LES BRAVES GENS NE COURENT PAS LES RUES [A GOOD MAN IS HARD TO FIND]
First French trade edition of O'Connor's classic 1955 short story collection, translated from the English by Henri Morisset.
First French trade edition of O'Connor's classic 1955 short story collection, translated from the English by Henri Morisset.
Second paperback edition of O'Connor's classic short story collection, presenting an array of good, bad, and very bad human specimens variously afflicted by the unkindnesses of this world.
Very scarce signed first paperback edition of O'Connor's second and final novel, the last book published in her lifetime.
Later printing of O'Connor's classic short story collection, translated into German by Elisabeth Schnack.
Scarce first Japanese edition of these two classic O'Connor short stories, presented with English text and Japanese translation on facing pages.
First Greek edition of O'Connor's second and final novel, translated by major postwar Greek novelist, critic, and journalist Alexandros Kotzias.
Limited first French edition of O'Connor's classic 1955 short story collection, one of just 26 numbered copies, translated from the English by Henri Morisset.
First Danish edition of O'Connor's classic 1955 short story collection.
First Italian edition of O'Connor's complete short stories, originally published in two volumes as A GOOD MAN IS HARD TO FIND and EVERYTHING THAT RISES MUST CONVERGE, in the scarce original publisher's band.
One of 35 limited, numbered, large-paper copies of the first French edition, with Coindreau's introduction contextualizing American evangelical culture: Billy Sunday and Aimee Semple McPherson to Hazel Motes and his creator.
Scarce first French edition, limited issue on handmade paper, of O'Connor's posthumously published collection — one of just 26 copies.
Uncommon first edition of this memoir by the Dominican nuns of Atlanta, with O'Connor's introductory essay on the difficulties of writing and reading about good and pious children.
Advance proofs of the first UK edition of O'Connor's posthumously published collection, including three O. Henry Award-winning stories.
Catholic Book Club edition of this memoir by the Dominican nuns of Atlanta, originally published in the US as A MEMOIR OF MARY ANN, with O'Connor's introductory essay on the difficulties of writing and reading about good and pious children.
Scarce transcription of a panel discussion with Porter, O'Connor, Caroline Gordon, Madison Jones, and moderator Louis D. Rubin, the final event in a two-day symposium on Southern writing held at Wesleyan College in 1960.