Fine Books and Manuscripts

Fine Books and Manuscripts

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 1020. Doyle, Arthur Conan | The Hound of Baskervilles; perhaps the best-loved crime story .

Property from an Important American Collection

Doyle, Arthur Conan | The Hound of Baskervilles; perhaps the best-loved crime story

Lot Closed

December 8, 07:20 PM GMT

Estimate

3,000 - 5,000 USD

Lot Details

Description

Property from an Important American Collection


Doyle, Arthur Conan

The Hound of the Baskervilles. London: George Newnes, 1902


8vo. 16 plates by Paget, ex libris to pastedown; light spotting to title. Publisher's red cloth, blocked in gilt with black hound to upper cover, spine gilt; spine lightly sunned, head and foot a little bumped. Collector's quarter morocco clamshell box.


An uncommonly bright first edition of the famed crime novel.


Following Doyle's decision to end the Holmes and Watson stories with "The Final Problem" in Memoirs, pressure from his readers encouraged him to write another novel in the series. The tale was inspired, in part, by Bertram Fletcher Robinson (Daily Express correspondent during the Boer War), with whom Doyle struck up a friendship when travelling back on the same ship from Cape Town. On a golfing holiday in 1901 Robinson mentioned the legend of the Black Hound of Hergest associated with the Vaughan family of Hergest Court in Herefordshire. Doyle subsequently re-located the story, with Sherlock Holmes as the main protagonist, to Dartmoor in Devon, Robinson's native county.


Doyle wrote to his mother on 2 April 1901: "Robinson and I are exploring the moor over our Sherlock Holmes book. I think it will work out splendidly... Holmes is at his very best, and it is a highly dramatic idea".


A remarkably bright and attractive copy.


REFERENCES:

Cooper & Pike, Detective Fiction, pp. 115-119; Green & Gibson A26a