“MAY NO WANTON HAND EVER DISTURB HIS REMAINS!”: FIRST EDITION OF COOPER’S THE PRAIRIE, IN ORIGINAL BOARDS
COOPER, James Fenimore. The Prairie; A Tale. Philadelphia: Carey, Lea & Carey, 1827. Two volumes. Octavo, original blue paper boards respined with original paper spines and paper spine labels neatly laid down. Housed in custom chemises and half morocco slipcase.
Preferred first American edition of the fifth and final work in Cooper’s acclaimed Leatherstocking Tales, in original boards.
Though published before The Pathfinder (1841) and The Deerslayer (1842), this book is the fifth and final installment in James Fenimore Cooper's Leatherstocking Tales. In it, the character of the trapper meets his death on the Great Plains, resolving his arc. Cooper also revisits some of his classic themes, including the noble savage, westward expansion, and the roles of women. To this day, Cooper remains one of America's best-loved authors. "Cooper's achievement… was sustained almost to the close of a hectic, crowded career. His worldwide fame attests his power of invention, for his novels have been popular principally for their variety of dramatic incidents, vivid depiction of romantic scenes and situations, and adventurous plots" (Hart, 165). With cancel slips affixed to copyright notices as called for by Spiller & Blackburn. With publisher's advertisements at the front of Volume I, present in some copies according to BAL (no priority). This preferred first American edition was preceded by the Paris and London editions of the same year. Spiller & Blackburn 8. BAL 3836. Bookplate; early owner ink signatures to title pages.
Some mild foxing to text, spotting to boards, a bit of rubbing to corners. A nicely restored copy, extremely good, in original boards.