"THE MOST GIFTED PROSE WRITER OF HIS GENERATION": FIRST EDITION OF HENRY GREEN'S "GREATEST" NOVEL, PARTY GOING, IN ORIGINAL DUST JACKET
(YORKE, Henry) GREEN, Henry. Party Going. London: Hogarth Press, 1939. Octavo, original blue cloth, original dust jacket.
First edition of Party Going, "Green's masterpiece" (New York Times Book Review), published by Virginia and Leonard Woolf's famed Hogarth Press, in original dust jacket by modernist artist John Banting, a splendid copy.
Henry Green, the pseudonym of Henry Yorke, is regarded by many as "the most gifted prose writer of his generation" (V.S. Pritchett). "No one who has ever loved and tried to understand the secrets of writing as an art has ever surpassed Green" (Independent). Yet despite Green's "reputation as one of the most original and fascinating novelists of our time… he is probably one of the most neglected" (Holmesland, Critical Introduction, 1). Named one of Guardian newspaper's 100 Best Novels, Party Going follows "a group of bright young things… on their way to a house party in France, by train. But fog is rolling in from the Channel… So the party—quintessentially shallow, vapid and spoiled—holes up in the station hotel to wait for the fog to lift… [It] was published by Virginia and Leonard Woolf's imprint, Hogarth Press, in 1939, just before the outbreak of war. Within a few years it had acquired a distinguished retinue of literary admirers" (Guardian). The novel stands as "Green's masterpiece… fashioned in a slightly eccentric way that seemed to suggest the obliqueness, the fluidity, the improvised quality of life itself" (New York Times Book Review). To his biographer, "Party Going—among the funniest and most disturbing of Green's novels—is his greatest" (Treglown, Romancing, 104). First edition, first printing with no additional additions or printings stated. With dust jacket by artist John Banting. The creation of dust jacket covers "was a collaborative process between the Woolfs… designers include Duncan Grant, John Banting" and Vanessa Bell, Virginia Woolf's sister (Southworth, Leonard and Virginia Woolf, 197).
A fine copy.