Showing posts with label MARY SHELLEY. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MARY SHELLEY. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 9, 2024

FIRST EDITION FRANKENSTEIN SELLS BIG


One of only three copies known to exist of the first edition of Mary Shelley's FRANKENSTEIN was auctioned off earlier this month for a monstrous $843,750. It is also the only known edition that was in a private collection, the other two are among holdings at the New York Public Library.


Details from the auction:

The superb Kern-Hersholt-Kettaneh copy of Mary Shelley's classic tale of terror, uncut in pink original boards

Mary Shelley. Frankenstein: or, The Modern Prometheus. London: Lackington, Hughes, Harding, Mavor, & Jones, 1818.

3 volumes, 12mo (c.190 x 110 mm). Half-titles and advertisements present in each volume, as issued. Original mottled pink boards, with printed spine labels, uncut; housed together in full morocco slipcase.

FIRST EDITION. A REMARKABLE UNCUT COPY IN ORIGINAL PINK BOARDS OF THE LANDMARK GOTHIC HORROR STORY, with paper watermarked "1816". In volume 2, page 21 is misnumbered 12, but page 25 is correctly numbered (misnumbered 52 in Tinker copy).

Mary Shelley's ground-breaking novel was begun in the summer of 1816, while on a trip to Lake Geneva with her soon-to-be husband, poet Percy Bysshe Shelley, and their friend, the poet Lord Byron. Confined indoors during an unseasonably cold summer, the writers competed to see who could compose the most compelling ghost story. The novel was finished over the course of 1817, when the Shelleys were living near Windsor.

Frankenstein was published in three volumes on January 1, 1818, by a small London publishing house, Lackington, Hughes, Harding, Mavor & Jones, with a small print run of 500 copies. The first edition appeared anonymously, and featured an unsigned preface by Percy Shelley, and a dedication to Mary's father, philosopher William Godwin. Mary Shelley didn't publicly claim her novel until four years later, when her novel was adapted into a popular play.


EXCEPTIONALLY RARE: Copies in the original boards are extremely rare and sought after, this being one of only three sets to appear at auction since 1985. Recorded copies of Frankenstein in original boards were more often bound in plain blue-gray boards with tan paper backstrips, and printed spine labels. Based on the style of mottling of the paper covering this copy and the other institutional copies located, it is plausible that these may have been prepared for Continental distribution. Only three copies of Frankenstein in the more typical boards have appeared at auction over the past forty years: The Slater copy in 1982, The Paul Webster copy in 1985, and the Richard Manney copy in 1991. The Manney copy appeared again as part of the Ted Baum collection in 2021, and sold at Christie's New York for a record-breaking $1,170,000. The only other copies we could locate of Frankenstein in original pink boards are the two copies at the NYPL (Pforzheimer and Berg Collections), making the present copy the only known copy in pink boards in private hands, and the only set ever offered at auction.

Tuesday, September 28, 2021

FRANKENSTEIN BREAKS A RECORD


While the 1931 version of Universal's film, FRANKENSTEIN is celebrating its 90th Anniversary this year, the book that originated the story sold for almost $2 million at a recent Christie's auction.

The first edition of Mary Shelly's novel was published in 1818 in three volumes, and is considered rare. What distinguished this particular sale was the book's condition, which was listed in fine condition.

After over two centuries, the legacy of Frankenstein and his monster live on stronger than ever!


First Edition of Mary Shelley’s ‘Frankenstein’ Sells for Record-Breaking $1.17 Million
A rare copy of the iconic Gothic novel is now the most expensive printed work by a woman sold at auction

By Nora McGreevy | September 22, 2021 | smithsonianmag.com

A first edition of Mary Shelley’s iconic Gothic novel Frankenstein shattered expectations last week when it sold at Christie’s for a whopping $1.17 million.

Per a statement, the three-volume set broke the auction record for a printed work by a woman. The lot’s pre-sale estimate was $200,000 to $300,000.

As Alison Flood reports for the Guardian, the previous world record for a printed work by a woman was set in 2008, when a first edition of Jane Austen’s 1816 novel Emma sold for around $205,000.

The record-breaking copy of Frankenstein stands out because it retains its original boards—the blueish gray pasteboards that cover each volume. Nineteenth-century publishers used these disposable coverings to bind and sell books, with the expectation that the tomes’ new owners would eventually replace them with a permanent cover.

“The [book] is incredibly fragile and as a result very scarce, so a copy like this, particularly in fine condition, is highly desirable to collectors,” a Christie’s spokesperson tells the Guardian. “Overall, it’s a very strong market and we are seeing increased demand for fine examples of literary high spots.”

Christie’s notes that this edition of Frankenstein is the first of its kind to sell at auction since 1985. It numbers among dozens of rare first editions featured in the auction house’s sale of antiquarian book collector Theodore B. Baum’s holdings. Other titles sold include copies of Bram Stoker’s Dracula (1897), Virginia Woolf’s Night and Day (1919) and James Joyce’s Dubliners (1914). Sales from Baum’s collection netted more than $9 million altogether, according to the statement.

Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin wrote the first draft of her groundbreaking novel in 1816, while on a trip to Lake Geneva with her soon-to-be husband, poet Percy Bysshe Shelley, and their friend, the famed poet Lord Byron. Stuck indoors during an unseasonably cold summer—the aftermath of a catastrophic volcanic explosion in Indonesia—the writers competed to see who could compose the most compelling ghost story.

“I busied myself to think of a story,” Shelley later recalled, “… [o]ne which would speak to the mysterious fears of our nature, and awaken thrilling horror—one to make the reader dread to look round, to curdle the blood and quicken the beatings of the heart.”

Inspiration struck one night as Shelley was attempting to sleep. Inspired by her eerie surroundings and recent discussions of galvanism, which suggested that scientists could use electricity to simulate life or reanimate the dead, the 18-year-old writer began crafting the tale of Victor Frankenstein, an obsessive scientist who brings a humanoid “creature” to life with terrifying consequences for both.

“I saw the pale student of unhallowed arts kneeling beside the thing he had put together,” Shelley wrote in the text. “I saw the hideous phantasm of a man stretched out, and then, on the working of some powerful engine, show signs of life, and stir with an uneasy, half vital motion.” (Viewers can explore her original handwritten draft, complete with Percy’s line edits, online through the Bodleian Library at the University of Oxford.)

A small London publishing house, Lackington, Hughes, Harding, Mavor & Jones, first printed Frankenstein: or, a Modern Prometheus in a limited series of just 500 copies on January 1, 1818. The first edition was published anonymously but featured an unsigned preface by Percy and a dedication to Mary’s father, philosopher William Godwin. Shelley didn’t publicly claim her novel until four years later, when Frankenstein was adapted into a popular play.

First Edition of Mary Shelley's 'Frankenstein' Sells for Record-Breaking $1.17 Million
Illustration by Theodor von Holst from the frontispiece of the 1831 edition of Frankenstein Public domain via Wikimedia Commons
Today, Frankenstein is regarded as a foundational, prescient work of science fiction.

“It’s a book that’s relentlessly questioning about where the limits are and how far to push, and what the implications are of what we do in the world,” Gita Manaktala, editorial director of MIT Press, told Kat Eschner of Smithsonian magazine in 2018.

At the time of its publication, however, reviews of the novel were mixed. Shelley herself was dissatisfied with the work, as she made clear in her annotations of the margins of at least one copy held in the collections of the Morgan Library and Museum. Available to view online, the critical comment reads, “If there were ever to be another edition of this book, I should re-write these two first chapters. The incidents are tame [and] ill arranged—the language sometimes childish. They are unworthy of the rest of the narration.”

In 1831, thirteen years after Frankenstein’s initial release, Shelley published a revised edition that included a reworked first chapter and other narrative changes. This 1831 text is the one that’s most widely read today, as Genevieve Valentine noted for NPR in 2018. Whereas the 1818 text is more sympathetic to Victor Frankenstein’s actions, Valentine argued, the later version emphasizes the scientist’s hubris in attempting to alter the natural state of the world.

Shelley also chose to remove an epigraph from John Milton’s 1667 epic poem about the Christian parable of original sin, Paradise Lost. The phrase, a question from the biblical first human, Adam, to God, opened the 1818 text: “Did I request thee, Maker, from my clay / To mould me Man? / Did I solicit thee / From darkness to promote me?”

Friday, August 30, 2019

HAPPY 222ND BIRTHDAY, MARY SHELLEY!


This week seemed to turn into a female-centered series of postings since Monday, which was Women's Equality Day. Never let it be said the MMW doesn't recognize women as having an important role in the field of horror.

It seems like fitting close to the festivities to celebrate the 222nd birthday of Mary Shelley, an original feminist, liberal, radical, anarchist, home-wrecker, counter-cultural icon, and, oh, the writer of "Frankenstein".

Happy Birthday, Mary!

NOTE: The portrait shown above is by Richard Rothwell, who painted it in 1840.

Wednesday, January 23, 2019

PHOTOPLAY FRANKENSTIEN


Another current item from HERITAGE AUCTIONS is this copy of the Photoplay Edition of the original FRANKENSTEIN, starring Boris Karloff. Mary Shelly's famous novel is reprinted along with a sprinkling of still from the film. A collector's item for any Monster Kid.

As of this writing, the current bid is $36.

UPDATE: The final bid for this lot was $372.00.

Description of Lot #53131:
Frankenstein by Mary Shelley (Grosset & Dunlap, 1931) Fine/Very Fine. Hardcover Photoplay Book with Reproduction Dust Jacket (240 Pages, 5.75" X 8.25"). Horror. Featured is a hardcover photoplay edition of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, released after the success of James Whale's 1931 film starring Boris Karloff. The book includes images of scenes from the horror classic. An unrestored book that displays signs of use. May include light edge or spine wear, small spine cracks, faint toning, or unobtrusive stains. There is a collector's plate on the flyleaf. The dust jacket included is a printed reproduction. Fine/Very Fine.




Saturday, November 24, 2018

THE PHILOSOPHY OF FRANKENSTEIN


Much of what we have seen so far this year, the 200th Anniversary of Mary Shelly's account of "The Modern Prometheus", has been talk about its enduring legacy in popular culture. A few books have delved deeper into the science and psychology behind the author and her creation.

Presented here are a series of articles that raise the subject to the heights of the philosophical. The October/November issue of PHILOSOPHY NOW (#128) includes discussions ranging from the, of course, philosophy of the story to moral and ethical considerations.

Time to shave off your beetle-brow and read some high-tone takes on Frankenstein!

















Monday, January 1, 2018

THE 200 YEAR-OLD MONSTER


"How I, then a young girl, came to think of, and to dilate upon, so very hideous an idea?" — Mary Shelley

On New Year's Day, 1818, the first edition of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus was released to an unsuspecting Georgian England. Begun two years earlier, when she spent spent a stormy summer at the Villa Diodati on the shores of Lake Geneva with her renegade lover, Percy Bysshe Shelley, her stepsister Claire Claremont, the infamous poet, Lord Byron and his personal physician, John Polidori, it was published anonymously in three volumes by Lackington, Hughes, Harding, Mavor & Jones, London. It was dedicated to her father, William Godwin, and this indicated to those who suspected that it was, indeed, Shelley who was the author. When this fact became known (that a story of this nature was written by a woman!), book sales, that had not been successful from the start, declined even more. Much like Edgar Allen Poe's works, it was not until the novel was published in French that it caught on, not only in France, but the rest of the world. A second, revised edition was published in 1831, and it was thereafter forever embedded in the consciousness of English literature.

Today marks the 200th anniversary of Frankenstein's publication. It's impact on literature and popular culture cannot be overestimated. The book is still taught in schools and there are still films that are produced related to the story.

Here at MONSTER MAGAZINE WORLD, this marks the beginning of a year-long celebration of Shelley's novel and her amazing creation, the world's most famous monster!

NOTE: The images shown in today's post are from the University of Notre Dame, where a first edition of Frankenstein is housed in their European literature collection.