Item #1816 B.F.'S DAUGHTER. John P. Marquand.
B.F.'S DAUGHTER
B.F.'S DAUGHTER
B.F.'S DAUGHTER

B.F.'S DAUGHTER

Boston Toronto: Little, Brown & Company, November, 1946. George Salter. First Edition. Cloth. 8vo, beige cloth with blue label & blue and gold lines on spine, Mylar-protected lettered and pictorial dust jacket (unclipped) with drawing by George Salter, [viii] + 439 pages. Fine / Fine. Item #1816

Novel about a hi-society lady in New York.

Though well known for his "Mr. Moto" spy series which were made into movies starring Peter Lorie during the 1930's, John Philips Marquand (1893-1960) was also a distinguished novelist who treated American society (often the upper classes) with sensitivity, respect, and satire. Thus, he won a Pulitzer for The Late George Apley in 1938.

Other crime novels included Ming Yellow (1935); Don't Ask Questions (1941); Repent in Haste (1945, L: 1949); and It's Loaded, Mr. Bauer (1949); Stopover: Tokyo (1957).

The author's literary novels included: The Unspeakable Gentleman (1922); The Black Cargo (1925); Waring Hill (1930); THE LATE GEORGE APLEY (1937) for which he won the Pulizer Prize in 1938; Wickford Point (1939); H. M. Pulham, Esquire (1942); So Little Time (1944); B. F.'s Daughter (1946); Point of No Return (1949); the aforesaid Melville Goodwin (1952); Sincerely, Willis Wayde (1955); as well as Women and Thomas Harrow (1958).

Marquand's novel Melville Goodwin (1951) was slated in 1956 for a movie starring Humphrey Bogart, but when throat cancer prevented Bogie from playing the leading role, Kirk Douglas then starred in the 1957 film.

He also wrote several distinguished collections of short stories , essays, and articles, some of which included his perceptive analyses of sports.

Superior Condition! No remainder marks; clean, bright, tight with superior dust jacket. Light tan partial offset on endpapers as from a newspaper clipping once laid in.

Price: $75.00

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