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Churchill, Winston S. Great Contemporaries. Thornton Butterworth, London, 1938.

Price: US$10.18 + shipping

Condition: Good

Description: The revised edition with four additional biographies, 8vo, 387pp, 25 portraits including the 4 new ones on Fisher, Baden-Powell, Parnell & Roosevelt, photo illustrations, an undistinguished copy with oxidising to spine lettering and general rubbing about extrems, previous owner's name to ffep o/w G Copy, no DJ Size: 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall

Seller: Roger Lucas Booksellers, Horncastle, United Kingdom

Winston S. Churchill. Great Contemporaries. Thornton Butterworth Ltd., London, 1938.

Price: US$21.44 + shipping

Condition: Fair

Description: 1938. Fourth Impression. 334 pages. No dust jacket. Blue cloth with gilt lettering. B&W photographs throughout. Large ink stain to page 79 and opposite plate, and does cover the text. Notable foxing and tanning to endpapers and page edges. Some gutter cracking. Name plate to front paste down, with inscription to endpaper. Mild wear and bumping to spine, board edges and corners, with scuffing, staining and marking to boards. Notable sunning to spine and board edges. Book has a forward lean.

Seller: World of Rare Books, Goring-by-Sea, SXW, United Kingdom

Winston S. Churchill. Great Contemporaries. Thornton Butterworth Ltd., London, 1938.

Price: US$27.56 + shipping

Condition: Fair

Description: 1938. Revised Edition First Impression. 387 pages. No dust jacket. Blue cloth with gilt lettering. Pages remain bright and clear with minimal tanning and foxing. Binding remains firm. Pencil inscription to front free endpaper. Boards have mild edge-wear with slight rubbing to surfaces. Mild crushing to spine ends. Gilt lettering is bright and clear.

Seller: World of Rare Books, Goring-by-Sea, SXW, United Kingdom

Winston S. Churchill. Great Contemporaries. Thornton Butterworth Ltd., London, 1938.

Price: US$400.00 + shipping

Description: This is the first printing of the first revised and expanded edition of Churchill’s much-praised collection of insightful essays about leading personalities of the day. This edition, published in 1938 soon after the first edition of 1937, added four new essays (Fisher, Parnell, Baden-Powell, and - of great interest – Franklin D. Roosevelt). As is the case with the 1937 first edition, first printing, the dust jacket for the 1938 revised edition is both elusive and desirable – in our experience, even more elusive than that of the 1937 first edition – and the binding quite prone to sunning and dulling in its absence. This British first revised edition, first printing, is very good plus in a flawed dust jacket. The blue cloth binding is square, clean, and tight with sharp corners and only trivial shelf wear to extremities. Of particular note, both the boards and spine retain unusually bright color and vivid gilt. Even most jacketed copies do not remain quite this bright, with spine dulling the norm. The contents are bright within and show no previous ownership marks, but we do note spotting to the page edges. Transfer browning to the endpapers from the pastedown glue corresponds to the dust jacket flaps, confirming that this copy has spent life jacketed. This edition's attractive dust jacket bears a front face image of Churchill on a large blue panel. This jacket shows a large loss to the upper spine to a maximum depth of 1.25 inches (3.2 cm) and extending to the upper front and rear faces. We note a smaller loss to the lower spine and short closed tears and wrinkling to the edges. The dust jacket is protected beneath a clear, removable, archival cover.The character sketches herein offer remarkable portraits of both their subjects and the author. Churchill's piece about Hitler can be a shock to the modern ear, as it underscores his ability to write a balanced appraisal of his subject while expressing his earnest desire to avoid the war that he would fight with such ferocious resolve only a few years later. Neville Chamberlain, perhaps Churchill’s most vexing political opponent at the time, wrote to Churchill on 4 October 1937 to say: "How you can go on throwing off these sparkling sketches with such apparent ease & such sustained brilliance is a constant source of wonder to me. But the result is to give great pleasure and entertainment " It was written with what has been called "penetrating evaluation, humor, and understanding." Churchill's balanced and nuanced perspectives contrast favorably with those of more polemic writers – both then and now. In the course of sketching the character of his contemporaries Churchill necessarily reveals much of his own character and perspective. Churchill's portrait of T.E. Lawrence, published here just a few years before the Second World War, might well have been written about the author rather than by him: "The impression of the personality of Lawrence remains living and vivid upon the minds of his friends, and the sense of his loss is in no way dimmed among his countrymen. All feel the poorer that he has gone from us. In these days dangers and difficulties gather upon Britain and her Empire, and we are also conscious of a lack of outstanding figures with which to overcome them. Here was a man in whom there existed not only an immense capacity for service, but that touch of genius which everyone recognizes and no one can define." (Great Contemporaries, p.164) While some of the subjects of Churchill's sketches have receded into history, many remain well-known and all remain compellingly drawn.Reference: Cohen A105.3.a, Woods/ICS A43(b.1), Langworth p.182.

Seller: Churchill Book Collector ABAA/ILAB/IOBA, San Diego, CA, U.S.A.

Winston S. Churchill. Great Contemporaries. Thornton Butterworth Ltd., London, 1938.

Price: US$950.00 + shipping

Description: This is the first printing of the first revised and expanded edition of Churchill’s much-praised collection of insightful essays about leading personalities of the day. This book was part of the personal library of Churchill's bibliographer, Ronald Cohen.This edition, published in 1938 soon after the first edition of 1937, added four new essays (Fisher, Parnell, Baden-Powell, and - of great interest – Franklin D. Roosevelt). As is the case with the 1937 first edition, first printing, the dust jacket for the 1938 revised edition is both elusive and desirable – in our experience, even more elusive than that of the 1937 first edition – and the binding quite prone to sunning and dulling in its absence. This British first revised edition, first printing, is in exceptionally clean, near-fine condition in a very good dust jacket. The blue cloth binding is square, clean, unfaded, and tight with sharp corners, bright gilt, and only trivial shelf wear to extremities. The contents are uncompromisingly bright and clean. We find no spotting, no previous ownership marks, and no age-toning. Even the page edges remain notably bright. The sole defect is original; the two leaves comprising pages 13-16 were incorrectly trimmed at the upper fore edge. Mild transfer browning to the endpapers from the pastedown glue corresponds to the dust jacket flaps, confirming that this copy has spent life jacketed. This edition's attractive dust jacket features a front face image of Churchill on a large blue panel. This jacket is unclipped, retaining the original price on the lower front flap and lower right front face, and substantially complete, with only minor chip loss to extremities. There are closed tears to the upper and lower front face, spine head, and upper front face, all with attendant wrinkling. The dust jacket is protected beneath a clear, removable, archival cover.The character sketches herein offer remarkable portraits of both their subjects and the author. Churchill's piece about Hitler can be a shock to the modern ear, as it underscores his ability to write a balanced appraisal of his subject while expressing his earnest desire to avoid the war that he would fight with such ferocious resolve only a few years later. Neville Chamberlain, perhaps Churchill’s most vexing political opponent at the time, wrote to Churchill on 4 October 1937 to say: "How you can go on throwing off these sparkling sketches with such apparent ease & such sustained brilliance is a constant source of wonder to me. But the result is to give great pleasure and entertainment " It was written with what has been called "penetrating evaluation, humor, and understanding." Churchill's balanced and nuanced perspectives contrast favorably with those of more polemic writers – both then and now. In the course of sketching the character of his contemporaries Churchill necessarily reveals much of his own character and perspective. Churchill's portrait of T.E. Lawrence, published here just a few years before the Second World War, might well have been written about the author rather than by him: "The impression of the personality of Lawrence remains living and vivid upon the minds of his friends, and the sense of his loss is in no way dimmed among his countrymen. All feel the poorer that he has gone from us. In these days dangers and difficulties gather upon Britain and her Empire, and we are also conscious of a lack of outstanding figures with which to overcome them. Here was a man in whom there existed not only an immense capacity for service, but that touch of genius which everyone recognizes and no one can define." (Great Contemporaries, p.164) While some of the subjects of Churchill's sketches have receded into history, many remain well-known and all remain compellingly drawn.Reference: Cohen A105.3.a, Woods/ICS A43(b.1), Langworth p.182.

Seller: Churchill Book Collector ABAA/ILAB/IOBA, San Diego, CA, U.S.A.