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Book House in Dinkytown
1316 4th Street SoutheastMinneapolisMN 55414United States
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USD$1,750

Description

First American Editions. Complete in three volumes. Houghton Mifflin Co., 1954/1955/1956; correct points on title and copyright pages. Fold-out maps fixed to rear paste-downs. VG-/VG hardcovers, missing the dust jackets. Bindings are tight, sturdy, and square; minor wear to edges of blue cloth boards; mild sunning to spines of first two volumes, gilt titling remains bold on all volumes; small previous owner inscription on each front paste-down carefully rubbed off, faint blue-tinted patch in middle all that remains; maps and text very good throughout. No dust jackets. Due to the size/weight of this set extra charges will apply for international and/or expedited shipping. Ships same or next business day from Dinkytown in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

About The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers

The second volume of J.R.R. Tolkien's high fantasy adventure The Lord of the Rings, 'The Two Towers', continues the story of the quest to destroy the One Ring. The fellowship is scattered, and its members take different paths in order to combat the spread of darkness by the evil Sauron and his allies. New alliances are formed and epic battles are fought, setting the stage for the story's climax in the final volume.

Identifying the First Edition of The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers

The primary method to authenticate first editions of The Lord of the Rings involves inspecting the publication details within each volume. Look for the publisher's name, typically stated as "George Allen & Unwin Ltd," on the title page. Verify the dates on the back of the title page: the initial two books should bear the 1954 date, while the third should display 1955, without any subsequent dates. A common query we encounter concerns editions where later books in the series are listed on the dust jacket. This situation often prompts the question, "Can it still be a first edition?" For many books—such as James Bond novels or the Harry Potter series—it's crucial to ensure that the dust jacket or the author's list of works doesn't mention books published afterward, as this would indicate that your copy isn't a first edition. However, The Lord of the Rings deviates significantly from this standard. As the series was originally conceived as a single lengthy book and divided into three due to financial considerations, the publishers anticipated subsequent releases and utilized the dust jacket flaps to advertise them.