Details
One signed photograph and five volumes, comprising:

EDMONDS, Randolph (1900-1983). Shades and Shadows. Boston: Meador, 1930.
First edition of an important collection of Harlem Renaissance plays, inscribed by the author during his time as a professor at historically black college Dillard University. Octavo. Original purple cloth, spine and upper cover lettered in gilt, upper cover with border blindstamped (extremities slightly rubbed, lightly marked). Provenance: Miss Peterson (authorial presentation inscription to front free endpaper, dated Sep. 20, 1944).

THURMAN, Wallace (1902-1934). The Blacker the Berry… A Novel of Negro Life. New York: Macaulay, 1929.
First edition of Thurman’s first and most famous book. Octavo. (A few leaves dog-eared, library stamps on p.31 and p.153.) Original brown cloth, spine and upper cover lettered in black, upper cover with silhouette of figure stamped in black (lacking the rare dust-jacket, extremities lightly rubbed, upper hinge cracked but firm). Provenance: Dixie Lending Library, Atlanta (library stamp).

CULLEN, Countee (1903-1946). Color. New York and London: Harper & Brothers, 1925.
First edition of Cullen’s first book of verse. Octavo. Yellow cloth-backed decorative boards, orange label to spine and upper board titled in black (extremities very lightly rubbed, head of spine lightly soiled); original dust-jacket (flaps completely detached, edges and backstrip sunned, several small chips and nicks, those to backstrip resulting in some textual loss to publisher’s name at foot).

The Ballad of the Brown Girl. An Old Ballad Retold. New York and London: Harper & Brothers, 1927.
First trade edition, signed by the author. Large octavo (239 x 157mm). Decorative title, border decorations and one double-page illustration by Charles Cullen. Modern yellow calf-backed marbled paper boards, spine lettered in gilt, top edge gilt (very lightly rubbed).

Copper Sun. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1927.
First edition of Cullen’s most ambitious collection. Octavo. 17 black and white illustrations by Charles Cullen. Original black cloth-backed boards, label to upper cover lettered in blue and label to spine titled in brown (lightly rubbed, endpapers browned); original dust-jacket (lightly spotted, small nicks or chips to spine ends and corners, short closed tear along foot of one fold).

— Black and white portrait photograph of Countee Cullen [c.1930s].
Rare inscribed portrait of Countee Cullen to Henry Ogden Wintermute (1895-1964), a writer, historian and collector. Mounded on cork board and in silver frame (230 x 162 mm). Inscribed by Cullen 'For Ogden Wintermute, Cordially, Countee Cullen'.
Brought to you by
Benedict WinterAssociate Director, Specialist
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