Americana Exchange

Auction Details

Auction House Sothebys
Website www.sothebys.com/
Auction Name Library of an English Bibliophile, Pt.II
Sale Number NO8768
Auction Date Oct 20, 2011 - Oct 20, 2011

Lot Details : Sothebys

Lot Number 124     
Author POE, EDGAR ALLAN.
Title TALES
Year Published 1845
Place Printed NEW YORK WILEY AND PUTNAM
Description 8vo (189 x 127mm.), first edition, first printing, with Ludwig's imprint on the copyright page, first issue, with the New York imprint. initial blank, half-title, publisher's advertisements ([4], [4], xii pages at end, publisher's printed wrappers, red morocco gilt slipcase, brown buckram chemise, scattered foxing, slightly stained, spine split, split on upper cover near spine skillfully repaired, corners chipped printed book
Lot Note BAL 16146; Grolier American 55; Heartman and Canny (1943) 90-97; NYPL/Gordan 485; Queen's Quorum 1; Yale/Gimbel 61 "The tale proper, in my opinion, affords unquestionably the fairest field for the exercise of the loftiest talent." (Poe to Hawthorne) "Here ... begins the detective story, with 'The Murders in the Rue Morgue', 'The Mystery of Marie Roget', and primus inter pares, the character of the amateur detective who triumphs over the blundering police, in 'The Purloined Letter'. The earlier Tales of the Grotesque and Arabesque... contains a larger number of the Poe tales of horror, which are still the artistic standard for that school, but this volume adds... 'The Descent into the Maelstrom' and 'The Gold Bug'" (Grolier American). "...the first important book of detective stories, the first and greatest, the cornerstone of cornerstones...the highest of all high spots...contains for the first time in book form all three Dupin stories." Queen's Quorum 1 While the tales herein were not selected by Poe (and he expressed reservations about the editor "whose taste does not coincide with my own") they are in the end perhaps the single best representation of his broad range and lasting influence. The 1845 Tales contains not only the invention of modern detective fiction, but also his supreme handling of pyschological horror, and contributions to both science fiction and the adventure story. Very rare, one of only perhaps 6 copies found in the full original wrappers.
Provenance Edward Hubert Litchfield, armorial bookplate and description from Philadelphia dealer Charles Sessler laid in, his sale, Sotheby's-Parke-Bernet, 1951, lot 745; H. Bradley Martin, bookplate, his sale ("Highly Important American and Children's Literature"), Sotheby's New York, 30 January 1990, lot 2210
Estimated Price USD 200,000.00 - 250,000.00
Actual Price USD 314,500.00