The Lost World.

"THERE ARE HEROISMS ALL ROUND US": FIRST EDITION OF SIR ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE'S THE LOST WORLD: Rare Large Paper Edition

The Lost World.

DOYLE, Arthur Conan.

Item Number: 95822

London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1912.

First edition of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s “robust adventure story,” one of 190 large paper copies. Octavo, original cloth blindstamped with dinosaur footprints, gilt titles to the spine and front panel, pictorial endpapers, with eleven tipped-in plates with tissue guards including frontispiece portrait of Professor Challenger. In very good condition. Rare and desirable.

As early as 1889, Conan Doyle mused about writing "a Rider Haggardy kind of book… dedicated to all the naughty boys of the Empire." By 1911 "he was writing it at last… inspired in part by local fossil evidences of prehistoric life"—including two fossilized iguanadon feet, a Stone Age flint arrowhead—and "by sentiments expressed at a May 1910 luncheon in honor of the Arctic explorer Robert Peary… [For] The Lost World, he turned to a barely explored region of the Amazon in South America; for as he said at Peary's luncheon, 'romance writers are a class of people who very much dislike being hampered by facts'" (Arthur Conan Doyle: A Life in Letters, 577-8). The restless, questing intellect of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle spurred him far beyond the ingenious puzzles he constructed for Sherlock Holmes. In The Lost World, Doyle, a devotee of fantastic tales of adventure and discovery, introduces his readers to Professor Challenger, an eccentric paleontologist, on his suspense-filled search for prehistoric creatures in the wilds of the Amazon. Professor Challenger's doughty troupe includes a skeptical colleague, Professor Summerlee; the cool-headed, plucky sportsman Lord John Roxton; and the narrator, the intrepid reporter Edward Malone. When their bridge to civilization collapses, the explorers find themselves marooned among dinosaurs and savage ape-people. "Despite such anachronisms as cavemen living with dinosaurs, both Challenger and the credibility of the detail strengthen the narrative, making it the classic of its type" Anatomy of Wonder. Barron, Anatomy of Wonder, 1-31; Goldscheider, Conan Doyle Bibliography, 477.

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