Comic. 1st printing. Near Mint. Book.
Comic. Liefeld, Rob (illustrator). Vol. 1, no. 1. Cover by Liefeld & Tanya. Flashback artwork by Gil Kane, Stephen Platt & Jow Weems V, Keith Giffen & Bill Wray, Adam Pollima & jon Sibal, Dan Jurgens & Al Gordon. Near Mint. Book.
Comic. Liefeld, Rob (illustrator). Vol. 1, no. 1. Cover by Liefeld & Evans. Flashback artwork by Gil Kane, Stephen Platt & Jow Weems V, Keith Giffen & Bill Wray, Adam Pollima & jon Sibal, Dan Jurgens & Al Gordon. Near Mint. Book.
Published by Charles Boni Paper Books, New York, 1930
Seller: The First Edition Rare Books, LLC, Cincinnati, OH, U.S.A.
First Edition
Paperback original. Condition: Near fine. Set of four paperback books published by Charles Boni Paper Books in 1930. Titles include The Return of the Hero by Darrell Figgis, The Master of the Day of Judgment by Leo Perutz, By the Waters of Manhattan by Charles Reznikoff, and Prize Poems 1913 (illustrator). First Edition Thus. Octavo, [four volumes]. Publisher's original paperback covers, detailed illustrations on covers and endpapers. Solid text blocks, lightly soiled covers, a few stains along edges, internally fine. Housed in the publisher's black and beige cloth slipcase, "Early Paperbacks" in black on blue paper label affixed to spine. The Boni family, including Charles and his brother, Albert, were pioneers in the field of publishing. The brothers began with the Little Leather Library, a set of 30 miniature classics bound in lamb. This was followed by a collaboration with Horace Liveright to launch the Modern Library in 1917. After facing professional differences with Liveright, the Boni brothers opened their own publishing house which allowed each man to pursue his own projects. Charles Boni created Boni Paper Books, a monthly paperback subscription service that yielded 16 total pieces before he quit in 1931 due to limited interest during the Great Depression era.
Published by nella stamperia [Gerardo?] Giuliano, Turin, 1772
12mo (151 x 85 mm). 180 pages. 26 half-page woodcuts printed from 23 blocks, of which 22 showing tormented souls in Hell and one a memento mori; five smaller woodcuts: title cut of St. Michael (printer?s device?), St. Francis receiving the stigmata, the Trinity with spheres of the cosmos, a skull and crossbones, and the Crucifixion; a few type ornaments. (Lower corners of fols. B1 and B2 torn with loss to a few words on B2v; softened, some corners creased, light foxing.) 20th-century quarter parchment and block-printed paper covered boards (scrape to lower cover). Provenance: ?Ex libris Sac. J. Henry,? 20th-century inkstamp repeated twice on title. *** Rare edition of a popular devotional work intended to terrify readers away from sin, illustrated with nightmarish, expressionistic woodcuts.? Showing silently screaming sinners contorting with pain in the flames and tortures of Hell, the woodcuts illustrate 24 ?esclamaziones,? most describing, in purple prose, different sins. Each ?exclamation? is followed by an esempio ? a monitory tale, and a final, brief paragraph containing the sinner?s remorseful prayer for pardon. At the outset the unknown author paraphrases Augustine (Ep. 185, 21) to express the grim view that fear is the strongest incentive toward virtue ("Plus sunt quos corrigit timor, quam quos diligit Amor"). Faced with a hair-raising image of the ultimate punishment, the reader learns the perils of pride, lust, avarice, usury, vengefulness, gluttony, slander, cursing, sloth, ingratitude, gambling, dancing, expensive dress, ostentatious display, disrespect towards one?s parents, obstinacy, impenitence, and despair. Duly terrified, he or she is prepared to learn more about Hell, eternity, Judgment Day, God?s omnipotence, and even Paradise. Further lessons include a particular warning to ?dishonest poets, painters, and comedians,? a poetic litany of metaphors for mortal sin (an infinitely ugly monster, a drink that transforms men into beasts, poison proffered by the Devil in a golden cup, etc.), its effects on the soul and the body, and how to avoid it. Just when one thought it was over, more tales of the damned follow, including one of a female sinner, who ?neglected to confess a mortal sin out of shame.? The work concludes (finally) with lists of daily prayers and meditations. A single wood engraver produced the 23 half-page blocks, 22 of which (repeated to 25) show horror-filled scenes of naked souls. He deployed his limited skills effectively, filling the frames with tireless parallel hatching and varying the positions of each writhing sinner, shown as if through a window into Hell. The iconography was evidently copied from one edition to another, to judge from the only digitized images of any edition that we could find, 2 pages from the undated Lucca: Marescondoli edition (ICCU ITICCUCFIE?28152). The memento mori cut on p. 72 includes xylographic text which was engraved backwards by the possibly illiterate engraver, who copied it directly from a different block. The smaller woodcuts, in different styles, were probably from the printer?s stock. OCLC and ICCU together list 16 editions of this popular text (most claiming, like this one, to be revised and expanded), the earliest from 1670, and the latest published in 1857. The majority were printed in the 18th century, in Bassano, Treviso, Brescia, Bologna and Lucca. It is obvious that the surviving editions, none of which are recorded in more than two copies (most in one copy only), reveal but the tip of the iceberg of a chillingly gripping bestseller. Only this edition, whose attributed dating by ICCU we have adopted, and another edition by the same printer, dated 1742, are from Turin. The present edition is the only one recorded with the word ?chiamar[e]? instead of ?richiamare? in the title. Interestingly, the other Turin edition, which was presumably illustrated wtih the same primitive woodcuts, is held by the Biblioth?que Kandinsky in the Centre Pompidou in Paris, a library dedicated to the study of modern art. The book fits right in. ICCU ITICCUTO0E?35776, locating a copy of this edition at the Biblioteca provinciale di filosofia San Tommaso d'Aquino in Turin. The only American holdings are a copy of the Bologna 1675 edition at Yale Medical Library, and of the Treviso 1785 edition at Harvard.