“AS CLEAR AND CRISP AND PERFECTLY SHAPED AS ICICLES”: SCARCE ASSOCIATION COPY OF HEMINGWAY’S MEN WITHOUT WOMEN
HEMINGWAY, Ernest. Men Without Women. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1927. Octavo, original black cloth, gold paper labels, top edge orange, original dust jacket. Housed in custom chemise and slipcase.
First edition, first issue, of this collection of Hemingway’s stories—“as sharp as splinters of glass” (Time)—an association copy from the library of Hemingway scholar and friend Fraser Drew, in rare first-issue dust jacket.
The 14 stories in this early collection “are as clear and crisp and perfectly shaped as icicles, as sharp as splinters of glass. It is impossible to read them without realizing that seldom if ever before has a writer been able to cut so deeply into life” (Time). Included are “The Killers,” “Ten Indians,” “Today is Friday” and “Hills Like White Elephants.” First issue, printed on heavy stock (overall weight of 15-1/2 ounces), in first issue dust jacket, with plain orange bands across the front, and two errors on the front inner flap. With four stories published for the first time. Hanneman A7a. Bruccoli & Clark I:178. With bookplate of Professor Fraser Drew of the University of Buffalo in New York. As a young teacher, Drew wrote a letter to which Hemingway responded kindly. This was somewhat unusual as Hemingway could be quite cold or even nasty with correspondents. Eventually, Hemingway invited Drew to visit him in Havana. On April 8, 1955, one year after Hemingway won the Nobel for literature, Drew and Hemingway spent a long afternoon discussing literature and teaching, later recounted by Drew in his article “Unedited Notes on a Visit to Finca Vigia” (in Bruccoli, Conversations With Ernest Hemingway, 89-98), an account remarkable for its portrayal of Hemingway’s modesty and generosity. Trace of label removal to front pastedown.
Book fine; lightest soiling to bright about-fine dust jacket. An exceptional association copy.