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Seller's Description:
Collectible-Very Good in Collectible-Very Good jacket. First American edition. Text is unmarked; pages are bright, though the page edges are age toned. Binding is tight and square. Dust jacket shows some wear, with a couple small closed tears at the top edge. Overseas/Priority shipping at cost. 829pp.
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Seller's Description:
Very Good. New York: Dutton, 1975. Stated first American edition, 1975, but likely second printing. Bright red cloth with gilt spine lettering, illustrated in black and white, a hefty 829 pages, no dustjacket. Very good condition with firm binding, clean pages, no names or other markings. Hard Cover. Very Good. 8vo-over 7¾"-9¾" tall.
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Seller's Description:
Near Fine in Near Fine jacket. Thick Octavo. 829pp. Orange boards, gilt lettering on the spine. 24pgs of black and white illustrations. A light dot on the fore-edge, otherwise like new. Unclipped orange jacket has light creasing on the upper edge, otherwise fine. In mylar sleeve. "Dispensing with the long-established Victorian picture of Shelley as a blandly ethereal character, Richard Holmes offers a startling image of "a darker and more earthly, crueler and more capable figure." Expelled from college, disowned by his aristocratic father, driven from England, Shelley led a life marked from its beginning to its early end by a violent rejection of society; he embraced rebellion and disgrace without thought of the cost to himself or to others. Here is the real Shelley--radical agitator, atheist, apostle of free love--but above all a brilliant and uncompromising poetic innovator, whose life and work have proved an essential inspiration to poets as varied as W.B. Yeats and Allen Ginsberg."