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Festival Art and Books
28 FelindreMachynllethSY20 9DZUnited Kingdom
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+447748980700Mark Faith
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USD$1,902

Description

Allen & Unwin, 1974 4th printing of the 1969 3 in 1, Deluxe Indian paper edition. 4th printing late the same year, but the 3rd and 4th printings are more scarce for some reason? They may have increased the print runs significantly by the 5th printing. True fine book with unique 1st State slipcase, one of a kind. In box not slipcase. I believe the 3rd printing was issued in a slipcase, like 1st and 2nd printing, but there are no A& U records to confirm, only what appears on the market. Bookstores or later owners may have swapped them around sourcing any available box. 3rd slipcases may have end up swapped onto the more scarce 1st and 2nd. I've seen and sold 1974 3rd printings with slipcases and boxes. I've not see many 1974 4th printings. I believe the 4th 1974 printing was the first to come in a special LotR box with label, likely released 1975. This example supports it as this slipcase is paper covered, not vinyl. This must be the first ever box as they switch to hard wearing vinyl as with the deluxe Hobbits. The first 1976 Hobbit had a paper covered box like this, in which must have been the prototype style being developed? The 1976 Hobbit, likely produced late 1975, the same time they were designing new boxes for the LotR deluxe. 5th printing 1976 boxes and later are vinyl. Does it matter? Yes, new collectors are always interested in printing errors which are common, but planned production variations called states are usually in low numbers are truly rare. Like the different states of first edition slipcases, the early and first boxes are extremely valuable as much as the books. Keen collectors want what no one else has. I've never seen one like this one in 22 years and given there is unlikely to be a flood of them, its very valuable.

About The Lord of the Rings

Book One: The Fellowship of the Ring The story begins in the Shire, a peaceful region where Frodo Baggins inherits a mysterious ring from his uncle, Bilbo. Gandalf the wizard discovers the ring is the One Ring, forged by the dark lord Sauron to dominate Middle-earth. Frodo is tasked with taking the ring to Rivendell, where a council forms the Fellowship: Frodo, Gandalf, Aragorn, Legolas, Gimli, Boromir, Sam, Merry, and Pippin. Together, they set out to destroy the ring in Mount Doom, the only place it can be unmade. Their journey is fraught with peril, and the Fellowship eventually splinters when Boromir succumbs to the ring's temptation, and Frodo decides to continue the quest with Sam. Book Two: The Two Towers The narrative follows two main threads. Frodo and Sam traverse the dangerous lands toward Mordor, guided by Gollum, a former ring-bearer corrupted by the ring's power. Meanwhile, Aragorn, Legolas, and Gimli pursue the orcs who have kidnapped Merry and Pippin. The hobbits escape and find themselves in the ancient forest of Fangorn, where they encounter Treebeard the Ent. Gandalf, reborn as Gandalf the White, reunites with the group. The novel climaxes with battles at Helm's Deep and Isengard, and Frodo's capture by orcs after being betrayed by Gollum. Book Three: The Return of the King Aragorn claims his destiny as the true king of Gondor, leading forces against Sauron's armies. Frodo and Sam, enduring immense hardship, infiltrate Mordor and destroy the ring, aided unwittingly by Gollum. Sauron’s power collapses, peace returns, and Aragorn is crowned. Frodo, burdened by his trauma, sails to the Undying Lands with Bilbo, Gandalf, and the elves, leaving Sam to carry on in the Shire.