Vonnegut | Kurt

Nothing Is Lost Save Honor

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Description

Signed limited edition of Nothing Is Lost Save Honor: Two Essays by Kurt Vonnegut.

Octavo, [unpaginated]. Quarter brown cloth, marbled paper boards, gilt lettering on spine. Printed at The Toothpaste Press (West Branch, Iowa) on Gutenberg Laid, a German mouldmade paper. Bound at the Campbell-Logan Bindery. Frontispiece portrait by David Levine. Includes the publisher’s prospectus. From a limited edition of 300 copies numbered and signed by Kurt Vonnegut, this being number 156.

Nothing Is Lost Save Honor is a collection of two essays by Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. The first essay, “Fates Worse than Death,” was delivered to congregants at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York City in 1982. The second essay, “The Worst Addiction of Them All,” was originally published in The Nation magazine in 1983. Both essays deal with the folly of the arms race. This publication was produced to benefit the Mississippi Civil Liberties Union.

Additional information

Location Published

Jackson, Mississippi

Publisher

Nouveau Press

Edition

Limited Edition

Date Published

1984

Binding

Quarter Cloth

Condition

Fine

Author

Vonnegut | Kurt

Author Display

Kurt Vonnegut