![]() ![]() ![]() DJ protected by a brand new, clear, acid-free mylar cover. Dust jacket is worn and lightly tattered with a small chip at top of spine panel but clean and bright. Seuss titles on back end sheet and back cover cover. ![]() Very faint, small erasure on front end sheet. Sale ends January 2, 2024***** Pictorial cover is worn at corners and spine caps but clean, bright, and in very good- condition. ****Holiday Sale! The current price reflects a 20% discount off the regular price, while the item lasts. (If pictured, shown without the mylar cover for an accurate representation of dust jacket. We add mylar covers to all books with DJs to preserve the DJs and add luster to magnify their beauty. Dust jacket has light wear and a 1" chip at the bottom of the spine panel but clean and bright. Seuss titles on back cover chronologically listed from "And to Think I Saw it on Mulberry Street" (first published 1937) to "Horton Hears a Who!" (first published in 1954), indicating this is a very early printing (1954-1955) published prior to his next title (If I Ran the Circus), which came out in 1956. Pages are clean and in very good condition. Sale ends January 2, 2024***** Pictorial cover has wear to corners and spine caps but clean, bright, and in very good+ condition. The front flap is unclipped with the 250/250 price intact. The jacket is good with some chips and closed tears along the top and bottom edges and two small pieces missing from the top and bottom of the spine. There is an owner's name on the flyleaf else the text is very good with some light spotting to a few pages but no other markings. A good copy with some chipping to the spine tips and some wear along the edges. This book was one of six titles "withdrawn" by the Seuss Foundation in 2021. First edition of this scarce Seuss title with all of the points listed in Younger & Hirsch ($2.50 price on flap and ten titles listed on rear jacket panel from Mulberry Street to Horton Hears a Who! In this take on the genre of alphabet book, Seuss presents, instead of the twenty-six letters of the conventional English alphabet, twenty additional letters that purportedly follow them. ![]()
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