“TO DIE IS NOT A DIFFICULT THING, BUT TO DIE IN SUCH SLOW AND HORRIBLE FASHION WAS MADDENING”: 1915 FIRST EDITION OF JACK LONDON’S THE STAR ROVER, IN VERY SCARCE ORIGINAL DUST JACKET
LONDON, Jack. The Star Rover. New York: Macmillan, 1915. Octavo, original pictorial blue cloth, original dust jacket. Housed in a custom cloth chemise and half morocco slipcase.
First edition of London’s 18th novel, with color frontispiece. A lovely copy in the very scarce original dust jacket.
The Star Rover "was a strange work, full of murky metaphysics, yet contained passages of great force and imaginative power; and its phantasmagoric quality suggested that [London] had inherited some the mystic tendencies of his parents—his mother's Spiritualism, his presumed father's guidance from the stars—and was finally putting them to use… His hero was Darrell Standing, a professor of agronomics… who had been sentenced to life for having killed a fellow professor… Standing was placed in solitary after having been falsely accused of participating in a plot to smuggle dynamite in the prison, and was tortured by the brutal warden, who had him laced into a canvas jacket so tight it almost crushed the life out of him. Others in solitary instructed Standing in the art of releasing himself from suffering by traveling backward into another dimension of time and reliving experiences of the past" (O'Connor, 363-64). First published serially in the Los Angeles Examiner and the American Sunday Monthly Magazine from February to October 1915. Preceded by two months by the English edition, titled The Jacket. Sisson, 83-84. Woodbridge 132. BAL 11963.
Book fine and lovely. Some edge-wear, a few minor closed tears, and soiling to extremely good, scarce original dust jacket, with front panel bright.