Language: English
Published by Hutchinson & Co, London, 1933
Seller: West Hull Rare Books - ABA, ILAB, P.B.F.A., Hull, YORKS, United Kingdom
Association Member: PBFA
First Edition Signed
US$ 4,484.33
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketHardcover. Condition: Very Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Very Good. 1st Edition. HARDBACK - A very good book bound in the publisher's navy blue cloth boards with bright gilt lettering present to the spine. Pushing to the spine tips, with some ghosting to the spine, also with a touch of fading to the top one centimetre of the front panel. Internally clean with a little toning to the closed text blocks. Light foxing to the front and rear pastedowns, also to the front and rear end-papers, but the rest of the inner text is clean with no soiling or finger marks inset. Free of any previous owner names or inscriptions, but with a P.T. Lovell stamp in red ink present to the half title page and to the top corner of the title page. Signed by the author to the title page. The dust wrapper is in very good condition for its age with the usual fading to the spine. There is chipping to the spine tips, with closed tears and rubbing to the extremities. Dust soiling to the corners of the front and rear flap folds. The publisher's printed price of 10'6 net present to the lower centre of the spine. Signed by Author(s).
Language: English
Published by The Cresset Press, London, 1935
Seller: Wabash Museum Books, Mount Carmel, IL, U.S.A.
Signed
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Fair. E Mcknight Kauffer (illustrator). 142 Pages; Part 1 With 16 Chapters. Introductory Remarks In Front Of Book; Finale In Rear Of Book. Pages Tight; No Markings On Pages. Signed Note "To Gilbert L Harcutt H G Wells" On Front End Page. Dark Blue Boards With Gild Lettering On Front Cover And Spine. Minor Shelf Wear. Glossy Dust Jacket Has Beige Background; Light Blue And Black Lettering And Illustration On Front Cover And Spine. Black Background With Image Of Film Scenes On Back Cover. Some Rubbing And Fading; Few Nicks On Dj Edges And Spine Ends; Minor Creasing And Wear Near Top Front; 2 Small Tears Of Approximately 1 Inch At Top On Front Dj.Wear On Fold Flaps Ends. Author Provides A Complete And Thrilling Story, Which Is Not Impaired In Any Way Although The Full Technical Details Of The Film Are Given. The London Film Productions Gave Permission To Use The Photographs Which Were Reproduced On The Dust Jacket. Other Works By H G Wells Are Listed On The Front End Page Opposite The Title Page. Chapter Headings Include: Before The Second World War; War Break Over Everytown; The Second World War; The Wandering Sickness; Everytown Under A Patriot Chief; The New Generation; World Audience; The Struggle For The Space Gun; The Firing Of The Space Gun, Etc. Very Rare Signed Copy With His Signature Ending In A Special Elegant Design. Signed by Author(s).
Published by The Cresset Press, 1935
Seller: Bibliodisia Books, Caxton Club, Chicago, IL, U.S.A.
Association Member: MWABA
First Edition Signed
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. E. McKnight Kauffer (illustrator). First Edition. Publisher's blue cloth with gilt title in black square with gilt border. This edition contains the story covered by the classic Raymond Massey film. A professional facsimile of the rare E. McKnight Kauffer dust jacket is included in pristine condition and in a plastic cover. The book is near fine with light amber spotting to the endpaper from humidity, not extending to the text block. Signed.
Published by London Secker and Warburg 1942, 1942
Seller: Aquila Books(Cameron Treleaven) ABAC, Calgary, AB, Canada
First Edition Signed
Condition: Very good. First edition. 288[13]pp. Large 12mo., with buff coloured cloth boards and purple lettering to spine. Wells has written an inscription, as well as the date (New Year, 1944) on the half-title page in black ink. Some very light wear to the edges and corners, as well as the odd bit of spotting throughout the text. Overall, a very good copy. Wells Society #144: "an amalgamation and modernization of two books: 'The Fate of Homo Sapiens' and 'The New World Order'".
Published by Watts, 1952
Seller: Neverland Books, Waalre, Netherlands
Signed
Soft cover. Condition: Good. "First and Last Things. The Definitive edition, The Thinker's Library No. 1" by H.G. Wells. London: Watts & Co., [1952], signed by Wells to front free endpaper, book in good condition, advertisement leaf at end, endpapers toned, original pictorial brown cloth, upper joint split, lightly rubbed. Signed by Author(s).
Published by London: Cassell and Company, Ltd, 1916, 1916
Seller: Adrian Harrington Ltd, PBFA, ABA, ILAB, Royal Tunbridge Wells, KENT, United Kingdom
First Edition Signed
US$ 620.91
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketFirst Edition. [Philosophy / Literature] FIRST EDITION, first impression, INSCRIBED BY THE AUTHOR. Octavo (19 x 14cm), pp.295; [1], imprint. Publisher's impressed green cloth with gilt titles to spine. With signed, dated inscription by Wells to first blank. Contents heavily toned, paper is brittle, some neat repairs to tears on p.97 and p.161, small amount of insect damage to inside joint, covers rubbed and worn, gilt dulled. This book was cheaply produced, is notoriously fragile and as a result, rather scarce. Copies simply haven't survived. Only two other firsts are currently listed online, neither of which is signed. Twelve chapters on rearmament and political theory. The print run is not stated in either Wells bibliography, although the paucity of survivors suggests a small number were produced in book-form, likely as the content had already appeared in Cassell's Magazine, The Daily Chronicle and The Daily News. Geoffrey H Wells [59]. See Haining; H.G.Wells' Scrapbook. Signed.
Published by London London Films 1934-1936, 1936
Seller: James Pepper Rare Books, Inc., ABAA, Santa Barbara, CA, U.S.A.
Signed
Present in the archive is the extremely rare privately printed original screenplay written by H.G. Wells for the film Things To Come entitled at this working stage - Whither Mankind? Most films scripts of the period are simple mimeographed pieces. Wells went and had his script typeset by a printer and printed like a book in a tiny quantity: ÒThis is the property of Mr. H.G. Wells.PRIVATE AND CONFIDENTIAL.FOR PRIVATE CIRCULATION ONLY.Ó Bound in plain green wrappers. Laid in is an Autograph Letter Signed from H.G. Wells to the film director of Things To Come, William Cameron Menzies, in which he tries to take Menzies to account and assert his control over the film: ÒPrivate and Confidential. Oct. 9. 34. Dear Menzies. This is all wrong. Get it in full perspective. This is an HG WELLS film!!!! And your highest and best is needed for the complete realization of MY treatment. Bless you. The very casting of Ômachines to the design of Mr. MenziesÕ will be a casting out. Again bless you, H.G.Ó Accompanied by a remarkable detailed pencil quarto size Autograph Letter Signed H.G. Wells written to actor Raymond Massey, the lead star of Things To Come. Wells's obsession with exerting his desires are well shown in the letter where Wells takes Massey to task on aspects of his performance in a key scene with Ralph Richardson telling him that it should be re-shot and Wells has drawn 4 pencil sketches showing how he thinks the scene should be filmed. This letter was then given by Massey to director Menzies. Additionally, present is a typed carbon copy of a letter to H.G. Wells from actor Ralph Richardson who played the role of The Boss in the film. Apparently, Wells was unhappy with Richardson's performance as well and Richardson in the letter suggests it can be improved by reshooting and that Wells should speak to Menzies as director. This carbon was sent on to Menzies to give him a heads up. And there are four original black and white still photographs from the film including a terrific image of H.G. Wells on the set with actors Raymond Massey and Ann Pearl Argyle in their futurist costumes. All the material is in very good to fine condition enclosed in a custom morocco and cloth clamshell box. Things To Come was the first great science fiction picture in the sound film era and its treatment approach and stunning design has influenced generations of motion pictures.
Published by London: The Cresset Press. and 1935, 1936
Seller: LUCIUS BOOKS (ABA, ILAB, PBFA), York, United Kingdom
First Edition Signed
US$ 4,484.33
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketFirst edition, first printing of both volumes, bound in one. Signed by the author. Inscribed presentation and association copy. Mid-twentieth century half calf for Henry Sotheran, five raised bands, gilt decorated compartments and titles on red morocco labels to the spine. Brown cloth boards. Ownership initials of Richard Kayne in gilt to the bottom right corner of the upper board. Top edge gilt. Marbled endpapers. A very good copy, the binding square and firm with some rubbing to the spine hinges and corners. The contents, with the bookplate of Richard Kayne to the front pastedown, and four pages of additional dialogue in the form of carbon-copy typescript (annotated in the hand of Wells), are clean throughout. The Man Who Could Work Miracles is inscribed by the author in black ink on the half title "for Philip Charlot / H. G. Wells / April 1936". The recipient was the film editor on the 1937 Lothar Mendes production starring Ralph Richardson, Joan Gardner and Roland Young. Underneath Wells' inscription Charlot has later inscribed "for Richard Kayne / with very best wishes / Philip Charlot / October 1956". The page preceding the half title of the second title 'Things to Come' is further inscribed by Charlot "Sorry, Richard, but H.G. forgot to sign this one for me - Philip". The recipient of Charlot's presentation is the writer, composer and musician Richard Kayne (pseudonym of William Sydney Kuttner), who is perhaps best remembered for composing the haunting theme from the 1959 Horror film 'House On Haunted Hill' (starring Vincent Price). [Bleiler; Locke: Spectrum of Fantasy]. Further details and images for any of the items listed are available on request. Lucius Books welcomes direct contact with our customers.
Published by The Cresset Press, London, 1935
Seller: Raptis Rare Books, Palm Beach, FL, U.S.A.
First Edition Signed
First edition of the novelization of the classic 1936 film H. G. Wells' Things to Come. Octavo, original publisher's cloth. Signed by H.G. Wells and actor Derrick de Marnay on front free endpaper. Derrick de Marnay starred as Richard Gordon in the acclaimed 1936 film adaptation, Things to Come, directed by William Cameron Menzies. In near fine condition. A very sharp and unique signed example. First published in 1933, The Shape of Things to Come takes the form of a future history that ends in 2106. A long economic slump causes a major war that leaves Europe devastated and threatened by the plague. In decades of chaos with much of the world reverting to medieval conditions, pilots and technicians formerly serving in various nations' air forces maintain a network of functioning air fields. Around this nucleus, technological civilization is rebuilt, with the pilots and other skilled technicians eventually seizing worldwide power and sweeping away the remnants of the old nation states. A number of Wells' short-term predictions would come true, such as the aerial bombing of whole cities presented in more detail than in his previous The War in the Air and the eventual development of weapons of mass destruction. The book was adapted into the 1936 film, Things to Come, directed by William Cameron Menzies and starring Derrick de Marnay as Richard Gordon. "Things to Come qualifies as the first true masterpiece of science fiction cinema" (Westfahl, Bio-Encyclopedia of Science Fiction Film).
US$ 5,312.21
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketCloth. Condition: Very Good. None (illustrator). First edition. A scarce, signed, first edition copy of HG Wells' 'Things to Come' dedicated in Wells' hand to his son, Anthony. Wells has signed the half title to his son, Anthony West. Lacking dustwrapper, as is usual with this work. From the estate of Katharine 'Kitty' Church. Kitty Church was a British neo-romantic painter who was married to the author and literary critic Anthony West to whom this work is addressed. West was the son of Rebecca West and H.G Wells. He is best known for the novel 'Heritage' which was a thinly disguised autobiography as it follows the life of a boy who grows up neglected and ignored by his famous parents. His mother famously threatened to sue him if the work was published in Britain. This is the film story based on the material in Wells' 'The Shape of Things to Come'. This science fiction work speculates on future events up to the year 2106. Several of Wells' short-term predictions in this novel would come true such as the aerial bombing of entire cities and the development of weapons of mass destruction. This screenplay adaptation was released in 1936 and was directed by William Cameron Menzies. A very scarce copy of this work, with important provenance. In the publisher's original cloth binding. Externally, very smart. Spine is cocked. A few handling marks to the boards and a little loss to the head and tail of spine. Author's inscription to the half-title. Internally, generally firmly bound. Slightly strained at page 48. Pages are bright, with just the odd spot. Light ink mark to the head of page 49 and to the top of the fore edge, matching the ink Wells has used. Very Good. signed by author. book.
Published by London Cresset Press 1935, 1935
Seller: James Pepper Rare Books, Inc., ABAA, Santa Barbara, CA, U.S.A.
First Edition Signed
First Edition. First Printing. Signed and inscribed in black ink by H.G. Wells to the manager of the Leicester Square and Lyceum theaters: ÒTo William Yorkham, who bridges the ages between the Lyceum & Leicester Square. H.G. WellsÓ and with WellÕs flamboyant paraph florish. It was at the Leicester Square Theater that Things To Come had its world premiere on February 21, 1936. With light foxing to the top edge and endpapers, else a near fine copy in the original cloth binding in a very good dust jacket with a few small chips and tears. The screenplay written by H.G. Wells for the William Cameron Menzies directed British production starring Raymond Massey resulting in the first science fiction classic film of the sound era. Menzies, perhaps the finest production designer in film history, created a striking vision of the future that is still arresting today. Very rare signed by Wells, the modern father of science fiction.