First Printing. Octavo (21.25cm); black cloth and pale yellow paper-covered boards, with titling and author's initials stamped in gilt on spine and front cover; dustjacket; [viii],[3],4-471,[1]pp. Remainder stamp to upper edge of textblock, with just a hint of foxing to text edges (though clean internally); Near Fine. Dustjacket is unclipped (priced $12.95), showing a few pinpoint rubbed spots and a few very tiny tears to extremities, a hint of foxing on verso, and a faint diagonal crease to lower front flap; Near Fine, with the spine lettering notably unfaded. McCarthy's semi-autobiographical fourth novel set in the early 1950's, following Cornelius Suttree, who has repudiated his life of privilege to spend his life as a fisherman on the Tennessee River. Though now widely considered one of McCarthy's most serious and ambitious works, drawing comparisons to Ulysses, Cannery Row, and The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, fewer than 3,000 copies of the first printing were sold at the time of publication prior to being remaindered.