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McNeil, Morris. Hokum: A Play in Three Acts. The Sans Souci Press, Wellesley, 1978.

Price: US$150.00 + shipping

Condition: Very Good

Description: Handlettered R of 26 copies A-Z and signed by William Young, the publisher. In good slipcase.

Seller: Moe's Books, Berkeley, CA, U.S.A.

HEMINGWAY, Ernest and Morris McNeil. Hokum: A play in three acts [Deluxe Issue, Signed]. The Sans Souci Press, Wellesley Hills, 1978.

Price: US$275.00 + shipping

Description: Deluxe Issue, one of 26 lettered copies specially bound and signed by publisher William Young, this being copy 'S'. Octavo (22.5cm); beige buckram, with title label mounted to upper spine; dustjacket; publisher's original slipcase; [8],9-138,[6]pp. Fine in a Fine dustjacket and slipcase. Handsome edition of this early dramatic work, co-written by Hemingway and his old schoolmate Morris Musselman in the early 1920's.

Seller: Lorne Bair Rare Books, ABAA, Winchester, VA, U.S.A.

Hemingway Ernest; McNeil, Morris. HOKUM: A play in three acts. Wellesley Hills Sans Souci Press 1978, 1978.

Price: US$2750.00 + shipping

Description: First Edition. ONE OF ONLY THREE COPIES, this being copy Number 2, inscribed by the publisher to the recipient with a long and very personal presentation inscription noting the placement of the three copies and the fact that the book would not be published and bound for still a month after this first issue copy which is specially bound for presentation. Signed and inscribed again on the colophon page with presentation to the recipient and the numbering of the copy as No. 2 of 3. 8vo, publisher's special binding of rough sepia cloth, the spine with a white label lettered in black, with end-leaves, wrapper and slipcase in off-white and the title-page printed in black. Typesetting by Thomas Todd, the binding by Robert Burlen, designed and printed by William and Raquel Freguson for William Young's San Souci Press, June 1978. 138 pp. A pristine copy, as mint, both the book and protective box in excellent condition ONE OF ONLY THREE COPIES OF THE EARLIEST ISSUE OF THE FIRST EDITION. ONE COPY FOR THE PUBLISHER, THIS COPY FOR PRESENTATION BY THE PUBLISHER TO A CLOSE FRIEND AND ASSOCIATE, AND ONE COPY FOR SALE AT THE HIGHEST PRICE. What led to the eventual publication of this book is a story of significant interest and it is outlined in the long introduction by William and Dorothy Young. The typescript of the play was dated: Chicago 1920-1921 and would therefore qualify as Hemingway's first book, unpublished. Later research proved that at least Acts One and Two were completed and that the play had been copyrighted on June 4, 1921 thus proving that "what was apparently Hemingway's first book lay resting in some dusty corner of the copyright office in Washington." 'The carbon typescript of the book was authenticated by Professor Carlos Baker, the definitive Hemingway scholar. The only fragment remaining of the original manuscript descended from Leicester Hemingway to the publisher. In the Quinlan papers at Yale is a letter from Hemingway to Grace Quinlan, dated November 16, 1920, stating, in substance that he is writing a fifty-fifty collaboration with Musselman. Professor Baker also made note of a second letter from Musselman to Hemingway which states among other matters that they must get to work over the weekend to begin the thrird act of the play. The entire matter is discussed in the introduction to the book. At one time, the book was banned in California but remains as Hemingway's first authored book.' W. Young "Banned in California" This is the first printing from the original typescript and is thus the first time the book, apparently Hemingway's first, has been available to the public. The handsome typesetting is by Thomas Todd and the binding by Robert Burlen. Design and printing were carried out by William and Raquel Ferguson.

Seller: Buddenbrooks, Inc., Newburyport, MA, U.S.A.