INSCRIBED TO ANTHONY POWELL
Remote People
Duckworth, 1931.
First edition. Original burgundy cloth, titles to spine gilt. Author's presentation copy, inscribed on the front end paper to Anthony Powell, "Tony from his brother of the pen. Nov 3rd 1931 Evelyn". Powell's bookplate to the front pastedown. Two folding maps and seven black and white plates. A near fine copy with slight fading to the spine.
An exceptional association linking two of the great novelists of the twentieth century.
"Although two years behind him at Oxford, Powell had seen just enough of Waugh to recognise that he was bound to make his mark in the world somehow. They met again in 1927... Powell warmed to Waugh, whose self confidence had not been dented by the many setbacks he had experienced since leaving Oxford." (Michael Barber - Anthony Powell A Life)
It was through his friendship with Powell, that Waugh found his first publisher in Duckworth where Powell worked at the time. Duckworth famously declined to publish Waugh's first novel, Decline & Fall, but remained Waugh's publishers choice for his travel writings. The break up of Waugh's marriage involving Powell's raffish friend John Heygate caused relations between Waugh and Powell to temporarily cool, but both kept up a regular correspondence and common interests saw to it that their lives intertwined for the remainder of Waugh's life. In particular, a mutual support, born of respect for each other's work, remained constant between the two. Upon Waugh's death in 1966, Powell wrote, "his going means that a chunk of my own life has gone too."
Remote People is the author's account of his travels to Ethiopia. In the same year Powell's first novel, Afternoon Men, was also published by Duckworth.
PROVENANCE: From the library of Anthony Powell, bookplate on pastedown.
Stock ID: 34100
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