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A Farewell to Arms (EASTON PRESS WORKS OF ERNEST HEMINGWAY)
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A Farewell to Arms (EASTON PRESS WORKS OF ERNEST HEMINGWAY) Hardcover - 1990

by Hemingway, Ernest; Illustrated by Richard Sparks; Introduction by Ford Madox Ford

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Description

Easton Press, 1990 Easton Press Collector's Edition in gilt-stamped & decorated full forest green leather with gilt and black decorations and 2 raised spine hubs, 1st Printing Thus in the nicely decorated binding (rather than the uniform brown later bindings), moire fabric endsheets, satin ribbon marker bound-in, all page edges gilt, Easton Hemingway bookplate to first white page, else as new; 8vo; (xv) 314pp illus. First Edition. Full-Leather. As New.
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About this book

Set during World War 1, Ernest Hemingway’s A Farewell to Arms is the story of Lieutenant Frederic Henry, an American serving as an ambulance driver in the Italian army, and his love affair with an English nurse named Catherine Barkley. The novel is semi-autobiographical, based on Hemingway's own experiences serving in the Italian campaigns during the war. While some assume the title of the work to be taken from a poem by 16th century English dramatist George Peele, others believe it to be a simple pun of the word “arms.”

A Farewell to Arms was first serialized in the May-October issues Scribner's Magazine 1929. It was published in book form in September of that year. As the work became available to the public just over ten years after the November 1918 armistice, Hemingway assumed his audience would recognize many of the references. In fact, certain basic information isn't alluded to in the book at all, as it was common knowledge around the time of publication.

The result of this immediacy? Arguably one of the best novels written about World War I… ever. A Farewell to Arms was Hemingway's first bestseller, affording him financial independence and cementing his stature as a modern American writer. More specifically, the novel and its content helped to established the author as a key member of the “Lost Generation,” a subset of Modernist artists namely defined by their post-war disillusionment. A Farewell to Arms is ranked 74th on Modern Library’s “100 Best” English-language novels of the 20th century. 

First Edition Identification

Scribner’s first published A Farewell to Arms in New York in September 1929 in a print run of about 31,000 copies. The 355-page first editions have no additional printings listed on the copyright page. Of the initial print run, 510 copies were numbered and signed by Hemmingway. These “Lost Generation” gems have sold for upwards of $20,000.

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