“SHE WANTED TO TRANSFORM THE NOVEL”: SCARCE FIRST AMERICAN EDITION OF WOOLF’S THE VOYAGE OUT, 1920
WOOLF, Virginia. The Voyage Out. New York: George H. Doran, (1920). Octavo, original green cloth.
First American edition of Woolf’s first novel, revised by her for American publication, in original cloth.
“Virginia Woolf emerged as a novelist through writing The Voyage Out. It was begun early in 1908 and not published until 1915. The fact that she rewrote the book so many times (she left evidence of five drafts, burnt several more) suggests her uneasiness. She wanted to transform the novel in ways that now seem quite consistent with contemporary experiments in modern art but which were for her, in 1908, solitary ambitions” (Gordon, Virginia Woolf, 98). This is the first American edition of Woolf’s first book, which was revised by her for American publication. A small number of these American sheets were exported to England to be issued by Duckworth in 1920, and then by the Hogarth Press in 1929. Aside from the Duckworth and Hogarth issues, this “revised version has not been published in the United Kingdom.” Without the virtually unobtainable dust jacket: its rarity has been noted by the bibliographers who state: “No specimen of dust-jacket available (Kirkpatrick A1b). Preceded by the 1915 English edition. Bookplate. Bookseller ticket.
Text generally fresh, front inner paper hinge starting but sound, some edge-wear to original cloth. An extremely good copy of this important literary work.