“AFTER ALL, HE SAID TO HIMSELF, IT IS PROBABLY ONLY INSOMNIA. MANY MUST HAVE IT”: HEMINGWAY’S WINNER TAKE NOTHING, 1933
HEMINGWAY, Ernest. Winner Take Nothing. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1933. Octavo, original black cloth, original gold paper labels, original dust jacket.
First edition of arguably Hemingway’s finest collection of short stories, in original dust jacket.
This distinguished collection of 14 Hemingway stories includes “A Natural History of the Dead” and “‘After the Storm,’ which is more imaginative than anything Hemingway has hitherto written” (New York Times). Of particular importance is “what is perhaps Hemingway’s finest story ‘A Clean, Well-Lighted Place”— securing his reputation as “the modern American master of the short story.” Hemingway’s “epigraph to Winner Take Nothing… is perhaps the finest and most accurate brief description of Hemingway’s heroes, of what he set out to do in his best work and what in the main he accomplished” (McCormick, 55-6). Six of the 14 stories in this collection made their first appearance here (though the dust jacket claims nine). Hanneman A12a. Bruccoli & Clark I:179.
Book fine; good dust jacket with deep chips to corners, tape repairs to verso and tape repaired closed tear to front panel.