“BRILLIANT, SAVAGE AND ARRESTING”: SCARCE FIRST EDITION OF WEST’S THE DAY OF THE LOCUST
WEST, Nathanael. The Day of the Locust. New York: Random House, (1939). Octavo, original red cloth, orange paper spine label, original dust jacket. Housed in a custom clamshell box.
First edition of West’s masterpiece, his brilliant final novel, named one of the 100 best novels of the century by the Modern Library, especially scarce in colorful unrestored dust jacket.
A Hollywood screenwriter during the 1930s, Nathanael West was “fascinated by the underbelly of Los Angeles” and used his experiences to compose what many consider the definitive Hollywood novel (New York Times). “West’s The Day of the Locust remains the best of the hundreds of Hollywood novels written… F. Scott Fitzgerald, who was himself working on The Last Tycoon, said that novel had ‘scenes of extraordinary power” (ANB). On its publication Dorothy Parker called the novel “brilliant, savage and arresting,” and The New York Times praised it as an astounding and “effective grotesque… a nightmare of lust and violence.” “An unusual and highly original talent, West was one of the first and best American writers of black comedy… Miss Lonelyhearts and The Day of the Locust are his most compelling and effective works” (Benet’s Reader’s Encyclopedia, 1056-7). Published in May 1939, the book sold less than 1500 copies. Within a year West died in a car crash in 1940 at the age of 37 and never lived to see the novel’s eventual critical acclaim. With “First Printing” on copyright page.
Book fine; very lightest edge-wear, faint rubbing to rarely found about-fine dust jacket.