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Alexandre Dumas’ D’Artagnan Romances Box Set

Alexandre Dumas’ D’Artagnan Romances Box Set

6b Alexandre Dumas. New York: Thomas Nelson & Sons, ca. 1900–1905. The New Century Library Edition. Complete in Five Volumes.

Notes

Spanning nearly five decades of French history from the reign of Louis XIII to the absolute monarchy of Louis XIV, the D’Artagnan Romances constitute the most celebrated adventure epic in Western literature. The sweeping narrative chronicles the life of d’Artagnan, a proud, penniless Gascon youth who travels to Paris to join the King's Musketeers, forming an unbreakable bond of loyalty with three legendary swordsmen: the noble Athos, the gargantuan Porthos, and the cunning Aramis. While the first two volumes capture the high-flying, comedic bravado of their youth, the final three volumes (which comprise English publishing's standard splitting of Dumas's massive final novel, Le Vicomte de Bragelonne) take a deeply mature, melancholic, and political turn. As the aging heroes find their personal loyalties divided by royal conspiracies, the epic culminates in the tragic mystery of The Man in the Iron Mask. Far more than mere swashbuckling tales, these novels stand as profound meditations on the passage of time, the bittersweet decay of youthful idealism, and the enduring sanctity of male friendship against the ruthless machinations of state power. 
Written by Alexandre Dumas between 1844 and 1850, the D'Artagnan Romances were heavily indebted to his chief historical collaborator, Auguste Maquet. Dumas drew his initial inspiration from a semi-fictionalized 1700 memoir of the real-life captain of musketeers, Charles de Batz-Castelmore. Serialized to an obsessed French public, the work was an immediate global phenomenon. Because Dumas’s final entry in the cycle was a singular, monolithic work containing 269 chapters, British and American publishers found it commercially unfeasible to print as one book. This Thomas Nelson edition utilizes the definitive Victorian translation that successfully codified the cycle into a five-volume narrative arc, establishing the standard reading sequence used by English scholars for over a century. 
This set was launched by Thomas Nelson & Sons in New Century Library at the turn of the 20th century and completely revolutionized pocket publishing. By pioneering the use of Nelson’s India Paper—an incredibly dense, opaque, yet whisper-thin paper stock—Nelson managed to condense unedited, 900-page historical masterpieces into compact volumes less than half an inch thick. This engineering marvel allowed readers to comfortably hold a massive, unabridged multi-volume saga like the D'Artagnan Romances in the palm of a single hand. The deluxe limp leather bindings, gilded tops, and elegant matching box sets were designed to satisfy the Edwardian elite's demand for functional luxury, allowing travelers to carry a high-quality library onto steamships and trains. Today, complete five-volume sets remaining in their original presentation box are exceptionally rare, highly prized as a beautiful fusion of industrial innovation and timeless literary craftsmanship.

Description

Pocket-sized octavos. Approx. 4.25 x 6.25 inches. Printed on premium, ultra-thin Nelson’s India Paper. Bound in publisher’s deep blue deluxe flexible limp smooth leather. Spines elaborately stamped and lettered in gilt. Top edges gilded. Original silk ribbon page markers intact. Housed in the publisher's original matching cloth-covered presentation box. Gilt lettering on interior of lid. Some minimal damage to top edge of box set. 

$612.50

Original: $1,750.00

-65%
Alexandre Dumas’ D’Artagnan Romances Box Set

$1,750.00

$612.50
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Description

6b Alexandre Dumas. New York: Thomas Nelson & Sons, ca. 1900–1905. The New Century Library Edition. Complete in Five Volumes.

Notes

Spanning nearly five decades of French history from the reign of Louis XIII to the absolute monarchy of Louis XIV, the D’Artagnan Romances constitute the most celebrated adventure epic in Western literature. The sweeping narrative chronicles the life of d’Artagnan, a proud, penniless Gascon youth who travels to Paris to join the King's Musketeers, forming an unbreakable bond of loyalty with three legendary swordsmen: the noble Athos, the gargantuan Porthos, and the cunning Aramis. While the first two volumes capture the high-flying, comedic bravado of their youth, the final three volumes (which comprise English publishing's standard splitting of Dumas's massive final novel, Le Vicomte de Bragelonne) take a deeply mature, melancholic, and political turn. As the aging heroes find their personal loyalties divided by royal conspiracies, the epic culminates in the tragic mystery of The Man in the Iron Mask. Far more than mere swashbuckling tales, these novels stand as profound meditations on the passage of time, the bittersweet decay of youthful idealism, and the enduring sanctity of male friendship against the ruthless machinations of state power. 
Written by Alexandre Dumas between 1844 and 1850, the D'Artagnan Romances were heavily indebted to his chief historical collaborator, Auguste Maquet. Dumas drew his initial inspiration from a semi-fictionalized 1700 memoir of the real-life captain of musketeers, Charles de Batz-Castelmore. Serialized to an obsessed French public, the work was an immediate global phenomenon. Because Dumas’s final entry in the cycle was a singular, monolithic work containing 269 chapters, British and American publishers found it commercially unfeasible to print as one book. This Thomas Nelson edition utilizes the definitive Victorian translation that successfully codified the cycle into a five-volume narrative arc, establishing the standard reading sequence used by English scholars for over a century. 
This set was launched by Thomas Nelson & Sons in New Century Library at the turn of the 20th century and completely revolutionized pocket publishing. By pioneering the use of Nelson’s India Paper—an incredibly dense, opaque, yet whisper-thin paper stock—Nelson managed to condense unedited, 900-page historical masterpieces into compact volumes less than half an inch thick. This engineering marvel allowed readers to comfortably hold a massive, unabridged multi-volume saga like the D'Artagnan Romances in the palm of a single hand. The deluxe limp leather bindings, gilded tops, and elegant matching box sets were designed to satisfy the Edwardian elite's demand for functional luxury, allowing travelers to carry a high-quality library onto steamships and trains. Today, complete five-volume sets remaining in their original presentation box are exceptionally rare, highly prized as a beautiful fusion of industrial innovation and timeless literary craftsmanship.

Description

Pocket-sized octavos. Approx. 4.25 x 6.25 inches. Printed on premium, ultra-thin Nelson’s India Paper. Bound in publisher’s deep blue deluxe flexible limp smooth leather. Spines elaborately stamped and lettered in gilt. Top edges gilded. Original silk ribbon page markers intact. Housed in the publisher's original matching cloth-covered presentation box. Gilt lettering on interior of lid. Some minimal damage to top edge of box set.