From The Author: Jonkers Rare Books

J O N K E R S R A R E B O O K S

P R E S E N T A T I O N C O P I E S & M A N U S C R I P T S

E.B. WHITE TO ELIZABETH TAYLOR

90. WHITE, E.B. CHARLOTTE’S WEB Harper, 1952. First edition. First issue, with ‘First edition, I-B’ on verso title page as required. Original publisher’s pictorial cloth in (supplied) dustwrapper. Author’s presentation copy, in- scribed to friend and fellow novelist, Elizabeth Taylor on the front end paper, “For Eliz- abeth Taylor / and I do like Irish whiskey / E B White”. Colour dustwrapper by Garth Williams and numerous line drawings in the text also by Williams. A very good copy, with some toning to the spine and a little wear to the spine ends and slight looseness to the initial pages. The dustwrapper is near fine, clean and bright with trivial wear and a thin chip to one corner. [30999] £15,000 Elizabeth Taylor, the critically regarded British novelist, described by Kingsley Amis as “One of the best English novelists born this century”, whose writing career was forced into relative ob- scurity as a consequence of coinciding with the rise of her more famous namesake, the American actress. Her style was in the mould of Ivy Compton-Burnett, Barbara Pym and Elizabeth Bowen, and has only recently been recognised as one of the important authors of the twentieth century. She wrote twelve novels and many short stories, most of which were originally published in The New Yorker, where E.B. White’s wife, Katherine, was her first editor. Taylor rarely travelled to America so did not often meet White, but they became good friends via a long and frequent cor- respondence. Charlotte’s Web was one of Taylor’s favourite books and was a story she read aloud to her grandchildren. E.B. White was known to be a great fan of whiskey, often having a bottle to hand to offer guests and storing all his manuscripts in old whiskey boxes. Presentation copies of Charlotte’s Web of significant literary association are genuinely rare. PROVENANCE: Elizabeth Taylor (1912-1975, Novelist)

WODEHOUSE TO DAVID JASEN 91. WODEHOUSE, P.G. TALES OF ST. AUSTIN’S A & C Black, 1903.

First edition, first state of title page, secondary binding with printed titles to the spine rather than gilt. Original red pictorial cloth. Inscribed by the author to his biographer, David Jasen, “To David from Plum P.G.Wodehouse May 26 - 1965”. Twelve black and white plates. A very good copy with a little fraying to the head of the spine and a short split at the head of the front joint. Front hinge tender. [37418] £2,500 The author’s third published novel. Inscribed copies are scarce. McIlvaine A3a

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