Fix Bayonets

John W. THOMASON

Item#: 86112 We're sorry, this item has been sold

Fix Bayonets

FIRST EDITION OF THOMASON’S FIX BAYONET’S!, WITH DOZENS OF ILLUSTRATIONS AFTER HIS WORLD WAR I BATTLEFIELD SKETCHES

THOMASON, John W. Fix Bayonets! New York and London: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1926. Quarto, original half green cloth.

First edition of this book of stories drawn from the World War I experiences of a U.S. Marine Corps captain, with dozens of illustrations after drawings Thomason made at the Front.

This book is a collection of short stories about the exploits of the 1st Battalion, 5th Regiment, United States Marine Corps during World War I. The author, John W. Thomason, Jr., was a captain and drew from his own experiences at Bellau Wood, Soissons, Blanc Mount, and elsewhere. Military historian Cyril Falls initially called it “the best American book on the War” and later amended his opinion to call it “one of the best books of any nationality on the War.” He wrote: “The 4th Brigade of the United States Army was composed of Marines, the bulk of them Regulars with considerable service and a very high standard of training. The book… has great power, a sense of beauty amid horror, and true humour.” He also praised Thomason’s “rough and hasty sketches, many of them made in action on scraps of paper” (Falls, 81). Without rare original dust jacket. Bookplate of Clayton Knight and Katharine Sturgis. Knight was a prominent World War I pilot and Greenwich Village artist. He was also a co-founder of the Clayton Knight Committee, which was established in 1940 to covertly recruit and transport Americans up to Canada to fight for the Allies against Germany and Japan while the United States was still officially neutral. The endeavor was completely illegal and the committee was shut down several times by the State Department and the FBI, only to reemerge right up until America declared war. Interestingly, Knight and his wife, Katherine Sturgis, were also the parents of Eloise illustrator Hilary Knight. Bookseller ticket.

A few spots of soiling to interior, rear inner paper hinge split, only light rubbing and soiling to binding. A near-fine copy with an interesting provenance.

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