NEW YORK, NY.- On Thursday, February 20
Swann Galleries will offer a sale of Fine Books & Manuscripts with a superb presentation of autographs, nineteenth and twentieth century literature, as well as art, press and illustrated books.
Nineteenth-century literature leads the sale with rare offering of first editions of all six of Jane Austens major novels. The works come across the block in uncommon surviving period bindings with scarce half title pages. Highlights from the offering are Austens first published novel, Sense and Sensibility, 1811the rarest of the six with likely less than 1,000 first editions being printedpresent at $30,000 to $40,000; Pride & Prejudice, 1813, at $20,000 to $30,000; and Emma, 1816the only one of Austens novels to bear a dedication, to the Prince Regentexpected to bring $15,000 to $20,000.
Additional works from the nineteenth century include The Alif Laila, 1839-42, commonly known as The Arabian Nights Entertainments, here in the rare Calcutta II edition in Arabic, edited by W.H. Macnaghten. Printed in Calcutta at the Baptist Mission Press, the subscribers copy carries an estimate of $12,000 to $18,000. The Woman in White, London, 1860, the worlds first detective novel by Wilkie Collins is available in the first edition, first printing, complete copy at $3,000 to $4,000.
There are over 20 inscribed first editions by Graham Greene being offered, including many important association copies, beginning with his first book, Babbling April, 1925, inscribed to his first mistress, Dorothy Glover, estimated at $5,000 to $7,000. Also of note is Greenes personal file copy of The Basement Room, 1935, signed and inscribed with his annotations throughout, at $4,000 to $6,000. Further literary works from the twentieth century feature a limited edition copy of Virginia Woolfs Kew Gardens, 1927, signed by the author and Vanessa Bell, set to bring $5,000 to $7,500. Equally impressive is a group of William Faulkner first editions including a family presentation copy of Intruder in the Dust, 1948, inscribed by him to his first cousin Sallie Burns, at $3,500 to $5,000. Sought-after titles by Anne Frank, Joris-Karl Huysmans, Henrik Ibsen, Friedrich Nietsche and Fernando Pessoa, some of them signed, lend a Continental perspective.
Autographs from literary figures abound with a complete galley proof of Sarojini Naidus book The Broken Wing, signed with several holograph pages, and an autograph letter signed to writer Edmund Gosse ($6,000-9,000); a small archive of five items signed by Philip K. Dick to his psychiatrist Dr. Harry Bryan ($3,500-5,000); an autograph letter signed by Mark Twain to his publisher James R. Osgood dated May 12, 1882 ($1,500-2,500); and an ALS signed by Virginia Woolf to her brother-in-law, Clive Bell, dated 1918 ($2,000-3,000).
The selection of autographs on offer are led by partly-printed document signed by Abraham Lincoln, in which the sixteenth president issues a call for troops during Americas first national draft just days before the NYC draft riots in 1863. The document is expected to bring $15,000 to $25,000. Further autographs from American presidents include Theodore Roosevelt with a small archive of nine typed letters signed to U.S. Steel co-founder Elbert Henry Gary dated from 1906-08, in which the president discusses his recent speeches, most notably his Muckraker speech demonstrating the extent of his sympathy with radical reformers ($6,000-9,000). A group photograph of Presidents Regan, Ford, Carter, and Nixon inside the White House prior to leaving for Anwar Sadats memorial, is available dated and signed by each between the years 1984-87 ($3,000-4,000).
Remarkable figures from history include signatures of all seven members of Project Mercurythe project that put the first man into orbitin a first edition, first printing copy of We Seven, 1962 ($5,000-7,000). A run of items signed by Diana, Princess of Wales, include a group of six autograph letters signed dating from 1996-97 to Harpers Bazaar editor Elizabeth Tilberis, accepting invitation to the Met Gala and anticipating Christies announcement of the charity auction of her dresses ($6,000-9,000), as well as a signed catalogue from the charity auction ($5,000-7,500). Helen Keller is represented by a signed and inscribed photographic postcard of Keller, with her hands on Enrico Carusos face. Dated May 22, 1916, Keller writes of Carusos private performance for her in April of that year: He poured his wonderful voice into my hand and my soul was filled with music, ($500-750).
The sale will also contain a selection of art, press and illustrated books, including limited-edition livres dartiste, material from the Sackner Archive of Concrete & Visual Poetry, and inscribed works by Latin American artists.