Velveteen Rabbit

William NICHOLSON   |   Margery Williams BIANCO

Item#: 67326 We're sorry, this item has been sold

Velveteen Rabbit

“HE WAS A REAL RABBIT AT LAST…”: FIRST EDITION OF THE VELVETEEN RABBIT

BIANCO, Margery Williams. The Velveteen Rabbit, Or How Toys Become Real. London: Heinemann (Whitefriars Press), 1922. Tall octavo, original pictorial boards, pictorial endpapers, original dust jacket. Housed in a custom clamshell box.

First edition, English issue (simultaneous with the American issue) of this beloved children’s classic, “one of the first modern picture books, a perfect combination of story and pictures” (Mahony, 234), with seven beautiful color chromolithographs (three double-page) by William Nicholson.

“Margery Bianco’s first children’s book, The Velveteen Rabbit, was written while she was living in England… Her own two children were young and at an age when toys meant much to them. She had vivid memories of the toys she had loved as a child, and this thinking about toys and remembering toys suddenly brought them to life. The Velveteen Rabbit introduced English artist, William Nicholson, to the field of children’s books” (Meigs et al., 473). Nicholson’s work has been placed “in the front rank among picture-books of this century” (Marcus Crouch). The first English and American editions of The Velveteen Rabbit, both printed by Whitefriars Press in Tonbridge and published simultaneously by Heinemann and Doran, are extremely rare. With colophon that identifies the printer and states that the colored illustrations were done via lithography by Vincent Brooks, Day & Son. Only the first printing of the book occurs with the chromolithographic plates as originally drawn by Nicholson (contemporary reprints were photo-mechanically reduced). See Bader, 25; Silvey, 487. Contemporary gift inscription to half title.

A few small stray crayon marks to generally fine interior. Boards with small loss to spine head, slight rubbing and soiling. Unobtrusive crayon mark to front panel of dust jacket, with expert restoration, primarily to spine, flap joints and edges. A lovely copy.

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