Doubleday Doran 1941 1941. Hardcover. Good. Good hardcover no DJ. Covers show light edge wear. Ex-Library college with usual markings. Text is clean and unmarked. Binding is tight hinges strong.; 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed! Ships same or next business day! Doubleday Doran, 1941 hardcover
Norman OK: University of Oklahoma Press 1974 Octavo 8.0 in. by 5.5 in.; 268pp.; very good softcover; age-toned cover spine; crisp; clean; bright. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, 1974 paperback
Marshall Jones Co 1923. Hardcover. Good. Good library bound hardcover. No DJ. Ex-Library with usual markings. Text contains minor marking. Covers show minor shelf wear. Binding is tight hinges strong.; 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed! Ships same or next business day! Marshall Jones Co hardcover
St. Louis: William Marion Reedy 1913. Octavo pp. 1-8 1-2 3-319 320: blank original pictorial gray cloth front panel stamped in orange and black spine panel stamped in black. First edition. The second and last of Lyon's two books both collecting some of his short fiction. Lyon's untimely death at age 33 cut short a promising literary career. His fiction was of high caliber and has been favorably compared with that of Stephen Crane and Ambrose Bierce. "The 31 tales and sketches in SARDONICS and GRAPHICS can be properly compared with the work of Crane and Bierce for vivid highly characterized and purposeful narrative. 'The Second Motive' in SARDONICS and 'Revenge' in GRAPHICS are psychological murder tragedies at the two extremes of the social scale. Lyon like Crane and Norris died before his talents had fully matured and unfortunately when his work had only begun to appear in McCLURE'S MAGAZINE and to attract special attention." - Bennett A Practical Guide to American Book Collecting p. 204. Most of the stories in GRAPHICS a collection dedicated to Joseph Conrad are mystery or detective shorts some with fantastic elements. "The Wind in the Lilacs" and "A Book in a Running Brook" contain short fairy tales with talking objects. "Ask and It Shall Be Given" features a blind boy who asks for the return of his sight on Christmas; an angel appears and gives him the ability to see into the hearts of people and this leads to an acceptance of his condition. Another Christmas story "The 2000th Christmas" is set in the future and features a mysterious young Jew who possesses magical abilities and whose visit may constitute the second coming. "These stories of the straitened lives of people most of them poor but a few rich alternate between bleak cynicism and pietistic sentiment." - Robert Eldridge. Smith American Fiction 1901-1925 L-614. Hubin 1994 p. 519. A bright fine copy. #136278 William Marion Reedy unknown