Item #007455 My Early Life. Winston S. Churchill.
My Early Life
My Early Life
My Early Life
My Early Life
My Early Life
My Early Life

My Early Life

London: Thornton Butterworth Limited, 1930. First edition, first printing, first state, first binding state. Hardcover. This is the first edition, first printing, first state, first binding state of Winston Churchill's autobiography. Two states of the first edition, first printing are identified, with a list of either 11 or 12 Churchill titles in the boxed list of "Works by the same Author" on the half title verso. With 11 titles on the half title verso, this copy is definitively first state. There were also a number of first edition binding states, bound in either a coarse or a smooth plum colored cloth, with the title stamped on the front cover in either three or five lines. Precedence goes to the coarse cloth and three lines on the front cover which, together with 11 titles on the half title verso, denote first edition, first printing, first state, first binding state. In short, this copy is among the first printed and bound by the publisher.

The first edition’s binding proved especially vulnerable to fading, soiling, and wear, and the contents quite susceptible to spotting. Condition of this copy is very good overall. Unusually for the edition, the spine retains strong plum hue, far less faded than typical. Nonetheless, the binding does show some typical flaws. The boards are bright, but with mild soiling and some shelf wear to extremities. The binding remains tight, but with a slight forward lean. And although the spine color is well-preserved, there is a dark stain at the lower third of the spine, above the publisher's name. The contents are quite respectably bright for the edition and minimal spotting is primarily confined to the page edges. The title page remains uncut, still connected to the succeeding dedication page. The sole previous owner name, inked on the front free endpaper recto, includes a "Toronto" address, leading us to speculate that this copy may have been one of the quite scarce Canadian issues of the British first edition (denoted only by a different dust jacket). Corroborating this speculation is "$4.50" written on the upper final free endpaper verso - the original price of the Canadian issue. Also on that page is a date of "10/30" written in the same pencil and hand as the price, as well as a succession of six date stamps spanning December through January (no year specified). A cosmetic split to the rear endpaper gutter partially exposes the intact mull beneath, but does not affect binding integrity.

My Early Life covers the years from Churchill’s birth in 1874 to his first few years in Parliament. One can hardly ask for more adventurous content. These momentous and formative years for Churchill included his time as an itinerant war correspondent and cavalry officer in theaters ranging from Cuba, to northwest India, to sub-Saharan and southern Africa. Churchill also recounts his capture and escape during the Boer War, which made him a celebrity and helped launch his political career.

Herein Churchill says:
"Twenty to twenty-five! These are the years!
Don't be content with things as they are.
'The earth is yours and the fulness thereof'.
Enter upon your inheritance, accept your responsibilities....
Don't take No for an answer. Never submit to failure...
You will make all kinds of mistakes; but as long as you are generous and true,
and also fierce, you cannot hurt the world or even seriously distress her.
She was made to be wooed and won by youth." (MEL, p.74)

By the end of his own twenty-fifth year, Churchill had been one of the world’s highest paid war correspondents, published his first five books, made his first lecture tour of North America, braved and breasted both battlefields and the hustings, and been elected to Parliament, where he would take his first seat only weeks after the end of Queen Victoria’s reign.

My Early Life remains one of the most popular and widely read of all Churchill's books. An original 1930 review likened it to a "beaker of Champagne." That effervescent charm endures; a more recent writer called it "a racy, humorous, self-deprecating classic of autobiography." To be sure, Churchill takes some liberties with facts and perhaps unduly lightens or over-simplifies certain events. Nonetheless, the factual experiences of Churchill’s early life compete with any fiction, and any liberties taken are pardonable, in keeping with the wit, pace, and engaging style that characterize the book.

Reference: Cohen A91.1.a, Woods/ICS A37(aa), Langworth p.131. Item #007455

Price: $750.00

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