"PRETTY CLOSE TO BEING FLAWLESS… A WORK OF ART": FIRST EDITION OF DAPHNE DU MAURIER'S JAMAICA INN
DU MAURIER, Daphne. Jamaica Inn. London: Victor Gollancz, 1936. Octavo, original blue cloth, original dust jacket.
First edition of Du Maurier's breakthrough novel and first mystery, published two years before Rebecca, a haunting and "beautiful blending of movement and suspense" (New York Times), basis for the 1939 Hitchcock film starring Maureen O'Hara and Charles Laughton, in original dust jacket.
Jamaica Inn marked Du Maurier's "coming of age as a novelist… it comes pretty close to being flawless… in its beautiful blending of movement and suspense, the story of Mary Yellen's adventure at Jamaica Inn is a work of art" (New York Times). Appearing two years before Rebecca (1938), Jamaica Inn was her first novel to be issued by the prestigious firm of Victor Gollancz, who early "recognized that her strengths lay in narrative drive and the evocation of atmosphere. He encouraged her to develop these and the result was Jamaica Inn" (ODNB). "Her dark, macabre tales of Gothic romance and revenge have enthralled millions" (Telegraph). To literary scholar Nina Auerbach, Du Maurier remains "a complex, powerful, unique writer, so unorthodox that no critical tradition, from formalism to feminism, can digest her" (Daphne Du Maurier, 10). Reilly, 510-13. Magill II:551-56. Hubin II, I:252. Steinbrunner & Penzler, 135-37.
Text generally fresh with foxing to fore-edge; slight toning to spine, light expert restoration to dust jacket.