First printing thus, mass market paperback, has tiny skew to binding, very slight bumps to spine ends and corners, some faint rubbing, touch of edgewear, and a hint of smudging to top edge of text block, otherwise a solid, tight VG+ copy.
ISBN . Mass Market Paperback First Bantam Printing as stated on the copyright page. Original prices neatly blacked out, Otherwise a Tight sound unmarked copy in Very Good condition with Slight browning to the edges of the interior pages. Bantam Book #A1357
Publisher: The Folio Society, London, United Kingdom
Date published: 1961
Format: Hardcover
The Informer by Liam O'Flaherty. 1961. Hardback. UK first edition Foilio. Book in very good condition with slipcase.Slipcase has one chip to bottom left, and two small spots of staining. Book is clean throughout. Bookseller Inventory #HFB0044912
Publisher: Del Rey Date of Publication: 1961 Binding: Hardcover Condition: This is the stated Signet First Edition from November 1961. Both the cover and the book are in positively excellent condition. There are no rips, tears, markings, etc. ---and the pages and binding are tight as a drum.
Publisher: Del Rey Date of Publication: 1961 Binding: Hardcover Condition: This is the stated Signet First Edition from November 1961. Both the cover and the book are in positively excellent condition. There are no rips, tears, markings, etc. ---and the pages and binding are tight as a drum.
First edition, second impression, 1925. Green cloth with gilt lettering on spine. Spine cocked. Spine ends pushed and rubbed; top board's forecorners a bit exposed. Interior is unmarked. Small, plain white remnant of label on front pastedown, else interior is generally clean. pp. 272. Liam O'Flaherty's third novel, a tense drama set in Dublin in the early 1920s during the milieu of the Irish Civil War. It won the 1925 James Tait Black Memorial Prize for fiction and was adapted into film in 1935. The film, directed and produced by John Ford, earned four Academy Awards.
O'Flaherty's fourth published novel, and perhaps his most famous, due to the movie that gave Victor McLaglen his Oscar. This is a Very Good (Minus) copy of the First Edition, lacking the dustwrapper. Green cloth binding, ruled, with gilt lettering on the spine. Clean text; 272 pages. The dustwrapper is a facsimile. Please note a condition issue: the cover has split along the edges of the spine and the cloth has come loose. Due to this, Quercus must list this as a Binding Copy, in need of repair or restoration.
First edition, second impression, 1925. Green cloth with gilt lettering on spine. Spine cocked. Spine ends pushed and rubbed; top board's forecorners a bit exposed. Interior is unmarked. Small, plain white remnant of label on front pastedown, else interior is generally clean. pp. 272. Liam O'Flaherty's third novel, a tense drama set in Dublin in the early 1920s during the milieu of the Irish Civil War. It won the 1925 James Tait Black Memorial Prize for fiction and was adapted into film in 1935. The film, directed and produced by John Ford, earned four Academy Awards.
O'Flaherty's fourth published novel, and perhaps his most famous, due to the movie that gave Victor McLaglen his Oscar. This is a Very Good (Minus) copy of the First Edition, lacking the dustwrapper. Green cloth binding, ruled, with gilt lettering on the spine. Clean text; 272 pages. The dustwrapper is a facsimile. Please note a condition issue: the cover has split along the edges of the spine and the cloth has come loose. Due to this, Quercus must list this as a Binding Copy, in need of repair or restoration.
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