Published by London: K.S. Bhat 1931, 1931
Seller: Harrison-Hiett Rare Books, Richelieu, France
Red cloth with gilt titles and design to the front cover. #97/300 (of a total edition of 350). One of a series of four anthologies of poetry and fiction published by Bhat in 1931-32. The contibutors include T F Powys, Oswell Blakeston, Laurence Powys, John Gawsworth and Rhys Davies. 225 by 150mm (8¾ by 6 inches). Good clean condition, with a touch of fading to the spine. Internally clean and tidy, with fractional darkening to the page edges. 62 pp.
Published by K S Bhat 63 Southwark Park Road S E 16 London, 1932
Seller: Deightons, Bournemouth, United Kingdom
First Edition
US$ 90.36
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketHardcover. Condition: Very Good. 1st Edition. 1st edition. Large 8vo. 100pp. Portrait frontis. PublisherÕs plain black cloth covers, gilt lettering on spine, small gilt moon on front. Original white eps. Neat initials on fep Ò J B W 1939Ó. Covers : shelf rubs top/bottom of spine, wear to corners else clean. Contents : browning to eps else clean & tight. Clean tight copy. VG.
US$ 55.60
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketLIMITED EDITION, no. 96/ 350. Slim crown 8vo, pp. [88] + frontispiece by Cecil Wray and illustration by Frederick Carter. Yellow buckram, spine lettered in silver, silver-stamped crescent moon to upper board. Top edge silver, leading edge untrimmed. Grubby boards (patchily so cleaning attempted?), dusty edges. Frontispiece loose, else, internally clean and tidy. Jisc LHD lists five legal deposit libraries (excepting NLS), plus St. Andrews and Senate House Library, as holding complete runs. Good+ A solid copy of the second issue of the limited edition (no. 96/ 350) of K. S. Bhat's fascinating, but short-lived interwar literary magazine, featuring contributions by Oswell Blakeston, the Czech Symbolist poet Otoka B ezina in translation via Paul Selver, Rhys Davies, John Galsworth, Laurence and T. F. Powys, plus Geoffrey West and the communist activist and first British MP (for Labour) of Indian Parsi heritage, Shapurji Saklatvala. "Sensitive people shudder when books are confused with magazines; but Dr. Bhat produced a highbrow magazine that practically was a book": so began the ever playful Oswell Blakeston in his tart retrospective of the interwar oddity, Soma, 30 years on (Blakeston, 1964). According to Blakeston, the very little-known K. S. Bhat was a socially- and literary-minded Indian doctor who practised in an impoverished area of London, often providing his services for free. While based in the UK, Bhat had "decided to send to India some of the creative work he liked best in the English literary scene," hence the robust bindings to facilitate safe travel to the subcontinent. Publication of Soma ceased in 1935, after five issues, when, as planned, the medically up-skilled Bhat returned to India himself.