“AN APOCALYPTIC POEM”: FIRST BOOK APPEARANCE OF THE BIRDS
DU MAURIER, Daphne. The Apple Tree. London: Victor Gollancz, 1952. Octavo, original red cloth, original dust jacket.
First edition of Du Maurier’s memorable collection of stories, featuring the first book appearance of “The Birds,” adapted to the screen by Hitchcock in the Oscar-nominated film starring Tippi Hedren in her feature film debut, in scarce dust jacket.
Published in 1952 amidst England’s difficult postwar years, this first edition of Du Maurier’s The Apple Tree is most famous for its story “The Birds,” which was adapted to the screen by Alfred Hitchcock in 1963. Du Maurier’s story is set in a coastal town where the family of a wounded war veteran is mysteriously attacked by a flock of birds. They begin to suspect the birds are massing for a full assault on England as “Du Maurier consciously plays on invasion fears aroused by the recently ended Second World War” (Guardian). Hitchcock, who already adapted two of Du Maurier’s works, Jamaica Inn (1939) and Rebecca (1940), relocated Du Maurier’s thriller to California in a film memorably described by Fellini as “an apocalyptic poem.” This scarce work also contains the novella “Monte Veritá” and the short stories “The Apple Tree,” “The Little Photographer,” “The Old Man” and “Kiss Me Again, Stranger,” with the latter story also popular in several television adaptations. Hubin, 128. Reilly, 511.
A fine copy.