“PYLE WAS THE GREAT INNOVATOR”: HOWARD PYLE’S BOOK OF PIRATES, WONDERFULLY ILLUSTRATED
PYLE, Howard. Howard Pyle’s Book of Pirates. New York and London: Harper & Brothers, (1930). Folio (9-1/4 by 12-1/2 inches), original half black cloth, tan paper boards, front cover with mounted color gravure, pictorial front free endpaper, original dust jacket with mounted color gravure, original cardboard box with paper label.
Later edition of Pyle’s colorful book of pirate adventures, profusely illustrated with 36 full-page plates, 12 in color, and numerous in-text line drawings, along with contains two sketches by N.C. Wyeth, reproduced for the first time, in scarce original dust jacket and cardboard box.
“Pyle was the great innovator who revolutionized American book illustration in the late 19th century. Before 1880 there were no American artists comparable to the great British illustrators… In less than 30 years, Howard Pyle not only created the Golden Age of American illustration, but also ensured that a large group of younger artists and disciples would carry on with similar work well into the 20th century” (Dalby, 35). His pirates are “not just historical puppets;” rather they are “made flesh and blood again” (Johnson, Foreword, xi). They are the product of an unusually active mind, “imagined,” in Pyle’s own words, “by a Quaker gentleman in the farm lands of Pennsylvania.” “Some of the factual and fictional pirates and seamen Pyle depicts include Blueskin, Tom Chist, Captain Scarfield, Captain Brand, Blackbeard, Jack Ballister, Jonathan Rugg and Captain Robertson Keitt” (Cotsen). N.C. Wyeth’s contributions are mounted on pages 232 and 239. With Harper’s code “K-E” on the copyright page indicating publication in October 1930. First published in April 1921. Embellished with illustrated initials, head- and tailpieces. With laid-in publisher’s advertisement and order form for “Adventure” books. Cotsen 9074. See BAL 16416. Gift inscription dated year of publication.
Interior fresh with only lightest scattered foxing; slight edge-wear, small closed tear to upper edge of front dust jacket panel, some soiling, edge-wear to box. A beautiful near-fine copy.