A superb collection of Mary Shelley autograph letters, from the collection of Mary Shelley specialist Professor Jean de Palacio at the University of Lille. The letters date from 15 April 1827 to the winter of 1847.
First edition presentation copy inscribed by Capote on the front free endpaper, “for Martha Robertson, with love, Truman Capote”. The recipient was Martha Hunt Robertson (1931-2014), an art teacher from Guntersville, Alabama, who in 1977 married noted journalist-novelist William Bradford Huie (1910–1986), of Hartselle, Alabama.
Breakfast at Tiffany’s is rare inscribed – we have only ever handled one other.
Sammy Jay presents The most ancient and famous history of the renowned Prince Arthur King of Britaine, in its Sixth edition, the earliest practically obtainable.
Malory’s Morte Darthur (the familiar title was accidentally given by its first printer, William Caxton, who mistook the name of its last section for the name of the whole), though in part a translation, is so woven together from a wide variety of sources that it is effectively an original work. Malory called what he wrote The Whole Book of King Arthur and his Noble Knights of the Round Table. As his title implies, he intended to retell in English the entire Arthurian story from authoritative accounts, which for him meant primarily the three major cycles of French Arthurian prose romance, although he knew many other Arthurian stories (including late medieval English alliterative poems) and drew on them for incidents, allusions, and minor characters that give his story additional solidity.
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