“THEY GOT THEMSELVES UP KILLINGLY”: EDWARD GOREY’S FIFTH ADULT ALPHABET, THE GLORIOUS NOSEBLEED, SIGNED BY HIM
GOREY, Edward. The Glorious Nosebleed: Fifth Alphabet. New York: Dodd, Mead, (1974). Small, slim octavo, original pictorial paper-covered boards, original dust jacket, original publisher's slipcase.
Signed limited first edition, number 164 of 250 copies signed by Gorey.
Edmund Wilson described Gorey's work as "surrealistic and macabre, amusing and somber, nostalgic and claustrophobic, poetic and poisoned." Gorey, known for his wry parodies of children's alphabet books, here takes on adverbs, providing a self-portrait in the letter Z. Gorey's is a "distinctive, instantly recognizable style: intricately detailed pen-and-ink drawings capture characters, fur-coated, turtle-necked, or dressed in 1920s or Edwardian garb, frozen in moments of stoicism. Somewhat Gothic and ostensibly grim, these images are usually accompanied by macabre stories of death, dread, and gore or by humorous verses detailing situations of horror" (Silvey, 278). Toledano A59b.
Fine condition.