury Absalom Absalom Flags In the Dust A few small chips to edges of wrappers otherwise fine. Enclosed in a custom folding case laid into a clamshell box. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer unknown books
195213958JNew York/Los Angeles/ Oxford Mississippi: 8 pages quarto 1952. In 1952 William Faulkner was badly in need of money and wished to promote his protege/lover Joan Williams. He was approached by an old friend television producer James J. Geller to write an original story for television which he proceeded to do in collaboration with Joan Williams. The first piece in the group is a Typed Letter Signed from Geller to Faulkner thanking him for the story and expressing interest in learning more about Joan Williams when Faulkner is to shortly visit Los Angeles. Next is the original contract signed by Faulkner selling the rights to the story. Faulkner arranged all this without consulting his agent Harold Ober to whom he then writes in a letter on July 30th: “…In confidence I am not particularly interested in this sort of thing writing television plays. This one was done in collaboration with a young woman who someday may write something serious and good. My main idea in this was to contrive an opening for her where she could partly support herself while she does tries to do serious writing. I am perfectly willing to allow my name to be used on this TV thing for that reason. As you see I do not commit myself to anything further. Geller is an old Hollywood friend has been kind to me is a reputable man and a reputable agent. The young woman I mentioned finally did a story I think is all right. I sent it to Harper’s magazine. If they decline it will you look at it yourself as possible agent I can promise to stop her from sending you trash or unsalable stuff…I will hold Geller’s check for $500.00 until I hear from you…My eyes are open about this I know my name will be exploited but the piece is honest if thin.†Included is the carbon copy of Ober’s response to Faulkner gently taking him to task for arranging a bad deal. On August 2 1952 Faulkner sheepishly writes to Ober in a second letter: “…Thank you for your letter re; Geller. I feel that I have more or less passed my word about this sum. That is I did not quibble about the price when he offered it and sent him the mss still without demanding any further discussion about price. I cannot seem to learn to ask you to represent me in things of this nature. I had two mysterious telephone calls two different parties one said he was in New York the other said Memphis about my character Gavin Stevens in television. I declined to talk to either insisted that they contact you. If you have not heard they may both be fakes. I didn’t at all like the high-pressure attitude of the Memphis one. They gave names; as usual I do not remember them…on the Geller thing…see what arrangement can be made for more of these short story-lines. I am going to have to raise some money. I am in a condition that is beginning to worry me a little. I have written nothing in a year don’t want to write have to force myself to attend my farm have lost heart somehow. I think I need to get away from here all responsibilities for at least a year maybe for good. But I will begin to need money soon. These short tv things seem to be the simplest; that is a six or page rough story synopsis for $500.00 a job…I think I mentioned a young woman Joan Williams a writing protege of mine to you. I sent a mss of hers to Harper’s about two weeks ago. I don’t remember if I put in return postage. The return address was her Memphis Tenn. the mss title: THE MORNING AND THE EVENING. Will you check with Harper’s in case I did not enclose postage†Also present are two carbons of letters from Ober to Faulkner and Geller discussing the project at length and an original typed letter signed from Geller to Ober clarifying various aspects of purchasing the story. 8 pages, quarto unknown books
1929D1094New York: Jonathan Cape & Harrison Smith 1929. First Edition. Hardcover. Very Good/Very Good. Original cloth spine still bright white. Front hinge discretely mended. Original dust jacket with its iconic design by Kathe Kollwitz is present and fully intact; some professional restoration to a patch of the rear panel lettering. <br/><br/>The tragic tale of the Compson family certainly counted as a masterpiece of the Southern Gothic tradition and an essential development in the stream-of-consciousness narrative technique. Faulkner's fourth novel refuses any simple synopsis or definition -- and likewise its attempted adaptation to the screen. Though Faulkner enjoyed success writing for Hollywood the attempt by Irving Ravetch and Harriet Frank bore little resemblance to the original tour de force. Jonathan Cape & Harrison Smith hardcover books
193670639New York:: Random House 1936. First edition. original cloth in dust jacket in a quarter morocco slipcase and chemise. A fine copy in a beautiful dust jacket with the slightest of rubbing to the extremities of the backstrip. There is almost none of the usual darkening and fading to the backstrip. A stunning example. 8vo. Random House, hardcover
192769737New York:: Boni and Liveright 1927. First edition; in the scarce "card-player" variant dust jacket. publisher's cloth in dust jacket; preserved in a custom quarter morocco folding box. Both inner hinges cracked; otherwise a very good copy without the usual effacement of lettering on the spine. Slight unobtrusive abrasion to the upper right corner of the front panel front flap and bottom of the backstrip of the dust jacket; some shallow chipping to the top of the backstrip just touching the "M" in "Mosquitoes." This dust jacket is extremely uncommon. 8vo. Author's second novel. Boni and Liveright, hardcover
195213958JNew York/Los Angeles/ Oxford Mississippi: 8 pages quarto 1952. In 1952 William Faulkner was badly in need of money and wished to promote his protege/lover Joan Williams. He was approached by an old friend television producer James J. Geller to write an original story for television which he proceeded to do in collaboration with Joan Williams. The first piece in the group is a Typed Letter Signed from Geller to Faulkner thanking him for the story and expressing interest in learning more about Joan Williams when Faulkner is to shortly visit Los Angeles. Next is the original contract signed by Faulkner selling the rights to the story. Faulkner arranged all this without consulting his agent Harold Ober to whom he then writes in a letter on July 30th: “…In confidence I am not particularly interested in this sort of thing writing television plays. This one was done in collaboration with a young woman who someday may write something serious and good. My main idea in this was to contrive an opening for her where she could partly support herself while she does tries to do serious writing. I am perfectly willing to allow my name to be used on this TV thing for that reason. As you see I do not commit myself to anything further. Geller is an old Hollywood friend has been kind to me is a reputable man and a reputable agent. The young woman I mentioned finally did a story I think is all right. I sent it to Harper’s magazine. If they decline it will you look at it yourself as possible agent I can promise to stop her from sending you trash or unsalable stuff…I will hold Geller’s check for $500.00 until I hear from you…My eyes are open about this I know my name will be exploited but the piece is honest if thin.†Included is the carbon copy of Ober’s response to Faulkner gently taking him to task for arranging a bad deal. On August 2 1952 Faulkner sheepishly writes to Ober in a second letter: “…Thank you for your letter re; Geller. I feel that I have more or less passed my word about this sum. That is I did not quibble about the price when he offered it and sent him the mss still without demanding any further discussion about price. I cannot seem to learn to ask you to represent me in things of this nature. I had two mysterious telephone calls two different parties one said he was in New York the other said Memphis about my character Gavin Stevens in television. I declined to talk to either insisted that they contact you. If you have not heard they may both be fakes. I didn’t at all like the high-pressure attitude of the Memphis one. They gave names; as usual I do not remember them…on the Geller thing…see what arrangement can be made for more of these short story-lines. I am going to have to raise some money. I am in a condition that is beginning to worry me a little. I have written nothing in a year don’t want to write have to force myself to attend my farm have lost heart somehow. I think I need to get away from here all responsibilities for at least a year maybe for good. But I will begin to need money soon. These short tv things seem to be the simplest; that is a six or page rough story synopsis for $500.00 a job…I think I mentioned a young woman Joan Williams a writing protege of mine to you. I sent a mss of hers to Harper’s about two weeks ago. I don’t remember if I put in return postage. The return address was her Memphis Tenn. the mss title: THE MORNING AND THE EVENING. Will you check with Harper’s in case I did not enclose postage†Also present are two carbons of letters from Ober to Faulkner and Geller discussing the project at length and an original typed letter signed from Geller to Ober clarifying various aspects of purchasing the story. 8 pages, quarto unknown
1932035975NY: Saturday Evening Post. 1932. A previously unknown Faulkner "A" item -- an offprint from the March 5 1932 issue of the Saturday Evening Post. In long-accepted Faulkner lore the first and only separate edition of Turn About was the 1939 edition published by W. L. Massiah of Ottawa Canada which has been considered Faulkner's scarcest "A" item with approximately seven known copies. Offered here is a 1932 offprint -- 7 years earlier than the Massiah edition -- with no other known copies. Faulkner's story "Turn About" was first published in The Saturday Evening Post on March 5 1932 with two bibliographically significant markers: the second paragraph includes a description of one character as having "a pink-and-white face and blue eyes and a little dull gold mustache above a mouth like a girl's mouth" and the text is broken up into 10 parts each identified with a Roman numeral from I to X. The earliest book publications of the story -- in O. Henry Memorial Award Prize Stories of 1932 and in Faulkner's collection Doctor Martino and Other Stories published in 1934 -- leave out both the "gold mustache" and the text breaks. The former change seems likely to have been authorial rather than editorial which means that Faulkner changed the text of the story removing the "gold mustache" phrase before the end of 1932 when the O. Henry collection was published. The 1939 Massiah edition includes the phrase which is how it was concluded that it had been printed from the text of the Post story rather than from one of the later book publications. The Massiah publication also retains the 10 text breaks but rather than being identified by Roman numerals the breaks are separated with a filigree design. The 1932 offprint offered here includes the "gold mustache" phrase as well as the 10 text breaks of the original Post publication with Roman numerals delineating the sections -- the only place other than in the original magazine itself where Roman numerals are used in the text. Carl Petersen the renowned Faulkner collector did not have a copy of Massiah's Turn About in his collection when he published his 1975 bibliography. By 1991 when Peter Howard of Serendipity Books published the 643-page catalog of Petersen's Faulkner collection he did have a copy which Serendipity valued at $17500 calling it "by far the rarest of Faulkner's published books." Christie's auction house called the Massiah edition "exceedingly scarce" and noted that "no copies have appeared at auction in at least 50 years" in a 2010 auction listing. As best we have been able to determine this 1932 Saturday Evening Post offprint displaces the 1939 edition of Turn About as Faulkner's scarcest "A" item: it is previously unknown contemporaneous with the initial story publication and possibly at this point one of a kind. 28 stapled pages; one page corner turned; a handful of mostly marginal pencil markings "x's"; near fine in stapled wrappers. Unless otherwise noted our first editions are first printings. First Edition. No Binding. Near Fine. Saturday Evening Post unknown
19293014New York: Jonathan Cape and Harrison Smith 1929. Very good/Very good. First state first printing of Faulkner's 1929 masterpiece. Black white and gray paper-covered boards white cloth spine stamped in black with a blue-gray top stain. One of only 1789 copies printed. Jacket has some fading to spine and small chips to top and bottom edges. Boards clean binding tight and top stain well preserved. Interior clean and free of any marks. First state of jacket showing a $3.00 price for "Humanity Uprooted." Copyright page shows "First Published 1929." Petersen A6.2a. Jonathan Cape and Harrison Smith unknown
192681010New York: Boni & Liveright 1926. First edition of Faulkner's first book in the rare first state dust jacket with An American Tragedy as the first of five titles listed on the rear jacket panel. Octavo original cloth. Bookplate near fine in a very good dust jacket with some toning to the spine and some chipping to the extremities. Housed in a custom clamshell box. Rare and desirable. Faulkner's first novel Soldiers' Pay 1926 is among the most memorable works to emerge from the First World War. Through the story of a wounded veteran's homecoming it examines the impact of soldiers' return from war on the people-particularly the women-who were left behind Boni & Liveright hardcover books
195746671New York:: Random House 1957. First edition. publisher's cloth in dust jacket. A near fine copy with some very faint browning to the front endsheet in a very good jacket with one internal tape repair. . 8vo. Inscribed by William Faulkner to Sally and Duncan Emerich "sincerely and gratefully and au bon retour." Also signed and dated by Faulkner on the title page as was his custom. Duncan Emerich was U.S. Cultural Affairs Officer in Greece in 1957 during a visit by Faulkner to that country. With the book comes a seven-page dittoed report of that visit by Emerich and 14 8 x 10" glossy photographs of Faulkner with various citizens and students. Random House, hardcover
1879132619Exeter: 1879. Exquisitely illuminated album commemorating the overturning of a miscarriage of justice Handsomely bound and illuminated presentation album one of just two copies presented to honour the work of solicitor and county clerk Ralph Sanders one of two men instrumental in reversing the miscarriage of justice in the case of Edmund Galley who became an international cause célèbre after being wrongfully convicted of murder and transported to Australia in 1836. On 28 July 1836 Edmund Galley alias "Dick Turpin" was tried at the Exeter assizes for the murder of one Jonathan May a wealthy farmer; Sanders was present at his trial. Convicted through mistaken identity he was first sentenced to death but a number of junior barristers convinced of Galley's innocence succeeded in commuting his sentence to life imprisonment. Galley spent two years incarcerated on the Ganymede a floating prison hulk on the Thames before being transported to Australia sailing on 12 May 1839 as one of 240 convicts aboard the Parkfield which docked in Port Jackson New South Wales on 1 September. Galley served over forty years of labour first as part of a chain gang assigned to work at Cooks River then as a farm servant to Thomas Waugh. In 1846 he became a ticket-of-leave man - allowed to seek another master on the proviso that he remained within a certain district and reported regularly to the police - and chose to settle in the Southern Tablelands. He worked as a horse driver for William Howell of Burrowa in the Yass District then as a farm servant for a Dr O'Brian of Illalong near the village of Binalong and finally as a shepherd in Bendinine employed by one of New South Wales's biggest farmers Henry Brown see Lambert p. 133. Extraordinarily Galley's case continued to garner international attention over the decades: newspapers in Australia New Zealand and even those in the United States and England - despite his far-flung exile - revisited the details of his trial and advocated his innocence. Moreover Galley's "excellent character" and status as "an upright man so impressed his employers. that they agitated" in his favour putting pressure on the English Home Office to revisit the case Australian Town and Country Journal 18 October 1879 p. 17. In May 1877 Galley sent a letter of petition to the Home Secretary which further excited public interest and which prompted Sanders and Latimer to take up his cause once more. Their efforts culminated in 1879 in a remarkable example of persistence in the pursuit of justice. Pardoned on 26 July 1879 Galley aged 80 received £1000 compensation for his unjust conviction. His free pardon was announced widely in the Australian press see the aforementioned Australian Town and Country Journal which included a stately full-length portrait of Galley alongside their article and The Sydney Morning Herald for 18 October 1879 as examples. In acknowledgement of the central part that both Sanders and Latimer played in procuring Galley's pardon "a number of young men in the city of Exeter determined to prepare and sign an Address expressing their appreciation of the efforts of these gentlemen and they quietly proceeded without the gentlemen concerned gaining the slightest inkling of what was intended until the movement was complete. Messrs. Latimer and Sanders were then asked to each accept a volume containing the addresses and the names as a Memento of Galley's release. The addresses were beautifully illuminated by Mr. F. Faulkner White and the names of the subscribers written by the same gentleman adorned the subsequent pages of the book. Each volume was handsomely bound by Mr. Henry Harris of Longbrook-street" The Daily Western Times 30 January 1880 and presented at the Athenaeum on Wednesday 28 January 1880 at a meeting of the subscribers which included persons of every class and political allegiance. Provenance: from the library of Richard S. Lambert author of the work presently offered with the Memento The Innocence of Edmund Galley. The other copy of this album was inscribed to Thomas Latimer publisher of The Daily Western Times who alongside Sanders was chiefly responsible for procuring Galley's eventual pardon over 40 years later. Large quarto 365 x 275 mm. Contents comprising 14 vellum leaves heavily illuminated by F. Faulkner White each with a tissue guard with Gothic-style calligraphic text surrounded by multicoloured floral and decorative borders. Title leaf with small oval albumen photograph of the recipient Ralph Sanders mounted; 3-leaf testimonial of appreciation and list of the 12 members of the committee that worked to free Galley; remaining leaves recording the names of the 342 citizens of Exeter; 1 folding printed broadside tipped in to second blank titled "A Memento of the Galley Case. Presentation to Messrs. Thomas Latimer and Ralph Sanders Re-printed from The Daily Western Times of Friday January 30 1880" providing an account of the case and the creation of the memento. Finely bound by H. Harris of Exeter c.1880 in contemporary red morocco gilt smooth spine separated by dot rolls and double fillets floral motifs to compartments triple fillet to boards enclosing elaborately decorated brown onlay frames roundels at each corner with vellum onlays front board with two additional vellum onlays bearing the coat of arms of Great Britain and date title lettered to brown onlay ceremonial ribbon in central panel of the same marbled endpapers board edges inner dentelles and edges gilt. With a limp red morocco dust jacket gilt double fillet frame to boards title to front in gilt Gothic type. Together with a very good copy of the first edition of Richard S. Lambert's The Innocence of Edmund Galley London: Newnes n.d. but 1936 in the dust jacket. Hand written note on lined paper copying out text of an inscription on a salver presented to Thomas Latimer laid in. Memento: binding discreetly refurbished and inner hinges repaired binder's ticket to front pastedown a little foxing to broadside with small tear to central fold first tissue guard loose with tape repair to verso a few guards foxed and with some edge wear. A near-fine copy the dust jacket a rare survival spine and extremities expertly restored and inner flaps reattached. See the online British Convict transportation register for further details of the Parkfield and its voyage. hardcover
192669731New York:: Boni & Liveright 1926. First edition. publisher's cloth in dust jacket. A bright fresh near fine copy with the remnants of a tiny bookseller's ticket to the rear pastedown. The dust jacket is tanned on the spine so that the yellow ink in the title lettering author's name and imprint is barely legible. There is some chipping to the top of the front and back panels and the extremities of the spine; and some splits at the folds. The front and rear panels are bright and unfaded. A good to very good example of an uncommon jacket. . 8vo. Author's first novel. Boni & Liveright, hardcover
192681010New York: Boni & Liveright 1926. First edition of Faulkner's first book in the rare first state dust jacket with An American Tragedy as the first of five titles listed on the rear jacket panel. Octavo original cloth. Bookplate near fine in a very good dust jacket with some toning to the spine and some chipping to the extremities. Housed in a custom clamshell box. Rare and desirable. Faulkner’s first novel Soldiers’ Pay 1926 is among the most memorable works to emerge from the First World War. Through the story of a wounded veteran’s homecoming it examines the impact of soldiers’ return from war on the people―particularly the women―who were left behind Boni & Liveright hardcover