“THIS IS BETTER THAN READING VERGIL”: FIRST EDITION OF BLACK SPRING, HENRY MILLER’S SECOND BOOK
MILLER, Henry. Black Spring. Paris: Obelisk, (1936). Octavo, original pictorial self-wrappers, uncut and partially unopened. Housed in a custom slipcase.
First edition of Miller’s second book, which he dedicated to Anais Nin, one of only 1000 copies, scarce in original wrappers, housed in a custom slipcase.
In these ten free-standing autobiographical pieces, Miller chronicles his life from his youth in Brooklyn to his life in Paris. In a November 1942 letter, Miller noted, “In the Black Spring I tell something about those early years—on the street. I was let loose very young, like a dog—wonderful experience, too. That was my ‘education’—and a damned good one” (Jackson & Ashley I26). Henry Miller is “a writer of and for real people, who, in other countries, is read, not just by highbrows, or just by the wider public which reads novels, but by common people… In the United States he has been kept away from a popular public and his great novels have been banned; therefore only highbrows who could import them from France have read him. I once crossed the Atlantic— 18 days in a Compagnie Générale Transatlantique freighter— with a cabin mate, a French African, who was only partially literate, but who was able to talk for hours on the comparative merits of Black Spring and the Tropic of Cancer and the Tropic of Capricorn” (Kenneth Rexroth).
Text fresh and clean with small closed marginal tear to one leaf (111), not affecting text, lightest edge-war to fragile wrappers. An exceptional near-fine copy, quite scarce in such excellent condition.