Language: English
Published by The Readers Library Publishing Company Ltd, London, 1928
Seller: RIVERLEE BOOKS, Waltham Cross, HERTS, United Kingdom
US$ 10.73
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketHardcover. Condition: Fair. No Jacket. Fair. Hardcover. No Dustjacket; spine damaged especially at top and base. Spine and cover sun-faded. May be folding to pages and marks and browning but otherwise in fair condition. Some foxing to the preliminary blanks. Red cloth boards with gilt lettering/ patterning to spine/ front cover. Owner's name on fep.
Language: English
Published by Jarrolds, London, 1922
Seller: NorWest Books (UK), Minehead, United Kingdom
First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: Fair+. No Jacket. Presumed First. Blue Cloth, Colour Frontis, 255 Pages. No Date Or Printing History; The Dedication Is Dated 1922. A Complete And Soundly Bound Book In Rather Worn Covers. A School Presentation Plate On The Endpaper. Not Ex Library.
Published by George Newnes Limited, London, 1934
Seller: Bookcase, Carlisle, United Kingdom
US$ 20.39
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketHard. Condition: Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Poor. Large open and closed tears to head and foot of DJ and signs of heavy shelf wear. PP are clean and bright and binding is firm. Previous owners book plate pasted on ffep. Size: 12mo.
Published by Jarrolds, London, 1917
Seller: Robert Eldridge, Bookseller, Elizabethtown, NY, U.S.A.
First Edition
Hardback. Condition: Very Good. No Jacket. First Edition. Dell, Draycott M. Ghosts: Adapted from Hendrik Ibsen's Famous Play. London: Jarrolds Publishers Limited, n.d. [1917]. First edition. Octavo, pp. [i-vii] viii [1] 2-190 [191-192: publisher's ads]. Original charcoal gray, front and spine panels stamped in red. Dated (1918) ownership signature on front free endpaper. Scattered light foxing, especially near endpapers, otherwise very good. Not held by any U.S. libraries. #613. $75. Novelizations of popular plays used to be a common feature of book publishing (much like today's novelizations of popular movies). What's odd about this present work is that such a controversial, high-brow play was chosen -- and issued by such a low-brow publisher as Jarrolds. The play itself represents another romp from those devil-may-care Scandinavians, in this case featuring adultery, alcoholism, syphilis, incest, euthanasia via morphine overdose, and an orphanage that burns down. What's not to like? The play was written in 1881 and first performed the following year, somewhat improbably, in Chicago by a touring Danish company. The author, though Norwegian, had written the play in Danish. Its title might be more accurately conveyed in English by the phrase "skeletons in the closet." The play concerns their sudden, overwhelming emergence. A curiosity that should appeal to Ibsen scholars and enthusiasts.