Display Signed Copies Only Display All Inventory on Abebooks

Available Copies from Independent Booksellers

Jack London. When God Laughs and Other Stories. Mills & Boon Limited, 1911.

Price: US$34.97 + shipping

Condition: Fair

Description: 1911. No Edition Remarks. 312 pages. No dust jacket. Red cloth with gilt lettering. Heavy foxing and tanning to pages; more prominent to text block edges and endpapers. Pencil inscriptions to front pastedown. Noticeable creasing to gutter. Hinges are cracked with exposed netting. Boards have light corner bumping and edge-wear with subtle fraying. Spine has visible tanning with moderate crushing to bottom edge. Lettering remains bright and clear. Some white staining overall. Bubbling to rear board.

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

London, Jack (1876-1916). When God Laughs and Other Stories. MacMillian and Company, New York, 1911.

Price: US$350.00 + shipping

Condition: Very Good

Description: ix+319+[1]+[4 ad] pages with frontispiece and five plates. Small octavo (& 1/2" x 5 1/4") bound in original publisher's olive green cloth decorated in red and light green and lettered in gilt. (BAL 11926; Sissons & Martens, p 51) First edition with 3,758 copies printed. Named after the first story about a couple that tries in vain to uphold an intensely idealistic romance against the erosions of time and the inconstancy of human nature the collection explores themes for which London became famous: the struggle for survival in the midst of hostile environments, human nature s most elemental drives, and worker abuse in industrialized society. In The Apostate his concerns with the working poor and his dislike of pre-union-era capitalism are evident in a grim story about a young man who is brutalized by the subhuman working conditions in a textile mill, yet achieves a kind of liberation in the end. London s fascination with primitive male characters is evident in Just Meat, a story of two thieves who plot each other s demise in a selfish grab for a hoard of recently stolen jewelry. Like his famous novel The Sea Wolf, the stories Make Westing and The Francis Spaight (described as "A True Tale Retold") portray corrupt sea captains abusing and terrorizing their crews during nightmarish voyages. In the concluding story, A Piece of Steak London starkly portrays the desperate struggles of an aging boxer as he grapples with a younger contender through most of a grueling twenty-round fight. As all of these stories vividly reveal, many of them brilliantly, no one had a more dispassionate and uncompromising view of human nature at its worst or could express it more forcefully than Jack London. Condition: Green stamping to spine faded, minor edge wear, tape residue on end papers, foxing to half title else a better than very good copy.

Seller: The Book Collector, Inc. ABAA, ILAB, Fort Worth, TX, U.S.A.