THE FIRST CIRCLE, SIGNED BY ALEXANDER SOLZHENITSYN
SOLZHENITSYN, Alexander I. The First Circle. New York and Evanston: Harper & Row, (1969). Octavo, original black cloth, original dust jacket.
First edition in English, early printing, of Solzhenitsyn’s first novel, signed by the author in Cyrillic on the title page.
Based on Solzhenitsyn's own experiences as a prison laborer in a scientific research institute during the 1950s, this, his first novel, concerns the life of a brilliant mathematician named Nerzhin forced into slave labor, narrating the hardships he and his fellow prisoners endure as cogs in the vast machine of Stalinist Russia. The First Circle was Solzhenitsyn's first novel; previously, he had only published novellas, including the famed One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich and An Incident at Krechetovka Station. The title is a reference to the first circle of hell in Dante's Inferno. Translated by Thomas P. Whitney. The first printing was published in September 1968 in a red cloth binding; this copy is an early printing, published in March 1969, as indicated by the publisher's code "C-T" on the copyright page.
Book fine. Light wear to extremities of bright, price-clipped dust jacket with a half-inch closed tear to spine head and an abrasion to spine panel, affecting the author's name. A near-fine copy, most scarce signed.