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  • Henry, Harriet

    Published by Grosset & Dunlap, New York, 1930

    Seller: Shady Grove Book Store, West Branch, MI, U.S.A.

    Seller Rating: 5-star rating, Learn more about seller ratings

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    Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. No Jacket. Condition is Very Good. Clean text. With b/w film stills. Based on the Warner Bros. film starring Constance Bennett. Tight binding. Slight slant. Moderate edge wear to blue boards. 310 pages.

  • Henry, Harriet

    Published by Grosset & Dunlap, New York, 1930

    Seller: Gil's Book Loft, Binghamton, NY, U.S.A.

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    Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. No Jacket. Reprint. Navy-stamped blue cloth, light-struck spine. No dust jacket. No names, clean text. With b/w film stills. Based on the Warner Bros. film starring Constance Bennett. 1401 shelf 310 p. Book.

  • Henry, harriet

    Published by grosset & dunlap, 1930

    Seller: GRAHAM HOLROYD, BOOKS, Webster, NY, U.S.A.

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    Hardcover. 2nd hardcover 4 stills. very good , faded spine, warner bros with constance bennett.

  • Harriet Henry

    Published by Stanley Paul, London, 1933

    Seller: G & S Books, Gillingham, KENT, United Kingdom

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    Hardcover. Condition: Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Good. Hard Cover is green, is bumped to spine ends with a very small mark on bottom edge. DJ is worn to edges and a small split to spine on back cover. There is a dedication on fep . No foxing inside book but some on fep and extreme page edges. DJ is covered in a clear protective wrapper. The book is undated but at the end of the book Stanley Paul have issued Spring announcements for 1933 which takes up 31 pages. I believe this could therefore be a first edition. Scarce book to find. Seller Ref: O4275.

  • Seller image for Jackdaws Strut (Only First Edition for sale on the Internet) for sale by Rareeclectic

    Harriet Henry

    Published by William Morrow & Co., New York, 1930

    Seller: Rareeclectic, Pound ridge, NY, U.S.A.

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    Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. 1st Edition. First Edition (SD, NAP; William Morrow & Co.= NAP up to 1974). As mentioned, this is the Only first edition for sale on the Internet. In fact, it's the only book of any edition published by William Morrow (American) for sale on the Internet. The book was also published in England a few years later. This was the author's second novel. It was made into a movie titled 'Bought' which was released in 1931 by Warner Brothers and directed by Archie Mayo. The movie starred Constance Bennett and featured Ben Lyon, Richard Bennett and Dorothy Peterson. Bennett was paid 'an all-time high salary of $30,000 a week for her work.' It was the only movie that she ever made with her father, Richard Bennett. The movie has its own Wikipedia page. Harriet Henry was married to Count Nils de Steuch of Sweden and so was formally known as Countess Harriet Henry de Steuch. Beside being a novelist she was on the staff of Vogue magazine. As it heads for its 100th birthday, this book is in very good condition. You can see the covers in the photos. They are very clean. The gilt lettering and design on the front is nicely bright and free of wear. The lettering and design on the spine is also free of wear. The lettering there is yellow as opposed to the green on the front. It's possible that the sun faded it from green to yellow, as the front and rear cover are black and the spine is a dark brown. There is only minor wear at the spine ends, a few spots of rubbing and one tiny tear at the bottom one. All six cover edges look very good. On the two bottom ones there's a tiny bit of very superficial rubbing or perhaps color fading. The corners have only a tiny bit of superficial rubbing. The top page edge had a topstain that's somewhat faded now. No soiling. The middle and bottom page edges are deckled or rough-cut. They both look very good. The book has a slight to moderate forward lean, but is solidly bound from cover to cover. I found only one instance of a very thin space at the juncture between two facing pages, both pages solidly bound from top to bottom. Both covers are nicely tight, no issues at the junctures of either. The inside covers and end papers form a green and white illustrated design of jackdaws in flight-- or possibly strutting. They are all very clean and in very nice condition with just a little bit of toning off of their edges. The pages in the book are also very clean. Scrolling through, I found only one instance of a light stain off the bottom edge of two facing pages. There's no foxing. The pages are toned, but uniformly. There's little to no creasing. No markings. No attachments. No writing. 'From a New York Times review: 'Harriet Henry is taking the theme of her latest novel from Gilbert and Sullivan (Things are never what they seem, Skim milk masquerades as cream, Highlows pass as patent leathers, Jackdaws strut in peacocks' feathers, Very true, so they do'). And it must be confessed that the curious title which she has drawn from the verse is thoroughly apposite. Stephany Dale, at the age of 18, lived with her widowed mother in a cheap apartment, past whose windows the elevated trains perpetually thundered. Mrs. Dale maintained their home only by unremitting toil over her needle, but Stephany, regarding the cracked enamel and the faded wallpaper, felt herself entitled to better things. Yet she could not quite imagine herself taking dictation at $20 a week. She demanded beauty and luxury and excitement-- and entrée into the coveted world of dinner jackets and genealogies, of debutantes and orchids, a world with which she was acquainted only through reading but represented to her everything really desirable.' The Times reviewer goes on to praise the book's 'really excellent plot', 'dramatic suspense', and 'sustained narrative interest that Jackdaws Strut undeniably contains.' He goes on to state that all of these positives 'compensate the reader rather well for the incredibility inherent in the characterization of Stephany Dale.'.