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P. Anderson Graham
Signed

The Collapse of Homo Sapiens

Inscribed first edition, 1923
The Collapse of Homo Sapiens (1923) by P. Anderson Graham is an early British post-apocalyptic novel in which a man granted supernatural visions of the future is shown England as it will exist two centuries later. What he finds is a civilization reduced to savagery. London is in ruins, reclaimed by forest and flood. The Thames flows wild and unnavigated. The remnant population is divided between a tiny settlement of survivors clinging to organized society under a Union Jack and great tribes of feral human beings who have reverted entirely to a pre-civilized state. The collapse is attributed to moral and social decay, successive wars, and a final invasion by what the novel calls "the coloured men," a racial framework Graham presents without disguise and that sits at the center of the book's argument. The Settlement is descended from those who held out after the invaders withdrew. The novel builds its account through embedded manuscripts, songs, and testimony alongside the first-person narrative, giving it the texture of a found-document archive. Graham was a naturalist, journalist, and author of rural studies of England, and his descriptions of the reverted landscape are among the most vivid passages in the novel. 

This copy is inscribed on the front free-endpaper by Graham and is from the library of John Clute, with his bookplate.


Hardcover. First Edition, First Printing. Octavo, green cloth boards with gilt lettering on front panel and spine. London and New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1923. #11444.
Very good.