The Wind in the Willows.
London, Methuen and Co., 1908
The text of The Wind in the Willows also encrypts a family tragedy. In 1899, Grahame married and had one child, a boy named Alastair who was troubled with health problems and a difficult personality, culminating in the boy's eventual suicide, the cause of much parental anguish. When Grahame finally retired from the Bank of England (as Secretary) in 1908, he could concentrate on the stories he had been telling his son, the stories of the Thames riverbank on which Grahame himself had grown up. So The Wind in the Willows is a tale steeped in nostalgia, and inspired by a father's love for his only son.' (Robert McCrum)
First edition, first impression; 8vo (196 x 232 mm); toning to contents and typical foxing to preliminary and terminal leaves as so very often; publisher's green cloth, decoration and titles to upper board and spine gilt, light flecking to lower board and minor rubbing especially at the head of the spine, otherwise an unusually bright copy of one of the cornerstone works of Edwardian literature.
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