![]() ![]() 1 much restored with residual tape marks, lower half of spine panel, lower half of rear panel, and the rear flap, restored in facsimile. 2 very presentable though with smaller chips and loss and tape repair to verso, Swann's Way vol. Generally very good condition, with a few small chips or nicks to jacket extremities and mild toning to spine panels, crude tape repairs to versos generally, larger chip with some loss at foot of Time Regained, and at head of The Sweet Cheat Gone, both Within a Budding Grove volumes rather worse for wear with loss along joints, Swann's Way vol. ![]() Original blue cloth, spines lettered in gilt, with dust jackets to works 1-3 and 4-7, and slipcase to work 4. READ MORE Descriptionħ works in 11 volumes, octavo. He published widely on William Blake, but also wrote bibliographies of Siegfried Sassoon, John Donne and Jane Austen. Knighted, in 1955, for services to medicine he was influential in breast cancer surgery and also blood transfusion. Sir Geoffrey Langdon Keynes (1887-1982) was an author, bibliographer, surgeon and brother of the economist John Maynard Keynes. The final Chatto and Windus title, Time Regained, was limited to 1,300 copies (here number 497). The first Knopf title, The Cities of the Plain, was limited to 2,230 copies and issued in a slipcase (here number 973). The final volume, Time Regained, was published by Chatto and Windus. Knopf, attempting to break into the English market, published Cities of the Plain, The Captive and The Sweet Cheat Gone under his own London imprint (though uniform with the Chatto & Windus volumes). The final volume of the sequence, Time Regained (1931), was translated by Scott Moncrieff's friend Sydney Schiff after his death, under the pseudonym Stephen Hudson. Moncrieff's translation was published episodically: Swann's Way (2 vols., 1922), Within a Budding Grove (2 vols., 1924), The Guermantes Way (2 vols., 1925), Cities of the Plain (2 vols., 1929), The Captive (1929), and The Sweet Cheat Gone (1930). Proust read and appreciated Scott-Moncrieff's translation, writing to him on 10 October 1922, after the release of Swann's Way, to compliment his "fine talent". It is universally acclaimed as among the most influential works of modern fiction. Proust's À la recherche du temps perdu was first published in France from 19. Complete sets in first impressions are scarce, but dust jackets, especially for the early volumes, are truly rare. ![]() This set was assembled by Sir Geoffrey Keynes, with his ownership inscriptions in several volumes. First editions in English, first impressions, of Proust's complete roman a fleuve, a truly rare set with all copies in dust jacket (saving Cities of the Plain which was not issued in jacket but only in slipcase, here also present). ![]()
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