HEMINGWAY, Ernest.
The Sun Also Rises.
“Nobody ever lives their life all the way up except bullfighters": Ernest Hemingway's The Sun Also Rises; Inscribed by Him to His Cousin, Ruth Lowry
New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1926.
$25,000.00
Out of Stock
Item Number: RRB-149986
* Custom Clamshell Boxes are hand made by the Harcourt Bindery upon request and take approximately 60 days to complete
Presentation copy of "Hemingway's greatest work" (Meyers). Octavo, original black cloth with gold paper title labels to the spine and front panel. Association copy, inscribed by the author on the front free endpaper, "To Ruth and Malcom, this little treatise on inconstancy, Ernest Hemingway." The recipients, Ruth White Lowry (1884–1974) and her husband William Malcolm Lowry (1884–1953), were longtime residents of Kansas City, Missouri, and integral members of Ernest Hemingway’s extended Midwestern family. Ruth, the daughter of William White and Mary Hall White, was a first cousin of Grace Hall Hemingway, the author’s mother. This made her Ernest’s first cousin once removed, though their families were close enough that Hemingway referred to her simply as “Cousin Ruth.” The White and Hall families had deep Midwestern roots—Ruth was educated in Kansas City and was part of the city’s civic and cultural life throughout the early twentieth century. When Hemingway and his second wife, Pauline Pfeiffer, returned from Paris to the United States in 1928, they came to Kansas City for the birth of their first child, Patrick Hemingway, who was delivered at St. Mary’s Hospital on June 28 of that year. The Hemingways stayed with Ruth and Malcolm Lowry at their Kansas City home both before and after the delivery. Pauline returned to the same house three years later, in November 1931, for the birth of their second son, Gregory Hancock Hemingway, while Ernest shuttled between Kansas City and Key West during the final stages of Death in the Afternoon. The Lowrys’ hospitality offered Hemingway a familial refuge far from the expatriate world of Europe and the growing celebrity that attended his literary success. The relationship between the two families endured for decades. Letters and family recollections describe Ruth as a warm, maternal presence in Hemingway’s life—a relative he could trust with his young family during periods of upheaval. The Lowry household thus occupies a unique place in Hemingway’s biography: it was the setting for the births of both of his sons with Pauline, and the site of rare domestic calm amid his restless movements between continents. Copies inscribed to members of the Lowry family remain among the most significant Hemingway association copies, linking the author’s private life in the American Midwest to his public identity as one of the central figures of twentieth-century literature. Hemingway's reference in the inscription to the work as a "treatise on inconstancy" gets to the heart of The Sun Also Rises, both in its characters and emotional landscape. Hemingway explores shifting affections, unstable identities, and the transience of postwar life through characters like Brett Ashley, whose romantic attachments drift, and Jake Barnes, whose inner steadiness contrasts the chaos around him. The novel captures the restlessness of the Lost Generation, where relationships, purpose, and even locations feel in constant flux---underscoring a deep yearning for meaning in an unmoored world. In near fine condition. First edition, early printing. An exceptional association.
The Sun Also Rises.
$25,000.00
Out of Stock




