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Seamus Heaney. North (Signed Copy). Faber & Faber, London, 1975.

Price: US$252.01 + shipping

Condition: Very Good

Description: Book condition: VG with a hint of fading; some very light abrasions; a couple of very faint spots to vertical page edges. First reprint in year of first publication (1975). Signed by Seamus Heaney on front blank endpaper. A bright, tight copy.

Seller: Kirklee Books, Glasgow, United Kingdom

HEANEY, Seamus. North. Faber and Faber Ltd, London, 1975.

Price: US$275.00 + shipping

Condition: Very Good

Description: Second printing of the wrappered issue. Slim octavo. Wrappers moderately worn with a small crease on the cover and top corners gently bumped, very good. Briefly Inscribed by Heaney on the front blank: "Seamus Heaney. For Betty with love, Hallowe'en 1975."

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

HEANEY, SEAMUS. North. Faber and Faber, London, 1975.

Price: US$516.94 + shipping

Description: First edition in paper wrappers, published simultaneously with the hardback issue. Signed by Heaney on first blank. Moderate edge-wear and fading to spine, else a very good copy.

Seller: Peter Grogan, London, United Kingdom

Heaney, Seamus. North (signed and inscribed). London: Faber and Faber, 1975, 1975.

Price: US$2275.79 + shipping

Condition: As New

Description: First Edition, First Printing. A fine copy in a very good to near fine dustwrapper. Inscribed by Heaney on the front free endpaper: "Seamus Heaney / for Ron Ewart / Sláinte / Locarno, October 1977". Hardbound copies of North are quite scarce; with near contemporary inscriptions even more so.

Seller: Yves G. Rittener - YGRbookS, Zürich, Switzerland

Seamus Heaney. North, inscribed by the author. Faber and Faber Ltd., London, 1975.

Price: US$2600.00 + shipping

Description: This jacketed first edition, first printing is inscribed by Heaney in three inked lines on the front free endpaper recto: "For Alan | with good wishes | Seamus Heaney". Condition of both volume and dust jacket is conservatively graded as very good plus. The blue cloth binding is tight and unfaded with bright spine gilt, minimal wear confined to extremities, a slight forward lean, and a hint of faint, whitish mottling to the boards. The contents remain respectably bright. The sole previous ownership mark is the author’s inscription. Differential toning to the endpapers corresponds to the dust jacket flaps and confirms that this copy has spent life jacketed. Light spotting and modest age-toning appears confined to the front pastedown and facing free endpaper and the page edges. The dust jacket is complete, unclipped with no loss or tears, with only mild toning to the fade-prone pale blue front panel and spine and light soiling and wear to extremities. The jacket is protected with a removable, archival quality clear cover. North marks Heaney’s artistic engagement with the Troubles. The conflict in Northern Ireland spanning the last three decades of the 20th century coincided with Heaney’s most prolific years as a poet. In 1972 he moved his family to Wicklow, south of Dublin, and began to write poetry full time. He wrote while "listening to the rain in the trees and to the news of bombings closer to home". (Nobel Lecture, 1995) Heaney became deeply concerned with the notion of a poet’s responsibilities, writing, "for years I was bowed to the desk like some monk bowed over his prie-dieu, some dutiful contemplative pivoting his understanding in an attempt to bear his portion of the weight of the world" (Nobel Lecture). Heaney calls North "The book of mine that came most intensely out of the first shock of the Troubles " (Interview, Stepping Stones, Dennis O’Driscoll, p.448) In part, North was prompted by Irish playwright Brian Friel’s 1975 play Volunteers, which is set on a construction site in Dublin where an archaeological dig is in progress, exposing layers of Irish history and the violence embedded therein. Heaney said: " when I read the play, I immediately started typing out all the bog ‘Singing School’/St Columb’s poems and so on, and by the end of a weekend I found I had a manuscript that I could send to Faber as well as to Brian. That’s how North got assembled " (Stepping Stones, p.179) The volume is in two parts. Part I is a metaphorical excavation of Ireland’s history, mining "the stable element, the land itself, that we must look for continuity" ("The Sense of Place", lecture, 1977). The poems of "Part II" are more "conversational and personal". Of them, Heaney said "They were a second movement as much as they were a second section different in pitch but integral to the book They come out of ‘the matter of the North’ of Ireland." (Stepping Stones, p.179) North, Heaney said, does "What the necessary poetry always does, which is to touch the base of our sympathetic nature while taking in at the same time the unsympathetic reality of the world to which that nature is constantly exposed" (Nobel Lecture). Seamus Justin Heaney (1939-2013) was the first of nine children born to a farmer and raised in rural County Derry "in suspension between the archaic and the modern." At Queens University Belfast Heaney evolved into a poet. In 1965 Heaney was a member of a group of young Belfast poets known as "The Group" when his first book, Eleven Poems, was published by Queen’s Festival Publications to coincide with their 1965 festival. The 1966 publication of Death of a Naturalist brought critical acclaim. The next half century saw Heaney publish a dozen poetry collections, as well as prose, plays, and numerous translations. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1995 "for works of lyrical beauty and ethical depth, which exalt everyday miracles and the living past". Bibliographic reference: Brandes & Durkan A12a.

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

HEANEY, Seamus.. North.. London Faber & Faber, 1975.

Price: US$3448.50 + shipping

Description: First edition, first impression, inscribed by the author on the front free endpaper; 8vo; front endpapers browned as usual; publisher's blue cloth, titles to spine gilt, with the dust jacket. An exceptional copy in the rather faded dust jacket. With the author's signed, presentation inscription to the front free endpaper on the day of publication, 'for Francis Quail Seamus Heaney 9th June 1975'. Contemporary presentation copies of North are uncommon, the collection is certainly one of the poet's major achievements. The jacket - which is printed on a pale blue ground - is particularly prone to fading. Brandes & Durkan A12a

Seller: Shapero Rare Books, London, United Kingdom

Seamus Heaney. North. Faber & Faber, London, 1975.

Price: US$3750.00 + shipping

Condition: Fine

Description: First UK Edition/First Printing. Hardcover. Near fine book in a fine unclipped dust jacket. Signed and dated on publication day (9th June, 1975) by the author on the front flyleaf. Book has a touch of rubbing to the edges, light spotting to the top edge and toning to the front flyleaf.

Seller: MDS BOOKS, Mississauga, ON, Canada