“MAN IS STILL A HUNTER? ELSE WHY AM I HERE?”: FIRST EDITION OF RUARK’S HORN OF THE HUNTER
RUARK, Robert. Horn of the Hunter. Garden City: Doubleday, 1953. Octavo, original cloth, pictorial endpapers, original dust jacket.
First edition of Ruark’s best-known work, his gripping account of an African big gane safari, with 32 pages of black-and-white photographs and 32 illustrations by the author.
A naval gunnery officer during World War II, Ruark “returned to the Washington Daily News in 1945, where his syndicated column made him a household name—Newsweek estimated his daily readership, by 1953, at some 15 million—and earned him the then princely sum of $40,000 a year. In his column, Ruark revealed a gift for expressing aversion amusingly, often in a facetiously ungrammatical style” (North Carolina Writer’s Network). Based on a 1951 safari in Tanganyika with his wife and hunter Harry Shelby, Horn of the Hunter was the first of Ruark’s African books. Bookseller’s ticket.
A fine copy, scarce in this condition.