“LIKE A BAT HE NEVER SHOWED HIMSELF TO THE FACE OF DAY”: RINEHART AND HOPWOOD’S THE BAT, 1926, IN SCARCE PHOTOPLAY DUST JACKET
RINEHART, Mary Roberts and HOPWOOD, Avery. The Bat. New York: Grosset & Dunlap, (1926). Octavo, original yellow cloth, original dust jacket.
First “photoplay” edition of the novelization of Rinehart and Hopwood’s popular Broadway thriller, in scarce movie tie-in dust jacket.
“By the 1920s Rinehart was established as one of America’s most successful and popular writers… In addition, she scored a considerable success in the theater. With Avery Hopwood she collaborated [in 1920] on The Bat, a dramatization and modification of [her 1907 novel] The Circular Staircase” (ANB). The popular play altered the novel’s plot, making “the supposed official detective the culprit” (Haycraft, 88). Roland West directed the 1926 silent film adaptation of the play, upon which this novel is based. He would, in 1930, direct a new version entitled The Bat Whispers. This later film significantly influenced artist and Batman creator Bob Kane, who counted it one of his favorites: “The formula of shadows, thunderstorms and masked men still influences horror films today, but Kane’s inspiration lay in using this ambience to create the background for a slightly sinister good guy” (Daniels, 20). The novel was made into a film a third time in 1959, starring Vincent Price and Agnes Moorehead. First published in the same year by George H. Doran. With scarce original “photoplay” dust jacket, illustrated with a scene from the 1926 Roland West film, issued by Grosset & Dunlap after buying Doran’s stock of the volume. Steinbrunner & Penzler, 342-44. See Crown Crime Companion, 45. Gift inscription.
A fine copy.