First edition, first printing, of the "first full-length book Hemingway has ever written about his own country and his own people... It is Key West, apparently, that remains America in cross-section to him: the noisy, shabby, deeply moving rancor and tumult of all those human wrecks" (Kazin).
This tale of a smuggler running contraband between Cuba and Florida was written during Hemingway's breaks from fighting in the Spanish Civil War. It was initially conceived as two separate stories: Part I first appeared as "One Trip Across", Cosmopolitan, April 1934, Part II as "The Tradesman's Return", Esquire, February 1936. The novel served the basis for the 1944 film with the screenplay by William Faulkner.
Octavo. Original black cloth, spine lettered in gilt on green ground, front cover stamped in gilt with facsimile of author's signature, top edge beige, top and bottom edges trimmed, fore edge untrimmed. With dust jacket.
Cloth sharp, contents clean; jacket fresh, extremities lightly rubbed and creased, couple of marks on verso, small bookseller's ticket on rear flap, unclipped: a fine copy in near-fine jacket.
Grissom A.14.1.a; Hanneman A14a. Alfred Kazin, New York Herald Tribune, 17 Oct. 1937.