The Less Deceived - Rare Book Insider
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LARKIN, PHILIP

The Less Deceived

The Marvell Press, Hessel: 1955
  • $985
Inscribed by Ann Thwaite, whose husband Anthony - Larkin's great friend and the editor of his letters - was one of the original subscribers listed at the rear. First edition, first issue - one of 300 copies bound from a total impression of 700 - this copy with a rounded spine. Barry Bloomfield was a very nice man and an excellent bibliographer but his description of this (A6) appears to contradict itself: he notes that "A later binding has no strip of stiffening mull inserted" - implying a flat, rather than a rounded spine - but also that "The early copies . . . are bound with flat spines". I have seen copies of the stated "second edition" (which is, in fact, the second issue of the first impression, being the 400 copies bound after the first 300 had been sold) with both flat and rounded spines. While I'm at it, another dubious point suggests that only the 120 `subscribers' copies' has the list of those individuals on pp. [44-45] at the rear - whereas it appears to be common to the whole impression of 700 copies. Dustwrapper deeply price-clipped and missing tiny chips from extremities of spine else a nice copy.
More from Peter Grogan
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Substantial archive of correspondence with a publisher

Comprising 24 autograph letters (48pp.), 19 typed letters ( 38pp.) and ten autograph postcards, all signed. The early letters concern an unrealised project to publish a collection of Middleton's poems: (from the earliest): "Joe Kennedy has suggested to me that I should contact you regarding your series of poetry chapbooks. I do not know if you have read any of my work, but I'm sending you a rather abstruse cycle of texts, minus two notes which are explicative but available (one from Shklovsky, the other about Nada) in the hope that, even if you haven't read anything of mine, you might give this cycle a good look." A second project, an American edition of "The Lonely Suppers of W.V. Balloon" meets with more success and thereafter the tone of the letters becomes more that of those between friends. (16 September 1982): "Sorry about your difficulties with the ladies. What can be the problem? Are you too wrapped up in yourself? That's often the trouble nowadays, it seems; the man who never steps outside of himself, or just trundles along without a show of initiative, the opaque man who lives in his dull old fantasies . . .". Throughout, the letters provide a wealth of biographical detail: (from the final one, at which point the author was in his 80th year): "So, anyway, I got about in June: 3 weeks in Turkey, one of which was spent in Urgup in Cappadocia . . . and in Istanbul where I met heaps of very interesting people. Berlin held me, before Paris, for ten days." Together with: four-pp. "Author Information Sheet" (1975) completed in detail by Middleton; three-pp. autograph fair copy of "Svatava's Dream" inscribed to the recipient; copies of outgoing correspondence for the earlier letters.