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Title

A Selection of C.S. Forester Volumes

The Earthly Paradise (1940);

The Sky and the Forest (1948);

Randall and the River of Time (1951);

The Nightmare (1954);

The Good Shepherd (1955);

Hunting the Bismark (1959);

The Man in the Yellow Raft (1969);

Gold from Crete – Short Stories (1971);

The Captain from Connecticut (1954 Later Edition).

[First Editions – Original Cloth Bindings with Dust Jackets]

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Author

C. S. FORESTER

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Year of Publication

1940 – 1971

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Publisher

London: Michael Joseph

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For full description see below - after all photographs IMG_4290 IMG_4292 IMG_4294 IMG_4296 IMG_4298 IMG_4299 IMG_4302 IMG_4303 IMG_4306 IMG_4308 IMG_4310 IMG_4312 IMG_4314 IMG_4316 IMG_4317 IMG_4319 IMG_4322 IMG_4323 IMG_4326 IMG_4327 IMG_4329 IMG_4332 IMG_4334 IMG_4335 IMG_4338 IMG_4339 IMG_4342 IMG_4344 IMG_4345 IMG_4348 IMG_4350 IMG_4352 IMG_4354 IMG_4356 IMG_4358 IMG_4360 IMG_4362 IMG_4364 IMG_4366 IMG_4368 IMG_4370 IMG_4371 IMG_4374 IMG_4376 IMG_4378 IMG_4380 IMG_4381 IMG_4384 IMG_4385 IMG_4388

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Description:

London: Michael Joseph, 1940–71. First Editions apart from ‘The Captain from Connecticut’ which is a Mermaid Books paperback.

12 volumes, octavo.

In the publisher’s original cloth binding with the original dust jackets. ‘The Captain from Connecticut’ is a paperback, first edition thus.

Some spotting to a couple of leaves, a good set. All first editions, first impressions apart from ‘The Captain from Connecticut’.

Cecil Louis Troughton Smith (27 August 1899 – 2 April 1966), known by his pen name Cecil Scott "C. S." Forester, was an English novelist known for writing tales of naval warfare such as the 12-book Horatio Hornblower series, depicting a Royal Navy officer during the Napoleonic wars. Two of the Hornblower books, A Ship of the Line and Flying Colours, were jointly awarded the James Tait Black Memorial Prize for fiction in 1938. His other works include The African Queen (1935; filmed in 1951 by John Huston).

Forester was born in Cairo and, after a family breakup at an early age, moved with his mother to London, where he was educated at Alleyn's School and Dulwich College, south London. At Alleyn's he may have been a contemporary of E. S. Hornblower, who died on active service with the Canadian Infantry in 1917. It is possible that as Cecil L. T. Smith and an Old Boy he would have been present at the unveiling of the War Memorial panels which are still on display where he would have read the name "Hornblower". He began to study medicine at Guy's Hospital, London, but left without completing his degree. Forester had always worn glasses and been thin. Trying to enlist in the army, he failed his physical and was told there was not a chance that he would be accepted, even though he was of good height and somewhat athletic. Around 1921, after leaving Guy's, he began writing seriously using his pen name.

During World War II, Forester moved to the United States where he worked for the British Information Service and wrote propaganda to encourage the US to join the Allies. He eventually settled in Berkeley, California. While living in Washington, D.C., he met a young British intelligence officer named Roald Dahl in early 1942, whose experiences in the RAF he had heard about, and encouraged him to write about them.

According to Dahl's autobiographical Lucky Break, Forester asked Dahl about his experiences as a fighter pilot. This prompted Dahl to write his first story, "A Piece of Cake".

Forester's 1934 SF novel The Peacemaker was reprinted in Famous Fantastic Mysteries in 1948

Forester wrote many novels. He is best known for the 12-book Horatio Hornblower series, depicting a Royal Navy officer during the Napoleonic wars. He began the series with Hornblower fairly high in rank in the first novel, published in 1937. The last completed novel was published in 1962. With demand for more stories, Forester filled in Hornblower's life story, in effect. Hornblower's fictional feats were based on real events, but Forester wrote the body of the works carefully to avoid entanglements with real world history, so that Hornblower is always off on another mission when a great naval victory occurs during the Napoleonic Wars.

Forester's other novels include The African Queen (1935) and The General (1936); Peninsular War novels in Death to the French (published in the United States as Rifleman Dodd) and The Gun (filmed as The Pride and the Passion in 1957); and seafaring stories that did not involve Hornblower, such as Brown on Resolution (1929), The Captain from Connecticut (1941), The Ship (1943), and Hunting the Bismarck (1959), which was used as the basis of the screenplay for the film Sink the Bismarck! (1960). Several of his works were filmed, including The African Queen (1951), directed by John Huston. Forester is also credited as story writer for several movies not based on his published fiction, including Commandos Strike at Dawn (1942).

He wrote several volumes of short stories set during the Second World War. Those in The Nightmare (1954) were based on events in Nazi Germany, ending at the Nuremberg Trials. Stories in The Man in the Yellow Raft (1969) followed the career of the destroyer USS Boon, while many of those in Gold from Crete (1971) followed the destroyer HMS Apache. The last of the stories in Gold from Crete was "If Hitler had invaded England", which offers an imagined sequence of events starting with Hitler's attempt to implement Operation Sea Lion, and culminating in the early military defeat of Nazi Germany in the summer of 1941. His non-fiction seafaring works include The Age of Fighting Sail (1956), an account of the sea battles between Great Britain and the United States in the War of 1812.

In addition to his novels of seafaring life, Forester also published two crime novels (Payment Deferred (1926) and Plain Murder (1930)) and two children's books. Poo-Poo and the Dragons (1942) was created as a series of stories told to his younger son George to encourage him to finish his meals. George had mild food allergies that kept him feeling unwell, and he needed encouragement to eat. The Barbary Pirates (1953) is a children's history of early 19th-century pirates.

C. S. Forester appeared as a contestant on the TV quiz program You Bet Your Life, hosted by Groucho Marx, in an episode telecast on 1 November 1956.

A "lost" novel of Forester's, The Pursued, was discovered in 2003 and bought at an auction and was published by Penguin Classics on 3 November 2011.

Approximately 7 ½ inches tall.

 

Condition Report

Externally

Internally

Publisher: see above.
Publication Date: 1940-71
Binding: Hardback

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Ruler in picture is 6 inches long!

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