“THE RAVISHING WILES OF PRETTY MAIDS ARE LIKE THE TERRIFYING DIN OF A FATEFUL BATTLE”: THE ADVENTURES OF HSI MEN CHING, ILLUSTRATED WITH EIGHT HAND-COLORED EROTIC PLATES
WANG, Feng-Chow. The Adventures of Hsi Men Ching. [New York]: Library of Facetious Lore, (1927). Large octavo, original three-quarter yellow morocco gilt, raised bands, burgundy morocco spine label, patterned paper boards, top edge gilt, uncut and partially unopened.
Splendid limited private-press edition, number 408 of only 750 copies, of this erotic book, allegedly an instrument of murder but in truth a charming literary fraud perpetuated over generations, illustrated with eight full-page line cuts, colored by hand.
According to the preface, this Ming Dynasty-era work was written by a historian named Wang Feng-Chow. Allegedly, he soaked the pages of the original work in poison in order to kill his target, presumably hoping that the erotic content would prove irresistible. In truth, it was a literary fraud perpetrated over and over again by various translators and orientalists taken in by the allure of a story too enticing to be true. Often banned for its provocative content, this edition was one of the titles seized by John S. Sumner, Secretary of the New York Society for the Suppression of Vice, in his 1928 raid of Gotham Book Mart.
A fine copy, with only minor creasing to endpapers and light rubbing to extremities of original morocco.