Photograph and Press Release for English Release of A Confederacy of Dunces

(1981).

Price: $2,500.00

Unbound. Silver gelatin photograph of John Kennedy Toole. Measuring 5" x 7". Fine with "Ken Toole" in ink on the rear of photo. This is the more uncommon image of Toole that appeared on the English first edition. [With] Two loose sheets. The first, consisting of four paragraphs, presents "Comments from Walker Percy, author of THE MOVIEGOER and LANCELOT" and is Signed by Percy in blue ink at the top. The second sheet, headed "Catalog Copy," presents three paragraphs about the books, including a quotation from Percy. These came from an extensive collection of *A Confederacy of Dunces*-related material that included uncorrected proofs, long galleys, advance review copies, and other rarities. We've not seen another copy of this photo or accompany promotional material. Possibly unique.

Item #589666

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Item #589666 Photograph and Press Release for English Release of A Confederacy of Dunces. John Kennedy TOOLE.
Photograph and Press Release for English Release of A Confederacy of Dunces

John Kennedy Toole
birth name: John Kennedy Toole
born: 12/17/1937
died: 3/26/1969
nationality: USA

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Biography

New Orleans-born author who was unpublished at the time of his suicide in 1969. His writing was championed at first by his mother and then by Walker Percy, and his novel A Confederacy of Dunces won a posthumous Pulitzer Prize.more

Collecting tips:

Toole's story is well-known, but if you don't already know it, he killed himself in despair when he couldn't get A Confederacy of Dunces (1980) published. His mother haunted publishers until, with the help of Walker Percy, she managed to get LSU to publish the book, the first work of fiction from that publisher. To everyone's surprise, the book won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1981. The boards of the book seem to warp or splay pretty easily, but copies with just a little splaying probably shouldn't be rejected out of hand, unless you really want to be a stickler. The jacket is uncoated, and primarily black, so its hard to find copies that don't have at least some rubbing. Also, look to see whether the pale blue lettering on the book has faded or not. Needless to say, a signed copy should raise a little suspicion (unless its been channeled from the spirit world), although copies signed by either Percy or the author's mother do turn up, and command a modest premium. A decade and a half ago one collector told us he had a bunch of copies signed by Percy, and rather annoyingly, he's been dangling them ever since. We'll keep you posted.more