J.R.R. Tolkien – The Fellowship of the Ring – First Edition 1954 – In the original unrestored dust wrapper
£37,500.00
The Fellowship of the Ring (1954), [vi], 423, [1] pp., “First published in 1954” to verso. Retaining the map with a little spotting to the red top stain. Binding firm and square, cloth bright with light rubbing and light fading to the spine end. A very good book without inscriptions. In the very good (or better) dust wrapper which is unclipped, showing some light scattered spotting and light toning – with ABSOLUTELY NO LOSS. The red on the spine a little faded. A great example which would sit nicely in any set.
Hammond & Anderson A5a, A6a, A7a; Currey p. 508; Bleiler p. 509.
When The Lord of the Rings appeared between 1954 and 1955, it was issued quietly, in modest print runs, by the London publisher George Allen & Unwin. Tolkien’s achievement was not merely narrative but architectural. Drawing upon philology, medieval literature, mythology, and his own linguistic inventions, he constructed a secondary world of unprecedented depth and internal coherence. Middle-earth was not a setting but a civilisation: languages, genealogies, cosmology, and moral philosophy interwoven with epic narrative. In doing so, Tolkien effectively established the template for modern high fantasy.
The trilogy’s publication history underscores its rarity. The first impression of The Fellowship of the Ring numbered only 3,000 copies and the amount of unrestored dust-jackets now, was never high. More than seventy years after publication, The Lord of the Rings remains one of the most widely read and culturally resonant works of the modern era.
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- Description
Description
The Fellowship of the Ring (1954), [vi], 423, [1] pp., “First published in 1954” to verso. Retaining the map with a little spotting to the red top stain. Binding firm and square, cloth bright with light rubbing and light fading to the spine end. A very good book without inscriptions. In the very good (or better) dust wrapper which is unclipped, showing some light scattered spotting and light toning – with ABSOLUTELY NO LOSS. The red on the spine a little faded. A great example which would sit nicely in any set.
Hammond & Anderson A5a, A6a, A7a; Currey p. 508; Bleiler p. 509.
When The Lord of the Rings appeared between 1954 and 1955, it was issued quietly, in modest print runs, by the London publisher George Allen & Unwin. Tolkien’s achievement was not merely narrative but architectural. Drawing upon philology, medieval literature, mythology, and his own linguistic inventions, he constructed a secondary world of unprecedented depth and internal coherence. Middle-earth was not a setting but a civilisation: languages, genealogies, cosmology, and moral philosophy interwoven with epic narrative. In doing so, Tolkien effectively established the template for modern high fantasy.
The trilogy’s publication history underscores its rarity. The first impression of The Fellowship of the Ring numbered only 3,000 copies and the amount of unrestored dust-jackets now, was never high. More than seventy years after publication, The Lord of the Rings remains one of the most widely read and culturally resonant works of the modern era.
















