Quick answer
A first edition of The Little Disturbances of Man by Grace Paley (Doubleday, 1959) is identified by: The US Doubleday (Garden City, New York, 1959) hardcover is the true first and Paley's first book. US Doubleday 1959 is the true first.
Checklist — a true first has these:
- The US Doubleday (Garden City, New York, 1959) hardcover is the true first and Paley's first book
- Doubleday first printings state 'First Edition' on the copyright page and remove it on later printings, so a true first shows the stated 'First Edition.' It is bound in tan cloth, the spine lettered in black, with an orange pictorial device to the front board
- The dust jacket is a priced jacket with the price present at the front flap
- Publisher imprint reads Doubleday
- Not a book-club edition (see below)
| Author | Grace Paley |
|---|---|
| Publisher | Doubleday |
| Year | 1959 |
| True first | US edition |
| Format | Hardcover (trade) |
| Key point | The US Doubleday (Garden City, New York, 1959) hardcover is the true first and Paley's first book |
| Book-club edition exists? | — |
The points of issue
- The US Doubleday (Garden City, New York, 1959) hardcover is the true first and Paley's first book
- Doubleday first printings state 'First Edition' on the copyright page and remove it on later printings, so a true first shows the stated 'First Edition.' It is bound in tan cloth, the spine lettered in black, with an orange pictorial device to the front board
- The dust jacket is a priced jacket with the price present at the front flap
How Doubleday marked a first edition
- Mid-1958–early 1959: numerical gutter code (1–52) on the last page of text indicating the WEEK of printing. Early 1959–1987: added a LETTER code before the week code indicating the YEAR.
Full Doubleday first-edition guide →
How to verify your copy, step by step
- Find the copyright page — the verso (back) of the title page.
- Confirm the first-edition statement — look for “First Edition,” “First Printing,” or the publisher’s equivalent wording.
- Check for a number line or dated printing — the lowest number present is the printing; a dated first printing with no later printings listed is the tell.
- Verify this is the US true first — not a later-market or reprint edition.
- Rule out a book-club edition — a blind-stamp on the rear board or a jacket with no printed price marks a book-club copy.
- Photograph four things — the front cover, spine, title page, and copyright page — the standard record for identification.
The dust jacket
For a collectible first edition the dust jacket matters as much as the book. Confirm the jacket is present and unclipped — the printed price should still be at the corner of the flap (a clipped corner or a price-less flap can indicate a book-club issue). First-state jackets can differ from later ones in the cover art, blurbs, or review quotations; where a specific first-state jacket point is known for this title it is noted above.
Binding & format
Where multiple bindings exist, the hardcover trade issue is usually (but not always) the precedence copy — confirm against the points above. Later printings often show cheaper cloth, thinner boards, or simplified spine stamping. A simultaneous signed or limited issue, when one exists, is a distinct state from the trade first.
Is this the true first?
US Doubleday 1959 is the true first. CORRECTION to census: the first UK edition is Weidenfeld & Nicolson (London, 1960) — red boards lettered in gilt at the spine — NOT André Deutsch; no André Deutsch edition is corroborated. The UK 1960 issue is the later, scarcer printing.
Frequently asked questions
Is my copy of The Little Disturbances of Man a first edition?
A first edition of The Little Disturbances of Man by Grace Paley (Doubleday) is identified by: The US Doubleday (Garden City, New York, 1959) hardcover is the true first and Paley's first book.
How do I tell the first printing from a later one?
Check the copyright page. A stated first edition, a number line ending in 1, or a dated first printing with no later printings listed is the key. US Doubleday 1959 is the true first.
Is the book-club edition the same as the first?
No. Book-club editions reprint the text but are not the true first; look for a blind-stamp on the rear board or a jacket with no printed price.
I have a first edition of The Little Disturbances of Man — what should I do?
First, document the copy: photograph the copyright page (the number line and any edition statement) and the dust-jacket flap — an unclipped, priced jacket matters. Confirm the points of issue above against your copy, and use the free First Edition Checker to decode the printing. To sell, the author’s collecting guide covers the market. And if you are clearing books in the Albuquerque area, the New Mexico Literacy Project offers free pickup, any condition, and makes sure collectible copies are identified rather than discarded.
Glossary
- First edition
- Every copy printed from the first setting of type. Collectors usually want the first edition, first printing (the true first).
- First printing / impression
- A single press run from that setting. The first printing is the earliest and most desirable; later printings are still the first edition but not the true first.
- Number line (printer's key)
- A row of numbers on the copyright page (e.g. 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1). The lowest number present is the printing — a line including 1 marks a first printing (Random House deliberately ends at 2).
- Points of issue
- Specific physical details — a stated edition, a number line, a typo, a jacket state — that identify the true first printing.
- Book-club edition (BCE)
- A reprint made for a book club. Tells include a blind-stamped dot or square on the rear board and a dust jacket with no printed price. Not the true first.
- First thus
- The first appearance of a particular version (first paperback, first illustrated, first U.S. printing) — a first of that kind, not the first edition of the work.
Related first editions
- An Invisible Sign of My Own — Aimee Bender
- The Girl in the Flammable Skirt — Aimee Bender
- The Particular Sadness of Lemon Cake — Aimee Bender
- Willful Creatures — Aimee Bender
- Roots: The Saga of an American Family — Alex Haley
- Advise and Consent — Allen Drury
- Gulag: A History — Anne Applebaum
- Everything That Moves — Budd Schulberg
How to cite this page
New Mexico Literacy Project. “Is The Little Disturbances of Man by Grace Paley a First Edition? Points of Issue.” NMLP First-Edition Identification Reference. Reviewed 4 July 2026. Retrieved from https://newmexicoliteracyproject.org/first-edition/the-little-disturbances-of-man. Licensed CC BY 4.0 — part of the open Canonical First-Edition Points of Issue dataset (DOI 10.5281/zenodo.21184548).