Jungle

Upton SINCLAIR

Item#: 123784 We're sorry, this item has been sold

Jungle
Jungle
Jungle

“WHERE SAVAGE BEASTS THROUGH FOREST MIDNIGHT ROAM, SEEKING IN SORROW FOR EACH OTHER'S JOY”: FIRST EDITION OF THE JUNGLE, INSCRIBED BY SINCLAIR WITH A QUOTATION FROM ONE OF HIS EARLIER NOVELS

SINCLAIR, Upton. The Jungle. New York: Jungle Publishing, 1906. Octavo, original pictorial green cloth.

"Sustainers' edition" of the first edition of Sinclair’s muckraking classic, inscribed by him with a quotation from an earlier novel of his: "'Where savage beasts through forest midnight roam, Seeking in sorrow for each other's joy.' The Journal of Arthur Stirling. Upton Sinclair."

Sinclair's famous exposé of Chicago meatpacking practices led to the immediate passage of food-inspection laws, but failed to generate the groundswell of sympathy for the International Socialist cause for the author had hoped would follow. "If ever a single work may be said to have anchored an author's career and determined his future course, it is The Jungle. Lofting its twenty-seven-year-old author to overnight fame, Sinclair's reportorial novel also… placed him in the front rank of America's small band of muckraking authors… Even with all he then went on to accomplish, he remained first and foremost the man who had taken on Chicago's meat packers in the novel with which his career effectively began" (Ahouse A7). This copy is from the "Sustainers' edition" of the first edition, one of approximately 5000 copies ordered by Socialist press readers to finance the publication of the full first edition; the front board is stamped with the Socialist Party emblem, absent from copies with the Doubleday imprint. Without the paper label attached to the front pastedown of copies of the Sustainers' edition, but with the three pages of advertisements only found in that edition. Rohde, 38. Ahouse, A7b.

Only most minor wear to cloth. An about-fine inscribed copy.

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