Fannie Hurst
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First Edition of J.M. Keynes' The Economic Consequences of the Peace; From the Library of American Novelist Fannie Hurst
KEYNES, John Maynard [J.M.] [Fannie Hurst].
The Economic Consequences of the Peace.
New York: Harcourt, Brace and Howe, 1920.
First American edition of the best-selling book that established John Maynard Keynes' reputation as a leading economist. Octavo, original blue cloth with gilt titles and ruling to the spine. From the library of Fannie Hurst with her bookplate to the front pastedown. Fannie Hurst (1885–1968) was a novelist, short story writer, and social activist whose work often addressed issues of gender, class, and race in early twentieth-century society. A highly popular and commercially successful author, she is best known for works such as Imitation of Life (1933), which explored racial identity and social inequality and was later adapted into influential films. Beyond her literary career, Hurst was actively engaged in public service and reform, serving on various government commissions during the New Deal and as a delegate to the U.N. World Health Assembly in 1937. In very good condition with wonderful provenance.
Price: $650.00 Item Number: 151443

