New York: Random House, 1965. Very Good/Very Good. New York: Random House, ca. 1965. Later printing. Signed by Ralph Ellison to poet, Professor, and intellectual confidante Michael S. Harper with inscription, "To Michael Harper who has made this here book much better known. With thanks for his insights, Ralph Ellison." Octavo. 439 pp. Illustrated dust jacket with $5.95 price intact. Black and tan boards stamped in white and gray. Jacket chipped with several short tears along edges; general rubbing and scuffing. Boards show light shelfwear. Binding sound. Professor Brown's ownership stamp to front free endpaper; interior unfortunately free of other markings; a Very Good copy. Harper's Dear John, Dear Coltrane was reviewed in Time Magazine in 1970, the same issue to feature Ellison's essay, "What America Would Be Like Without Blacks," and the two authors shared a passion for jazz, literature, and interrogating the American experience. In an interview, Harper clarified that they…