"RIVETING AND UNFORGETTABLE": FIRST EDITION OF ICE, ANNA KAVAN'S EXTRAORDINARY FINAL NOVEL
KAVAN, Anna. Ice. London: Peter Owen, (1967). Octavo, original blue paper boards, original dust jacket.
First edition of the last novel by Kavan, whose works stand with those of Poe, Kafka, Vonnegut and Virginia Woolf, ranked alongside Huxley's Brave New World and praised by Brian Aldiss as the best science fiction novel of the year, a splendid copy in the original dust jacket.
Born Helen Emily Woods, British novelist Anna Kavan is "one of the most mysterious of modern writers" (J.G. Ballard). "Kavan's contemporary Lawrence Durrell saw her as a writer in the lineage of Virginia Woolf and Djuna Barnes; others have placed Ice in the canon of drug novels, along with De Quincey's Confessions of an English Opium-Eater and Huxley's Brave New World." The last novel published before Kavan's tragic death in 1968, "Brian Aldiss voted it the best science fiction novel of the year" (Booth, Amongst Those Left, 97). Considered her masterpiece, Kavan's hypnotic portrayal of an apocalyptic frozen world in Ice is "riveting and unforgettable… the book has the velocity of a thriller yet the causal slippages associated with high modernist writing like Beckett's or Kafka's" (New Yorker). Jonathen Lethem, who ranks Ice with the works of Poe and Ishiguro, writes: "the frozen disaster overtaking the planet in Ice evokes that Cold-War, bomb-dreading, postwar 20th century we still, in many ways, live inside; it echoes images as popular as episodes of Rod Serling's Twilight Zone or Vonnegut's Cat's Cradle" (New York Times). First edition, first printing: with no statement of editions or printings on title page; first issue dust jacket with "30s net" on front flap. Clute & Nichols, 658.
Interior fresh with only tiny stray mark, faint foxing to initial blank; mild foxing to dust jacket. A very desirable about-fine copy.