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Virtual Book Fair Exclusive

Ulysses (First edition - Large Paper copy)

Joyce, James

$39,500
  • Condition: Fine
  • Edition: First edition
  • Publisher: Shakespeare and Company
  • Location: Paris
  • Date: 1922
  • Seller SKU: 6156
Paris: Shakespeare and Company, 1922. First edition. Fine. Exquisitely bound in full navy morocco by the Chelsea bindery. Gilt details on the boards, spine and turn ins, top edge gilt, silk moire end papers and paste-downs, original front wrapper bound in. One of 150 large paper copies, this copy number 231, originally sold to John Clark. Binding Fine. Internal contents are generally in excellent condition, a bit of toning to the front wrapper and the occasional marginal spot.

Joyce's masterwork of modernism, one of the great books of the 20th century. Though it follows a single day in the life of Dubliner Leopold Bloom—June 16th, a day which has since become a worldwide holiday—Ulysses' complex structure is actually inspired by Homer's Odyssey. The book's stream of consciousness prose and its experimental nature were groundbreaking, and many of the techniques Joyce used have since become standard fare. Ulysses took Joyce over seven years to write, and the story of its publication became an epic in itself. The work was first released in serial from 1918 to 1920 in the magazine "The Little Review," and published in Paris in a limited first edition in 1922 by Sylvia Beach, the owner of the Shakespeare and Company bookstore. It was not, however, released in the UK and United States, where the book had quickly been banned. In fact, copies were smuggled into both countries until a landmark obscenity trial cleared the book for American publication in 1934. Joyce claimed that he "put in so many enigmas and puzzles [into Ulysses] that it will keep the professors busy for centuries arguing over what I meant, and that's the only way of insuring one's immortality." Time has certainly proven him correct. "Ulysses is the most important contribution that has been made to fictional literature in the twentieth century. It will immortalize its author with the same certainty that Gargantua and Pantagruel immortalized Rabelais, and "The Brothers Karamazov" Dostoevsky. It is likely that there is no one writing English today that could parallel Joyce's feat..." (Contemporary NY Times Review, 1922).

Slocum and Cahoon A17. Fine.

Offered by Whitmore Rare Books

Whitmore Rare Books
Specializing in Childrens' Literature, Fine Bindings, First Editions, Illustrated Books, Literature, Modern Firsts, Signed Books and Women's Studies.
Whitmore Rare Books is a traditional retail shop in "Old Town" Pasadena open from 9-5 Monday - Saturday.
Contact the Seller
Daniel B. Whitmore
121 E. Union St.
Pasadena, California 91103
Phone/Text: (626) 714-7720
15 day return guarantee, with full refund if an item arrives damaged or not matching the description.
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