Without Feathers

Woody ALLEN   |   George SEGAL

Item#: 80570 We're sorry, this item has been sold

Without Feathers

“I KEEP WONDERING IF THERE IS AN AFTERLIFE, AND IF THERE IS WILL THEY BE ABLE TO BREAK A TWENTY?”: WITHOUT FEATHERS,INSCRIBED BY WOODY ALLEN AND ACTOR GEORGE SEGAL

ALLEN, Woody. Without Feathers. New York: Random House, (1975). Octavo, original half black cloth, original dust jacket.

First edition of Woody’s Allen’s timeless collection, boldly inscribed by him, “Dec 18—1978, To Don—Woody Allen,” along with an inscription by actor George Segal, “To Don—George Segal,” this scarce presentation copy believed inscribed by Allen and Segal, who both share a love for jazz, to fellow jazz musician and New Orleans banjo player Don Vappie.

This wonderful collection of Woody Allen’s early writings features brilliant short pieces such as “The Whore of Mensa,” “No Kaddish for Weinstein” and two one-act plays, Death and God. “‘I keep wondering if there is an afterlife, and if there is will they be able to break a twenty?’ Woody Allen memorably wrote in Without Feathers?. [where] his comic prose ranges from fractured Hasidic tales to ‘If the Impressionists Had Been Dentists” (New York Times). Also featured herein are comedic essays on subjects ranging from psychic phenomena, ballet, civil disobedience and slang to the true authorship of Shakespeare. This book’s recipient is very possibly Don Vappie, the famed New Orleans jazz musician and banjo player who shares a love for jazz with actor and banjo player George Segal and with Woody Allen, who regularly plays clarinet with his New Orleans Jazz Band.

A fine signed copy.

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