“THE MORE HE TRIED TO FORGET, THE MORE KEENLY AND INSISTENTLY HE REMEMBERED”: FIRST EDITION OF L.M. MONTGOMERY’S KILMENY OF THE ORCHARD, 1910
MONTGOMERY, Lucy Maud. Kilmeny of the Orchard. Boston: L.C. Page, 1910. Octavo, original taupe cloth, pictorial paper label, uncut.
First edition, first issue, of Montgomery’s third novel, with four color illustrations by George Gibbs.
Montgomery’s “mother died when she was two, and she was sent to live with her maternal grandparents in their farmhouse. In character she seems to have much resembled her heroine Anne. She became a teacher, but gave it up to look after her widowed grandmother” (Carpenter & Pritchard, 356). “By age 21 she was earning her living in the thriving periodical market of turn-of-the-century North America. International acclaim came in 1908 with the publication of her first novel, Anne of Green Gables, which instantly became—and remains—a best seller… there is energy of another type that animates Montgomery’s books, which retain a strong hold on adult readers. It is the energy of social critique, and it operates just below the surface of many of her novels” (Silvey, 465-66). After her second novel, Anne of Avonlea (1909), Montgomery “was tired of the Anne character and set her aside. [Publisher] Page, of course, wanted another book from her, so she began reworking a serial called ‘Una of the Garden,’ about a mute girl who miraculously gains the power of speech… the publisher requested the name change and Montgomery agreed… [she] also changed the original garden setting to an orchard because she thought the setting was too similar to Hester Gray’s garden in Anne of Avonlea” (Keeline, 43). Unlike the two previous Anne novels, Kilmeny was published in smaller print runs. It was not published in Montgomery’s native Canada until 1944, two years after her death. First issue, with “First Impression, April, 1910” on the copyright page. With six pages of publisher’s listings at rear.
Fine condition.