“LET ME LIVE OUT MY YEARS IN HEAT OF BLOOD!”: FIRST EDITION OF JACK LONDON’S MARTIN EDEN, 1909
LONDON, Jack. Martin Eden. New York: Macmillan, 1909. Octavo, original blue cloth.
First edition of Jack London’s moving autobiographical novel exposing the perils of success, an excellent copy in the original cloth.
Though known best for his beloved novels, The Call of the Wild (1903) and White Fang (1906), Jack London was anything but a contented novelist. Torn between a life of adventure and one of letters, he chose both. In fact, his “entire life might be accurately described in terms of an alternating pattern of work and escape. Perhaps the supreme irony was that while he chose the career of writing as a means to escape the toilsome underworld of the ‘workbeast,’ he was ultimately driven to work himself to death. His spectacular success story—as fantastic as Jay Gatsby’s rise from rags to riches—was an epitome of the American Dream. Notably, a decade and a half before F. Scott Fitzgerald created his famous character, London had written a mordant critique of the myth of success in his autobiographical bildungsroman, Martin Eden” (ANB). With ten pages of publisher’s advertisements at rear; without rarely found dust jacket. Woodbridge & Tweney 66. O’Connor, 74-75, 280-83. Walker, 29.
Faint offsetting to title page, just a touch of soiling to upper corner of front cover and a hint of rubbing to corners only. A very nice, near-fine copy.