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Doyle, Arthur Conan | First Edition with carte de visite of the author

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Doyle, Arthur Conan
The Hound of the Baskervilles. London: George Newnes, 1902

8vo. 16 plates after Sidney Paget; previous owner's inscription on first page. Original pictorial red cloth, upper cover with hound design stamped in gilt and black, spine gilt; spotting to fore-edge, rubbed at spine ends, minor fading to spine gilt, lightly bumped at corners. In red clamshell box with pictorial cover. [With]: Portrait photograph of Doyle, inscribed by the author on the mount, printed by Elliott & Fry, London. Bumped to corner with some loss to photograph, minor crease, and toning to photograph and mount.

First edition with carte de visite of the author, inscribed "Yours very [...] A Conan Doyle". The Hound of the Baskervilles, one of the most celebrated crime novels of all time, was inspired by Bertram Fletcher Robinson (Daily Express correspondent during the Boer War), with whom Doyle struck up a friendship when travelling back on the same ship from Cape Town. On a golfing holiday in 1901 Robinson mentioned the legend of the Black Hound of Hergest associated with the Vaughan family of Hergest Court in Herefordshire. Doyle subsequently re-located his version of the story, with Sherlock Holmes as the main protagonist, to Dartmoor in Devon, Robinson's native county. Holmes wrote to his mother on 2 April 1901: "Robinson and I are exploring the moor over our Sherlock Holmes book. I think it will work out splendidly... Holmes is at his very best, and it is a highly dramatic idea". The book was published on 25 March 1902 in an edition of 25,000 following the story's unprecedented success in Strand Magazine.

REFERENCE
Green and Gibson A26.a

Condition Report:
Condition as described in catalogue entry.

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[ translate ]

Doyle, Arthur Conan
The Hound of the Baskervilles. London: George Newnes, 1902

8vo. 16 plates after Sidney Paget; previous owner's inscription on first page. Original pictorial red cloth, upper cover with hound design stamped in gilt and black, spine gilt; spotting to fore-edge, rubbed at spine ends, minor fading to spine gilt, lightly bumped at corners. In red clamshell box with pictorial cover. [With]: Portrait photograph of Doyle, inscribed by the author on the mount, printed by Elliott & Fry, London. Bumped to corner with some loss to photograph, minor crease, and toning to photograph and mount.

First edition with carte de visite of the author, inscribed "Yours very [...] A Conan Doyle". The Hound of the Baskervilles, one of the most celebrated crime novels of all time, was inspired by Bertram Fletcher Robinson (Daily Express correspondent during the Boer War), with whom Doyle struck up a friendship when travelling back on the same ship from Cape Town. On a golfing holiday in 1901 Robinson mentioned the legend of the Black Hound of Hergest associated with the Vaughan family of Hergest Court in Herefordshire. Doyle subsequently re-located his version of the story, with Sherlock Holmes as the main protagonist, to Dartmoor in Devon, Robinson's native county. Holmes wrote to his mother on 2 April 1901: "Robinson and I are exploring the moor over our Sherlock Holmes book. I think it will work out splendidly... Holmes is at his very best, and it is a highly dramatic idea". The book was published on 25 March 1902 in an edition of 25,000 following the story's unprecedented success in Strand Magazine.

REFERENCE
Green and Gibson A26.a

Condition Report:
Condition as described in catalogue entry.

[ translate ]
Sale price
Unlock
Estimate
Unlock
Time, Location
02 Jul 2021
USA, New York, NY
Auction House
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