Product Type
Condition
Binding
Collectible Attributes
Seller Location
Seller Rating
Published by The John C. Winston Company, Philadelphia, Toronto, 1948
Seller: Currey, L.W. Inc. ABAA/ILAB, Elizabethtown, NY, U.S.A.
First Edition
Octavo, pebbled black cloth, stamped in red and gold. First edition. "True crime, mostly somewhat dramatized." - Hubin (1994), p. 1. A nearly fine copy; no dust jacket. (#118263).
Published by Neufeld & Henius, Berlin 1932 (ca), 1932
Seller: Abrahamschacht-Antiquariat Schmidt, Freiberg, Germany
Book
8° Leinen. ohne Schutzumschlag Gebrauchsspuren am Einband und Block Block sauber und fest ohne Einträge Einband berieben und etwas fleckig 224 Deutsch 450g.
Published by Covici-Friede, New York, 1932
Seller: Lok Man Rare Books. ABA/ILAB, Central, Hong Kong
First Edition
Dust Jacket Included. 1st Edition. First Edition. -- Condition: Near fine, light soiling to covers, and faint spotting to upper edge of text block, in near fine dust jacket with small areas of colour touch up to corners and spine ends with corresponding strips of restoration to verso. -- Details: A rare and superb example of the fourth Thatcher Colt mystery in the dust jacket designed by Arthur Hawkins. As the circus prepares to play in Madison Garden, Colt and his trusted sidekick (and story narrator) Tony Abbott enquire about a series of accidents that have occurred amongst the troupe, including one death, letters are being received by the main stars warning them against performing on the Friday 13th opening night. 'Thatcher Colt, Commissioner of Police for New York City, a dashing figure, handsome, wealthy, cultured and well connected. The Colt books are characteristic Golden Age products, complex and clever, designed to deceive and, in doing so, to satisfy.' - Cooper & Pike. Oursler (1893-1952) was a journalist, playwright, author and editor, as well as a convert to Catholicism, who wrote several religious books among them The Greatest Story Ever Told, published in 1949 - using his given name while authoring detective fiction under the nom de plume of Anthony Abbot. (Oursler also co-wrote with his son Will the fact-based book that inspired the hit film Boys Town [1938] starring Spencer Tracy.) Oursler's/Abbot's most famous sleuth, New York Police Commissioner Thatcher Colt, is clearly modeled after Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes, by way of S. S. Van Dine's Philo Vance. Interesting to note that Oursler prefaced many of his titles with 'About the . . ' to keep them near the top of alphabetized book lists. [Turner Classic Movies] The UK edition was published a year later in 1933 by Collins, London. -- References: Reilly, 'Twentieth-Century Crime and Mystery Writers' (1980), 12. Cooper & Pike, 'Detective Fiction', 14. -- Octavo (book size 20.8x14.4cm), pp. [6] vii-xi [1] 275 [1]. In publisher's yellow cloth, spine and upper board lettered in red, all edges trimmed. Dust jacket priced '$2.00' to upper corner of front flap, both flaps with publisher's decorative trim to corners, and small areas of colour touch up to corners and spine ends with corresponding strips of restoration to verso. --.