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Auction archive: Lot number 221

The Torrents of Spring

Estimate
US$2,000 - US$3,000
Price realised:
n. a.
Auction archive: Lot number 221

The Torrents of Spring

Estimate
US$2,000 - US$3,000
Price realised:
n. a.
Beschreibung:

Title: The Torrents of Spring Author: Hemingway, Ernest Place: New York Publisher: Scribner's Date: 1926 Description: Greenish-black cloth lettered in orange-red, pictorial jacket. First Edition, later issue jacket (circa 1929 with description for A Farewell to Arms on inside rear flap). Hemingway’s first novel, printed in an edition of only 1250 copies, the first of his books to be published by Scribner's. Hemingway began the book while under contract to Boni & Liveright, who had published his first book, the collection of stories “In Our Time.” Hemingway was dismayed by the book’s lack of commercial success and blamed the publisher's poor promotion and use of blurbs by more famous writers -- most especially Sherwood Anderson, who was then the dean of American letters and Boni & Liveright's bestselling author. Hemingway felt the blurbs were off-putting and hurt, rather than helped, his book. Although he was under contract to Boni & Liveright for two more books, Hemingway contrived a plan to free himself from the obligation: his contract stated that if Boni rejected one of his books, he would be free to terminate the contract and take his writing elsewhere. As such, he conceived of a short, comic novel which would lampoon Sherwood Anderson's most recent book, “Dark Laughter”, and which would be unpublishable by Boni, thus freeing Hemingway to go elsewhere. Hemingway wrote “The Torrents of Spring” in a few short weeks in November, 1925 and submitted it to Boni & Liveright where it was promptly, as he had expected, rejected. It was then that Hemingway moved to Scribner's, beginning his long association with the legendary editor Maxwell Perkins. F. Scott Fitzgerald later called The Torrents of Spring "the best comic [novel] ever written by an American." Hanneman A4.A. Owner’s two signatures (dated 1926) on front pastedown, and another later signature. Lot Amendments Condition: Minor stains to darkened jacket spine, short chips to edges, price clipped; cloth spine a bit faded, small chip to head, ends and corners bumped, a few tiny white spots on front cover; front hinge cracking, faint offsetting to endpapers and leaf facing half-title; about very good in a very good jacket. Item number: 192338

Auction archive: Lot number 221
Auction:
Datum:
12 Jun 2008
Auction house:
PBA Galleries
1233 Sutter Street
San Francisco, CA 94109
United States
pba@pbagalleries.com
+1 (0)415 9892665
+1 (0)415 9891664
Beschreibung:

Title: The Torrents of Spring Author: Hemingway, Ernest Place: New York Publisher: Scribner's Date: 1926 Description: Greenish-black cloth lettered in orange-red, pictorial jacket. First Edition, later issue jacket (circa 1929 with description for A Farewell to Arms on inside rear flap). Hemingway’s first novel, printed in an edition of only 1250 copies, the first of his books to be published by Scribner's. Hemingway began the book while under contract to Boni & Liveright, who had published his first book, the collection of stories “In Our Time.” Hemingway was dismayed by the book’s lack of commercial success and blamed the publisher's poor promotion and use of blurbs by more famous writers -- most especially Sherwood Anderson, who was then the dean of American letters and Boni & Liveright's bestselling author. Hemingway felt the blurbs were off-putting and hurt, rather than helped, his book. Although he was under contract to Boni & Liveright for two more books, Hemingway contrived a plan to free himself from the obligation: his contract stated that if Boni rejected one of his books, he would be free to terminate the contract and take his writing elsewhere. As such, he conceived of a short, comic novel which would lampoon Sherwood Anderson's most recent book, “Dark Laughter”, and which would be unpublishable by Boni, thus freeing Hemingway to go elsewhere. Hemingway wrote “The Torrents of Spring” in a few short weeks in November, 1925 and submitted it to Boni & Liveright where it was promptly, as he had expected, rejected. It was then that Hemingway moved to Scribner's, beginning his long association with the legendary editor Maxwell Perkins. F. Scott Fitzgerald later called The Torrents of Spring "the best comic [novel] ever written by an American." Hanneman A4.A. Owner’s two signatures (dated 1926) on front pastedown, and another later signature. Lot Amendments Condition: Minor stains to darkened jacket spine, short chips to edges, price clipped; cloth spine a bit faded, small chip to head, ends and corners bumped, a few tiny white spots on front cover; front hinge cracking, faint offsetting to endpapers and leaf facing half-title; about very good in a very good jacket. Item number: 192338

Auction archive: Lot number 221
Auction:
Datum:
12 Jun 2008
Auction house:
PBA Galleries
1233 Sutter Street
San Francisco, CA 94109
United States
pba@pbagalleries.com
+1 (0)415 9892665
+1 (0)415 9891664
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