Business and Pleasure: Photoplay title of The Plutocrat

New York: Grosset and Dunlap, (1927) [really 1932].

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Hardcover. Photoplay edition, and the first edition with this title. Small name stamp on the front fly, and some foxing to both the front board and the title page, very good or better in a nice, very good plus dustwrapper with a little foxing and very light wear. Illustrated with stills from the 1932 film that featured Will Rogers and Joel McCrea, with an attractive jacket painting of Rogers by Mac Tey. A nice copy.

Item #85240

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Item #85240 Business and Pleasure: Photoplay title of The Plutocrat. Booth TARKINGTON.

Booth Tarkington
birth name: Newton Booth Tarkington
born: 7/29/1869
died: 5/19/1946
nationality: USA

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Biography

American novelist and dramatist, best known for his satirical and sometimes romanticized pictures of American Midwesterners. - Merriam-Webster's Encyclopedia of Literaturemore

Collecting tips:

Booth Tarkington as collectible author is an enigma, wrapped in a contradiction, and drizzled with irony. Ask any book collector or dealer who have been around for a long time and they'll probably shrug -- who cares about Booth Tarkington? But the funny thing is that he has more collected books than many more highly regarded authors. He wrote two of the first four Pulitzer Prize novels, The Magnicent Ambersons (1919) and Alice Adams (1922), both of which are wicked scarce in jacket. The first title is also sought as a film source for the 1942 Orson Welles' film, as are several of his other books including Presenting Lily Mars (1933), Monsieur Beaucaire (1900, the 1924 film featured Rudolph Valentino), and Seventeen (1916). One of the primary guides to collectible children's books is entitled Peter Parley to Penrod, the later title, Penrod (1914), is a Tarkington novel, and very scarce in jacket. Even booksellers have a favorite Tarkington title -- Rumbin Galleries (1937) about a European emigre dealing in art and antiques in New York City, who dispenses wisdom about the antiquarian trades, all the while smiling benevolently upon his lovely assistant and her beamish beau. There is even a market for him as an Indiana author -- notably for his first book, The Gentleman from Indiana (1899, be sure to note whether the ear of corn on the spine of the book is pointing up or down!). He wrote approximately a zillion other books as well, some of them good, many of them forgotten. But then who cares about Booth Tarkington anyway?

Email us to request a printed copy of our catalog of Booth Tarkington Rare Books and First Editions (or download it via the link as a 4.61 MB pdf file).more