“LASSIE! SHE’S COME HOME! LASSIE’S COME HOME!”: FIRST EDITION OF ERIC KNIGHT’S BELOVED CLASSIC LASSIE COME HOME
KNIGHT, Eric. Lassie Come-Home. Chicago: John C. Winston, (1940). Octavo, original pictorial gold cloth, cartographic endpapers, original dust jacket.
First edition of the much loved children’s book on “the greatest canine heroine of the 20th century,” inspiring a popular series of films and television shows, in scarce original dust jacket.
Lassie, “the greatest canine heroine of the 20th century,” was brought to life when novelist and screenwriter “Eric Knight took a neighbor’s cross-collie pup, the runt of the litter, in exchange for the loan of a plough.” Soon Knight and his collie were inseparable and she became the model for a story serialized in the Saturday Evening Post (December 1938) that Knight expanded into this classic novel. The first movie adaptation of “Lassie Come Home began shooting in 1942 but its author would never see the finished film” (Telegraph). In 1943, while working for the OSS, Knight’s plane crashed and he was tragically killed. Knight’s tale of a collie who crosses 400 miles of rugged terrain to return home “has quite an honourable place in the long line of dog-centered stories accessible to children” (Kirkpatrick, 441). The 1943 film adaptation featured the young Roddy McDowall and Elizabeth Taylor, leading to a number of movies and more than one television series. With full-color frontispiece, six black-and-white plates and numerous in-text illustrations by Marguerite Kirmse; cartographic endpapers tracing Lassie’s route home. Carpenter & Prichard 304. Bookseller ticket.
Book fine; light edge-wear to scarce near-fine dust jacket.