Lot

52

Ruark, Robert Grenadine's Spawn: A Novel of Our Times 1st Edition 1952, Doubleday & Co., Garden

In Online Rare Books, Maps & Prints and Photograp...

This auction is live! You need to be registered and approved to bid at this auction.
You have been outbid. For the best chance of winning, increase your maximum bid.
Your bid or registration is pending approval with the auctioneer. Please check your email account for more details.
Unfortunately, your registration has been declined by the auctioneer. You can contact the auctioneer on +44 (0)20-3695-3172 for more information.
You are the current highest bidder! To be sure to win, log in for the live auction broadcast on or increase your max bid.
Leave a bid now! Your registration has been successful.
Sorry, bidding has ended on this item. We have thousands of new lots everyday, start a new search.
Bidding on this auction has not started. Please register now so you are approved to bid when auction starts.
1/4
Ruark, Robert Grenadine's Spawn: A Novel of Our Times 1st Edition 1952, Doubleday & Co., Garden - Image 1 of 4
Ruark, Robert Grenadine's Spawn: A Novel of Our Times 1st Edition 1952, Doubleday & Co., Garden - Image 2 of 4
Ruark, Robert Grenadine's Spawn: A Novel of Our Times 1st Edition 1952, Doubleday & Co., Garden - Image 3 of 4
Ruark, Robert Grenadine's Spawn: A Novel of Our Times 1st Edition 1952, Doubleday & Co., Garden - Image 4 of 4
Ruark, Robert Grenadine's Spawn: A Novel of Our Times 1st Edition 1952, Doubleday & Co., Garden - Image 1 of 4
Ruark, Robert Grenadine's Spawn: A Novel of Our Times 1st Edition 1952, Doubleday & Co., Garden - Image 2 of 4
Ruark, Robert Grenadine's Spawn: A Novel of Our Times 1st Edition 1952, Doubleday & Co., Garden - Image 3 of 4
Ruark, Robert Grenadine's Spawn: A Novel of Our Times 1st Edition 1952, Doubleday & Co., Garden - Image 4 of 4
Interested in the price of this lot?
Subscribe to the price guide
Cape Town
Ruark, Robert Grenadine's Spawn: A Novel of Our Times

1st Edition 1952, Doubleday & Co., Garden City, New York. Octavo, 14, 5 x 21cm; 253pp. Grey cloth boards with illustration in red on front board and red cursive titles to spine. Rough cut front edge. With dustjacket.


Ruark’s first novel, Grenadine Etching (1947), lampooned historical romances that were all the rage at the time.  This is the sequel.


Kirkus Review: ‘This sequel to is compounded of the same ingredients again aplied to the current social scene, and embodies a columnist's carps on a variety of things. With the fabulous Grenadine's death her four sons, Abercrombie, Peter, Jeter and Uranium, and a vaguely remembered other offspring (who turns out to be omnipresent Opal) take over her empire and positions in the military, moving pictures, science and propaganda...as World War II and Korea came over the pike. A widespread spatter-pattern of hard, and fogged, hits, this has fun with newspapers, advertising, publishing, economics and other discussed areas, and ends with Uranium blowing up the world..... The broadness and baldness of the lampooning blurs the sharp outline of what superior goofer dust can do.’


Robert Chester Ruark Jr., was born in Wilmington, N.C., on 29 December 1915. He started college at age 15 at the University of North Carolina and  graduated with an A.B. in journalism in June 1935. He worked as a journalist for various newspapers until the war. During World War II, he joined the Navy as a gunnery officer and later became a press censor the Pacific. He returned to the Washington Daily News in 1945 to become a syndicated columnist. In his column, Ruark revealed a gift for expressing aversion both facetiously and ungrammatically, poking fun at his uneducated "hick." He aimed his stinging wit at psychiatrists, Southern cooking, army generals, the state of Texas, progressive schools, scheming women, and other pet peeves.  His sharpest assaults were collected in two books, I Didn’t Know It Was Loaded (1948) and One for the Road (1949). During this time, he began writing Grenadine Etching, published in 1947. It was followed by  Grenadine's Spawn (1952).


After 1950, Ruark began spending time in Africa. In 1953, he published Horn of the Hunter : The Story of an African Hunt, about an African safari, and Something of Value in 1955. Something of Value, based on the Mau Mau uprisings, was a major success. He made over a million dollars on the royalties and the film rights which he sold to Metro Goldwyn Mayer. Ruark permanently settled in Spain. There he wrote his three autobiographical novels, The Old Man and the Boy (1957), Poor No More (1959), and The Old Man's Boy Grows Older (1961). In 1962 he published another work on race relations in Africa, Uhuru; his last book was The Honey Badger published in 1964. He died in June 1965.


Condition: Age toning to the book and edges with a small stain on the bottom edge, which is visible at the extreme bottom of the pages. Stain to bottom of rear pastedown. The protected dustjacket has worn edges with small chips, and chips to the spine tips. Stain to bottom of rear wrap. Overall Good.


Doubleday & Co.
New York
1952
14, 5 x 21cm
Visit AntiquarianAuctions.com to view more details and to bid
Ruark, Robert Grenadine's Spawn: A Novel of Our Times

1st Edition 1952, Doubleday & Co., Garden City, New York. Octavo, 14, 5 x 21cm; 253pp. Grey cloth boards with illustration in red on front board and red cursive titles to spine. Rough cut front edge. With dustjacket.


Ruark’s first novel, Grenadine Etching (1947), lampooned historical romances that were all the rage at the time.  This is the sequel.


Kirkus Review: ‘This sequel to is compounded of the same ingredients again aplied to the current social scene, and embodies a columnist's carps on a variety of things. With the fabulous Grenadine's death her four sons, Abercrombie, Peter, Jeter and Uranium, and a vaguely remembered other offspring (who turns out to be omnipresent Opal) take over her empire and positions in the military, moving pictures, science and propaganda...as World War II and Korea came over the pike. A widespread spatter-pattern of hard, and fogged, hits, this has fun with newspapers, advertising, publishing, economics and other discussed areas, and ends with Uranium blowing up the world..... The broadness and baldness of the lampooning blurs the sharp outline of what superior goofer dust can do.’


Robert Chester Ruark Jr., was born in Wilmington, N.C., on 29 December 1915. He started college at age 15 at the University of North Carolina and  graduated with an A.B. in journalism in June 1935. He worked as a journalist for various newspapers until the war. During World War II, he joined the Navy as a gunnery officer and later became a press censor the Pacific. He returned to the Washington Daily News in 1945 to become a syndicated columnist. In his column, Ruark revealed a gift for expressing aversion both facetiously and ungrammatically, poking fun at his uneducated "hick." He aimed his stinging wit at psychiatrists, Southern cooking, army generals, the state of Texas, progressive schools, scheming women, and other pet peeves.  His sharpest assaults were collected in two books, I Didn’t Know It Was Loaded (1948) and One for the Road (1949). During this time, he began writing Grenadine Etching, published in 1947. It was followed by  Grenadine's Spawn (1952).


After 1950, Ruark began spending time in Africa. In 1953, he published Horn of the Hunter : The Story of an African Hunt, about an African safari, and Something of Value in 1955. Something of Value, based on the Mau Mau uprisings, was a major success. He made over a million dollars on the royalties and the film rights which he sold to Metro Goldwyn Mayer. Ruark permanently settled in Spain. There he wrote his three autobiographical novels, The Old Man and the Boy (1957), Poor No More (1959), and The Old Man's Boy Grows Older (1961). In 1962 he published another work on race relations in Africa, Uhuru; his last book was The Honey Badger published in 1964. He died in June 1965.


Condition: Age toning to the book and edges with a small stain on the bottom edge, which is visible at the extreme bottom of the pages. Stain to bottom of rear pastedown. The protected dustjacket has worn edges with small chips, and chips to the spine tips. Stain to bottom of rear wrap. Overall Good.


Doubleday & Co.
New York
1952
14, 5 x 21cm
Visit AntiquarianAuctions.com to view more details and to bid

Online Rare Books, Maps & Prints and Photography Auction

Sale Date(s)
Venue Address
Online only
.
.
.
United Kingdom

General delivery information available from the auctioneer

Registration on AntiquarianAuctions.com is free of charge.

As a successful bidder you will receive an invoice from the seller after the auction. The seller will only invoice the final selling price. We do not charge a buyer’s premium and no VAT applies.

The buyer pays for shipping and insurance costs which can be requested from the seller before the end of the sale.

Important Information

This is an online only auction. Please visit AntiquarianAuctions.com for further information about a lot and to bid

Terms and Conditions

There is no buyer’s premium charged on AntiquarianAuctions.com

AntiquarianAuctions.com is an online rare book auction website. All lots are listed by recognised booksellers who have been vetted before being accepted to sell on the site. This allows buyers to bid with confidence and ensures that lots are accurately described.

Bidding will begin on 14 April at 4.30 pm (UK time) and ends on 21 April at 4.30 pm (UK time). Please follow the countdown on AntiquarianAuctions.com.

Please visit AntiquarianAuctions.com for further information about a lot and to bid

See Full Terms And Conditions