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First-Edition Identification · Dorothy Brett

Is My Lawrence and Brett: A Friendship a First Edition?

Lippincott, 1933 · entry-level to mid three-figure

The points of issue

The true first edition of Lawrence and Brett: A Friendship by Dorothy Brett is identified by: First edition; Taos art-colony memoir.

How points of issue work →

Can’t read the number line? Paste it into the number-line decoder to get the printing.

Commonly confused with

Book-club editions and later printings reprint the text but are not the first edition and are far less collectible. Use the points above to be certain — see book-club edition vs. first edition.

Where it sits

Lawrence and Brett: A Friendship is a Tier 4 (entry-level to mid three-figure) title in the New Mexico Book Value Index. Brett's 1933 memoir documents the D.H. Lawrence Taos circle from the inside.

Frequently asked questions

Is my copy of Lawrence and Brett: A Friendship a first edition?

Look for these first-printing points: First edition; Taos art-colony memoir Later printings and book-club editions lack them.

How do I tell a first printing from a later one?

Check the copyright page for the publisher's first-printing convention, and confirm the named point of issue above. A number line, stated edition, or dated first printing is the key.

Is a book-club edition the same as a first edition?

No. Book-club editions (BCE) reprint the text but are not the true first edition and are far less collectible. Check the points of issue above to be sure.

I have a first edition of Lawrence and Brett: A Friendship — what should I do with it?

If you're clearing books, New Mexico Literacy Project offers free pickup in Albuquerque in any condition and makes sure collectible copies aren't lost. If you'd rather sell, see the Dorothy Brett collecting guide. Either way, nothing valuable ends up in a landfill.

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