Let Us Now Praise Famous Men. Three Tenant Families.
Boston, Houghton Mifflin Company, The Riverside Press Cambridge, 1941
Fortune ultimately decided not to run the story and released it to Agee and Evans. In the spring of 1938, they reached an agreement with Harper and Brothers to expand the same material into book form. But, after a year and a half of discussions, Agee's refusal to change the text resulted in the withdrawal of the publishing offer. The project languished until Houghton Mifflin of Boston stepped in on the condition that certain Agee remove certain words that were illegal in Massachusetts. A suite of Evans's direct, unadorned photographs precede Agee's inventive stream-of-consciousness prose. The book was well received, but sales were poor; only around 600 copies were sold in a year and it was remaindered. In the Winter 1942 issue of the Kenyon Review, Lionel Trilling described Let Us Now Praise famous Men as being 'the most important moral effort of our American generation.'
First edition, 8vo (205 x 138 mm, 8 x 5½ in); black-and-white photographs printed in relief halftone, toning to edges, occasional minor marks; plain endpapers, light toning from flaps, black cloth-covered boards, titles stamped on spine in silver, toning to spine and edges, rubbing to bottom edges, pulling to head of spine, photo-illustrated dust-jacket, wear to edges with tiny chips, short tear to upper panel, short tear and crease to rear, toned and lightly marked, spine faded, a very good copy; [32], [ii], xvi, 471, [3]pp.
Photographers of the FSA III-A1; Regards à travers Le Livre 78; The Book of 101 Books pp108-9; Auer Collection p293; The Photobook: A History I, p144.
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