“A WELTER OF SEX AND SNOBBERY”: SCARCE ASSOCIATION FIRST EDITION OF WAUGH’S VILE BODIES, 1930,FROM THE LIBRARY OF RENOWNED AUTHOR LOUIS AUCHINCLOSS
WAUGH, Evelyn. Vile Bodies. (London): Chapman & Hall, 1930. Octavo, original red and black “snakeskin” cloth.
First edition of Waugh’s critically praised satire, a scarce association copy from the library of author Louis Auchincloss—noted “chronicler of Manhattan’s old-money elite”—with his bookplate.
In the early stages of writing his novel Vile Bodies, Evelyn Waugh described it as “a welter of sex and snobbery… rather like P.G. Wodehouse all about bright young people.” But the devastating break-up of his marriage soon prompted an indelible shift in tone from lightly humorous to edgy satire. On publication in January 1930, Vile Bodies won high praise from critics such as writer Rebecca West, who wrote that “Vile Bodies has, indeed, apart from its success in being really funny, a very considerable value as a further stage in the contemporary literature of disillusionment” (Hastings, 193-211). With colorful title page designed by Waugh; without scarce original dust jacket. Two-page publisher’s ad at rear. This important association copy is from the library of prominent author and lawyer Louis Auchincloss, with his gilt-stamped bookplate. A highly regarded “chronicler of Manhattan’s old-money elite,” Auchincloss has been favorably compared “to other novelists of society and manners like William Dean Howells, but his greatest influence was probably Edith Wharton.” Gore Vidal praised Auchincloss as the only American novelist “who tells us how our rulers behave in their banks and their boardrooms, their law offices and their clubs” (New York Times).
A scarce about-fine copy with an especially memorable association.