"AN IMMEDIATE SYMBOL OF AN AGE": THE SUN ALSO RISES, EARLY EDITION IN SCARCE ART DECO DUST JACKET
HEMINGWAY, Ernest. The Sun Also Rises. New York: Grosset & Dunlap, (1926, but circa 1933). Octavo, original lime green cloth, original dust jacket.
Early edition—published by Grosset & Dunlap—of what is not only one of Hemingway’s first novels but also one of his greatest, a book that made him "an immediate symbol of an age," in the Art Deco dust jacket depicting a flapper in a sleeveless dress that was reputedly Hemingway's favorite jacket among all his books, and which he preferred to the jacket on the original Scribner's edition.
An immediate success, The Sun Also Rises was published on October 22, 1926 in a first printing of only 5090 copies. A second printing of 2000 copies was ordered in November, and by mid-December, both the first and second printings had sold out. By 1961 it was estimated that the novel had sold over one million copies. "The emergence of Hemingway… gave the Modern Movement one of its few men of action… [In The Sun Also Rises] the post-war disillusion and the post-war liberation are united in the physical enjoyment of living and the pains of love. Perhaps that is what expatriation was about… No other writer stepped so suddenly into fame, or destroyed with such insouciance so many other writers or ways of writing or became such an immediate symbol of an age" (Connolly 50). An odd variant, retaining the spelling error on p. 169, but misprinting "Hemmingway" on the spine. First published by Scribner's in 1926; this edition is also preceded by the Modern Library edition of 1930. See Grissom A.6.1.l, the 1930 first Grosset & Dunlap edition, in a different binding and dust jacket; see Hanneman A6c.
Book about-fine, cloth clean; unrestored dust jacket with mild toning to spine, short split along front flap fold, some other minor edge-wear, extremely good. An uncommon edition of this Hemingway classic.