Display Signed Copies Only Display All Inventory on Abebooks

Available Copies from Independent Booksellers

Twain, Mark. Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (Tom Sawyer's Comrade). Charles L. Webster and Company, NY, 1886.

Price: US$399.99 + shipping

Condition: Good

Description: Early printing. The cover shows someedgewear with rubbing to the edges and age toning. The binding is sound (there is some stress to the front hinge with remnants of an old tape repair). There is edgewear to the first few pages.

Seller: Dogwood Books, Rome, GA, U.S.A.

GRANT, U.S. (Edited by Mark Twain). PERSONAL MEMOIRS OF U.S. GRANT (LEATHERBOUND, TWO VOLUMES, COMPLETE). Charles L. Webster, New York, 1886.

Price: US$605.00 + shipping

Condition: Good

Description: Octavos. Three-Quarters brown morocco, ruled in gilt, over brown, cloth-covered boards. Gilt medallions (3-in. diameter) to front and rear boards of both volumes, one commemorating the Joint Resolution of Congress December 17, 1863, and the one on the reverse the Mississippi River, quite dear to Twain. Marbled endpapers and edges. Steel engravings, maps, fold-out maps and letter-facsimiles tipped-in. REPAIRED VOLUMES. Both volumes show restorative patching to top of both volumes, and bottom of one. Hinges repaired (guarded) and boards (Volume II) reattached. Volume I shows a very small closed crack to bottom. Some rubbing to marbling on bottom edge of Volume II. Hinges guarded. Mixed set, and priced thusly. The first books published by Twain's firm were these Personal Memoirs of U.S. Grant, and Twain's own Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. Having been defrauded of his estate, Grant was determined to leave some financial legacy, and was still working on these memoirs several months before his death, despite the fact that many of the chapters were written when he was suffering from terminal throat cancer. Mark Twain established his own publishing firm in 1885 and placed his niece's husband Charles Webster in charge. "Written frantically while in a race with death, these recollections rank with the best of the Civil War period." (Nevins II, 59).

Seller: Aardvark Rare Books, ABAA, EUGENE, OR, U.S.A.

Mark Twain. Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. 1886. Cloth.. Charles L. Webster, 1886.

Price: US$850.00 + shipping

Condition: Fair

Description: Bound in original green cloth, with Huck on front, in black and gold. Some fray to head / tail of spine. Early printing, reprinting the 1885 first edition. 366 pages, 1 unnumbered leaf of plates: illustrations, portrait. Tear with loss to p. 77-78. Tears from edge of pages 23-26. Some old scotch tape repairs. Lithographic frontispiece by E.W. Kemble. **Sold with all faults**

Seller: Sequitur Books, Boonsboro, MD, U.S.A.

TWAIN, Mark. Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (Tom Sawyer's Companion). Charles L. Webster and Co, New York, 1886.

Price: US$3500.00 + shipping

Condition: Very Good

Description: Early American edition. The English edition preceded the first American by a year and was issued in 1885. Green cloth gilt. Front fly lacking, one signature a little sprung but tight, light fraying and wear at the corners and spine ends, but a sound and attractive very good copy. Small book label of author Larry McMurtry on front pastedown, and McMurtry's neat pencil signature on the front fly. One of the most beloved and regarded novels of American literature, Twain's masterpiece and one of the indisputable candidates for the Great American Novel. McMurtry's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel *Lonesome Dove* seems, like *Huckleberry Finn*, to be a great picaresque adventure, and likely was informed and inspired by the dark humor of the earlier novel. Johnson Highspot of American Literature. Blanck, *Peter Parley to Penrod.*.

Seller: Between the Covers-Rare Books, Inc. ABAA, Gloucester City, NJ, U.S.A.

Twain, Mark. [Samuel L. Clemens]. Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (Tom Sawyer’s Comrade).. Charles L. Webster and Company, New York, 1886.

Price: US$75000.00 + shipping

Description: Early printing of Twain's masterpiece, inscribed by Mark Twain. Octavo, bound in half buckram by Roycroft with paper labels to the spine, tissue-guarded frontispiece photogravure plate of Gerhardt's bust of Clemens, one hundred and seventy-four illustrations by E. W. Kemble. Presentation copy, inscribed by the author on the title page, "To Mr. Garth W. Cate: TakingÂtheÂpledge will not make bad liquor good, but it will improve it. Truly Yours, Mark Twain, Nov. 25/06." With a lengthy letter of provenance dated October 14, 1964 and signed by the recipient which reads in part, "Dear Mr. Jacobs, If I had been younger and could have carried out a study of some of Mark Twain's motives and acts, I never would have parted with my cherished old copy of the first printing of Huckleberry Finn. This was the first book given to me by my father. In 1906-1907 I was a lecture manager for Elbert Hubbard, the Sage of East Aurora, whose quasi-socialist group The Roycrofters was quite famous as an arts and crafts enter at East Aurora, New York. By that time the HUCK FINN was loose in its covers. Elbert Hubbard saw the book on my desk when I brought it in to have it rebound in the Roycroft Bindery. Said he, "No author could resist seeing such a well worn volume testifying to the delight it had given many readers. Why don't you send it down to Mark Twain and ask him to inscribed it. I'll sign and send Mark a few of my own books along with it, thus salting the mine for you." So I sent HUCK back to its spiritual father, and when it returned I was somewhat shocked, having been sent to a temperance Sunday School by a whiskey fearing mother, to find that he had inscribed it "To Mr. Garth W. Cate - Taking the pledge will not make bad liquor good, but will improve it." (Incidentally it was several years after that before I took my first drink. I am an abstainer today). Later on I was to marry a Christian Science practitioner, and when she saw this inscription she exclaimed: Why, that is the most immoral thing I ever saw! How could a great author send such a sentiment to a young man?" A careful search of Mark Twain's writings revealed that he had a deep-seated lifetime aversion for pledges, especially when they had been obtained under pressure from those of an older generation. It seems when Mark was a boy in his early teens, his mother and aunt talked and pressured him into signing a pledge not to touch alcohol in any from. Later he was to refer to this as "A ball and chain clanking behind him down the years of time." He hated such restrictions, especially when thrust upon him while immature." In very good condition. With the original publisher’s decorated green cloth cover bound in and three rare portraits of Twain tipped in. With two further letters of provenance and several period Twain-related clippings adhered to several pages. Housed in a custom half morocco clamshell box. An exceptional presentation copy with noted provenance. Written over an eight-year period, Twain's Adventures of Huckleberry Finn was controversial from the outset, attacked by critics for its crudeness, coarseness and vulgarity. Upon issue of the American edition in 1885, several libraries, including the Concord and Brooklyn Public Libraries, banned it from their shelves. Twain later remarked to his editor, "Apparently, the Concord library has condemned Huck as 'trash and only suitable for the slums.' This will sell us another twenty-five thousand copies for sure!" The book nevertheless emerged as one of the defining novels of American literature, prompting Hemingway to declare: "All modern literature comes from one book by Mark Twain. It's the best book we've had. All American writing comes from that. There was nothing before. There has been nothing since."

Seller: Raptis Rare Books, Palm Beach, FL, U.S.A.