Seller: BoundlessBookstore, Wallingford, United Kingdom
Condition: Good. Good condition. Light wear to boards. Content is clean and bright. DJ with some edge wear, sun fading and creasing.
Published by The Reprint Society NaN
Language: English
Seller: Bookbot, Prague, Czech Republic
£ 4.14
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Add to basketCondition: Fair. Mechanische Beschädigung.
Published by London: Eyre & Spottiswoode
Seller: Goldstone Rare Books, Llandybie, CARMS, United Kingdom
hardcover. Condition: Good. With dust jacket. Photograph available on request.
Published by London: Secker and Warburg, 1967, 1967
Seller: Adrian Harrington Ltd, PBFA, ABA, ILAB, Royal Tunbridge Wells, KENT, United Kingdom
First Edition Signed
[Memoir] SIGNED FIRST EDITION. Octavo (23 x 15cm), pp.[xxvi]; 224. Publisher's red cloth lettered in gold to spine, photographic dust-jacket designed by Martin Bronkhorst, printed price 36s net, top edge purple, photographic frontispiece of author. Signed by author to flyleaf. Minor spotting to edges, internally clean, minor toning and edge wear to dust-jacket, small closed tear on spine of jacket. Very good. Major-General Spears was head of military operations in both the first and second World Wars, however this book focuses mostly on his personal childhood memories. This copy is signed by the author, and is a subscriber's copy, for members of the Institute of Directors.
Published by Advocate House, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1975
Seller: Between the Covers-Rare Books, Inc. ABAA, Gloucester City, NJ, U.S.A.
First Edition
£ 19.18
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Add to basketSoftcover. Condition: Near Fine. First edition. Stapled wrappers. Quarto. 73pp. Slight edgewear and rubbing else near fine with the addendum sticker on page six. Special edition commemorating the death of W.H. Auden. Contributions by Louis Untermeyer, William Meredith, Randall Jarrell, Henry Moore, Alexander Theroux, Monroe K. Spears, Richard Eberhart, Karl Shapiro, Horace Gregory, Dorothy Day, William Empson, Walter Kerr, Phyllis McGinley, D. Day Lewis, Harry Levin, Richard Howard, Hannah Arendt, Frances Steloff, Elizabeth Bishop, Anthony Hecht, John G. Blair, Robert Fitzgerald, John Hollander, Robert Bloom, Tennessee Williams, Stephen Spender, Charles Osborne, W.H. Auden, and Edward Mendelson.
Published by London : W. Heinemann, 1931
Seller: MW Books, New York, NY, U.S.A.
£ 56.07
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Add to basketNew Impression, Reprinted. Provenance: Bookplate of Henry Courtney Brocklehurst. Very good copy in the original title-blocked cloth. Slightest suggestion only of dust-dulling to the spine bands and panel edges. Remains particularly well-preserved overall; tight, bright, clean and strong. Physical description: xxix, 597 pages, [32] lvs. pl., [14] folded maps : front., plates, portraits, colour maps ; 25cm. Subjects: World War, (1914-1918) -- Campaigns -- Western Front. 1 Kg.
Published by London : W. Heinemann, 1931
Seller: MW Books Ltd., Galway, Ireland
£ 53.69
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Add to basketNew Impression, Reprinted. Provenance: Bookplate of Henry Courtney Brocklehurst. Very good copy in the original title-blocked cloth. Slightest suggestion only of dust-dulling to the spine bands and panel edges. Remains particularly well-preserved overall; tight, bright, clean and strong. Physical description: xxix, 597 pages, [32] lvs. pl., [14] folded maps : front., plates, portraits, colour maps ; 25cm. Subjects: World War, (1914-1918) -- Campaigns -- Western Front. 1 Kg.
Published by London : Secker & Warburg, 1967
Seller: MW Books, New York, NY, U.S.A.
First Edition Signed
£ 75.63
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Add to basketFirst Edition. Signed by the author. Fine cloth copy in a good if somewhat edge-nicked and dust-dulled dust-wrapper, now mylar-sleeved. Remains particularly well-preserved overall; tight, bright, clean and strong. Physical description: 224p : front. (port.) ; 22cm. Subjects: Spears, Edward Sir (1886-1974). World War, (1914-1918) -- Personal narratives, English. 1 Kg.
Published by London : Secker & Warburg, 1967
Seller: MW Books Ltd., Galway, Ireland
First Edition Signed
£ 76.06
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Add to basketFirst Edition. Signed by the author. Fine cloth copy in a good if somewhat edge-nicked and dust-dulled dust-wrapper, now mylar-sleeved. Remains particularly well-preserved overall; tight, bright, clean and strong. Physical description: 224p : front. (port.) ; 22cm. Subjects: Spears, Edward Sir (1886-1974). World War, (1914-1918) -- Personal narratives, English. 1 Kg.
Published by London: Jonathan Cape, 1939, 1939
Seller: Adrian Harrington Ltd, PBFA, ABA, ILAB, Royal Tunbridge Wells, KENT, United Kingdom
First Edition
First Edition. Octavo. Bound in publisher's red cloth with gilt titles to spine; top edge stained red. Dust wrapper has titles in black to front cover and spine, rear cover blank. With an introduction by Winston Churchill, fold-out maps and photographic illustrations. Binding is lightly rubbed, with corners and spine ends bumped, two slight marks to binding through dust wrapper. Internally clean and free from spotting. Dust wrapper is rubbed, particularly to top edges, corners, and spine ends; one small chip to top edge and one small burn mark to front joint; small portion missing from spine, including the second 'L' of Churchill. Brigadier-General Spears' insider account of the sometimes fraught and perennially complex relationships between the military hierarchies of the Allied Forces in France in 1917, as well as descriptions of the battles and principal incidents on the Western Front. Churchill's introduction describes it as "one of the best books which have been written about the Great War", and surely there can be few higher recommendations.
Published by London: William Heinemann Ltd, 1954, 1954
Seller: Peter Harrington. ABA/ ILAB., London, United Kingdom
First Edition Signed
First edition, the dedication copy, inscribed by the author on the title page "To Winston Churchill an unbirthday [sic] present sent with affection & respect by the author E. Louis Spears Nov. 54", to whom the book was dedicated with Churchill's permission. The Fall of France was published on 29 November, the day before Churchill's 80th birthday. Churchill reviewed the typescript prior to publication and wrote to Spears on 10 August 1954: "I think it is a very fine piece of work, fully up to the level of your other famous war chronicles. I am of course much obliged to you for all the far too flattering things you say about me. those were not such bad days to live through after all, and I shall always be grateful to you for the help you gave me" (Churchill Archives, CHAQ 2/2/31/98-99). However, Churchill turned down Spears's request for him to write a preface to the book, believing it would be regarded as controversial by the French (CHUR 2/199). Churchill and Spears were friends and colleagues for many years. "In 1915 Spears had met Winston Churchill, then out of office, on the western front. Churchill admired Spears's courage and ability and supported him against French and British jealousy and suspicion. With Churchill's encouragement, he stood for parliament as a National Liberal, becoming member for Loughborough in 1922, a seat he held until 1924, and following Churchill into the Conservative Party to sit for Carlisle from 1931 to 1945. In support of Churchill, Spears opposed the foreign policy of the Chamberlain government. He remained a firm Francophile. on 22 May 1940 Churchill, as prime minister, made Spears his personal representative to the doomed French government of Paul Reynaud. Horrified at the humiliation and defeatism of his beloved France, Spears left Bordeaux for London in an aeroplane on 17 June with de Gaulle, recently one of Reynaud's junior ministers. A myth grew, nurtured by Spears, that he had gathered the general up and led him to Churchill, thus creating the leader of the Free French. His vivid and personal account of the fall of France, Assignment to Catastrophe, was published in two volumes in 1954 [Volume I, Prelude to Dunkirk, was published on 14 June 1954]; while scathing about the embryonic spirit of Vichy, it is admiring of de Gaulle" (ODNB). Churchill is, of course, a central character throughout the book. We have handled another copy of this book, with an undated inscription from Spears to Churchill. This copy is the earlier - on 10 June 1955 Spears sent the other copy, noting, "I did send you this book on the day of publication, but, since it has gone astray, I am delighted to send you another copy. If there is a book you should have it is this one for its theme is that of your finest hour" (CHUR 2/199). Churchill's posthumous bookplate, and that of his son Randolph, are mounted to the front free endpaper verso. Zoller B299. Octavo. Original red cloth, spine lettered in gilt. Cloth sunned and soiled, a little shaken, split at head of half-title in gutter: a good, well-read copy.