Helen Keller’s Journals. by KELLER, Helen.

Helen Keller’s Journals. by KELLER, Helen. < >
  • Another image of Helen Keller’s Journals. by KELLER, Helen.
  • Another image of Helen Keller’s Journals. by KELLER, Helen.
  • Another image of Helen Keller’s Journals. by KELLER, Helen.
  • Another image of Helen Keller’s Journals. by KELLER, Helen.
  • Another image of Helen Keller’s Journals. by KELLER, Helen.
  • Another image of Helen Keller’s Journals. by KELLER, Helen.

~ Helen Keller’s Journals. New York: Doubleday, Doran & Company Inc, 1938.

8vo, pp. vi, 313, [1]. Half-title. Loose newspaper clipping inserted with consequent browning to adjacent leaves. Red cloth, gilt lettering, torn dust wrapper, with some loss and rather crude tape repairs. Inscribed by Keller in pencil. Good.

First edition, inscribed by Keller to artist and illustrator W. Graham Robertson: ‘To Mr Graham Robertson I send this book, hoping that it may convince him of the reality of my cordial admiration. Helen Keller. September 24th 1938’ and loosely inserted is an envelope containing a telegram from Alexander Woollcott to Graham Robertson at Sandhills, his Surrey home saying, ‘Helen Keller and I send our love to you at Christmas’. Keller’s inscription is reproduced in Robertson’s Letters. In a letter of 29 December 1938 he recorded receiving ‘to my inordinate pride, an affectionate message from that eighth wonder of the world, Helen Keller. What have I ever done that she should think of me’. Several days later he outlined the background of their connection. ‘Helen Keller began some time ago to send me little messages through a mutual friend who had spoken to her of Time Was. I felt compelled to tell her (very gently and tactfully, I hope) that I was quite unable to believe her existence, and that she and her impossible career were quite obviously a beautiful fairy tale invented for the encouragement and comfort of the world. She then sent me one of her books, inscribed (of course she can write―that is quite a minor miracle) … And then she got Time Was in Braille and seemed to like it. And that’s how it happened that am privileged to call myself a friend of Helen Keller’s’.

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