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The Sun Also Rises Ernest Hemingway
Classic
Fiction
Literature
USD$255,304

Description

First edition, first printing, first issue, with an unimpeachable example of the iconic jacket, bright, fine, and untouched by restoration or repair. Hemingway's second novel is a roman à clef, drawing on his and Hadley's tumultuous time in Paris in the 1920s. The book is dedicated to Hadley and quotes as its epigraph Gertrude Stein's enduring description of Hemingway and his peers as "a lost generation". "The Sun Also Rises did not rock the country, but it received a number of hat-in-the-air reviews and it soon became a handbook of conduct for the new generation... how much of the novel seems as marvelously fresh as when it first appeared! Count Mippipopolous, his wound, and his champagne; the old couple from Montana on their first trip abroad; the busload of Basque peasants; the whole beautiful episode of the fishing trip in the mountains, in the harsh sunlight, with bright water tumbling over the dam; then by contrast the dark streets of Pamplona crowded with riau-riau dancers, who formed a circle round Brett as if she were a revered witch - as indeed she was, and as Jake in a way was the impotent Fisher King ruling over a sterile land - in all this there is nothing that has gone bad and not a word to be changed after so many years. It is all carved in stone, bigger and truer than life; and it is the work of a man who, having ended his busy term of apprenticeship, was already a master at twenty-six" (Cowley, pp. 70-3). All the first issue points are present First edition, first printing, first issue, with an unimpeachable example of the iconic jacket, bright, fine, and untouched by restoration or repair. Hemingway's second novel is a roman à clef, drawing on his and Hadley's tumultuous time in Paris in the 1920s. The book is dedicated to Hadley and quotes as its epigraph Gertrude Stein's enduring description of Hemingway and his peers as "a lost generation". "The Sun Also Rises did not rock the country, but it received a number of hat-in-the-air reviews and it soon became a handbook of conduct for the new generation... how much of the novel seems as marvelously fresh as when it first appeared! Count Mippipopolous, his wound, and his champagne; the old couple from Montana on their first trip abroad; the busload of Basque peasants; the whole beautiful episode of the fishing trip in the mountains, in the harsh sunlight, with bright water tumbling over the dam; then by contrast the dark streets of Pamplona crowded with riau-riau dancers, who formed a circle round Brett as if she were a revered witch - as indeed she was, and as Jake in a way was the impotent Fisher King ruling over a sterile land - in all this there is nothing that has gone bad and not a word to be changed after so many years. It is all carved in stone, bigger and truer than life; and it is the work of a man who, having ended his busy term of apprenticeship, was already a master at twenty-six" (Cowley, pp. 70-3). All the first issue points are present for the book: "stoppped" on page 181, line 26; "down-staris" on page 169, line 34; and "BOOK THREE" instead of "BOOK III" (page [235]). On the jacket, Hemingway's earlier title is incorrectly cited as "In Our Times". READ MORE Octavo. Original black cloth, spine and front with gold labels lettered in black, fore edge untrimmed. With dust jacket, designed by Cleonike Damianakes. Housed in a custom tan morocco backed folding case. Trace spotting to endpapers only; jacket with absolutely minimal rubbing at extremities: a fine copy in like, unclipped jacket. Grissom A.6.1.a; Hanneman 6A. Malcolm Cowley, A Second Flowering, 1973.

About The Sun Also Rises

The Sun Also Rises is a novel by the American author Ernest Hemingway. The book's title is taken from Ecclesiastes and alludes to the disillusionment and moral erosion of the post-World War I generation. The novel tells the story of American expatriates living in Paris and their journey to Pamplona to watch the running of the bulls and the bullfights. One of Hemingway's most enduring works, it is notable for its sparse prose style and for introducing the label 'Lost Generation' to describe Hemingway and his contemporaries.