“HOW CAN WE BUT HELP LOVE THE PLACES WHICH HAVE MADE US SUFFER?”: EXCEPTIONAL SET OF FIRST EDITIONS OF DURRELL’S ALEXANDRIA QUARTET
DURRELL, Lawrence. The Alexandria Quartet: Justine, Balthazar, Mountolive, Clea. London: Faber and Faber, 1957-60. Four volumes. Octavo, original red, blue, yellow, and orange cloth, original dust jackets. Housed in a custom slipcase.
First editions of all four novels in the Alexandria Quartet, with laid-in publisher’s slip printed “With the Author’s Compliments.” A splendid set in scarce original dust jackets.
Durrell’s landmark tetralogy, a piercing view of love in Alexandrian society in the years before WWII, shimmers as if capturing “the landscape of a dream.” The first of his four novels Justine “demands comparison with the best books of our century.” Balthazar continues Durrell’s epic series with “a spontaneous, resourceful new beauty” and, in the third novel Mountolive, Durrell again creates a “work of splendid craft and troubling veracity.” The tetralogy’s final novel Clea completes Durrell’s stated design of modeling “the series on ‘the relativity proposition’ in physics”— altogether achieving “a spontaneous, resourceful new beauty” (New York Times). As Durrell also noted, his novels’ greater purpose was an investigation into the nature of fiction itself, centered in “an investigation of modern love” (Parker & Kermode, 370). “We cannot see the whole of any given character or event in one novel alone. Each novel is meaningless on its own” (Burgess, 99 Novels, 67). Justine with laid-in publisher’s slip (4 by 5-1/2 inches) printed “With the author’s compliments.”
Clea with very small minor abrasion to back panel; very small tear to back panel of Justine. An exceptional set in fine condition.