First edition, first printing, of Steinbeck's first "play novelette", an experimental literary form intended to be both a novella and a script for a play. Staged in Broadway on 23 November 1937, the story won the Drama Critics Circle Award for best play.
Based on Steinbeck's experience working with migrant farm workers in the 1910s, the novella is titled after Robert Burns's poem "To a Mouse". The book was "one of the first in a long line of 'experiments', a word he often used to identify a forthcoming project... [It] is a tightly drafted study of bindle stiffs whose dreams he intended to represent the universal longings for a home, 'the earth longings of a Lennie who was not to represent insanity at all but the inarticulate and powerful yearning of all men', he wrote his agent. Both the text and the critically acclaimed 1937 Broadway play... made Steinbeck a household name, assuring his popularity and, for some, his infamy. (The book's language shocked many, and it is still listed with frequency on lists of "objectionable reading" or "banned books" for secondary school students.)" (ANB).
This copy has all the requisite points of first printing: the copyright page giving the printer as J. J. Little and Ives Company rather than Haddon; the phrase "and only moved because the heavy hands were pendula" (p. 9, l. 20-1); a bullet point to the pagination of p. 88; and the dyed top edge, here faded but with traces remaining visible.
Octavo. Original buff cloth, spine and front cover lettered in buff on orange ground ruled in black, top edge blue. With dust jacket.
Title page printed in similar fashion as binding design.
Bump to spine ends, top edge dye faded, binder's glue residue visible at half-title gutter, contents clean; jacket unclipped, spine and panels toned, blue colour on front panel faded, a couple of nicks and short closed tears: a near-fine copy in very good jacket.
Goldstone & Payne A7a.