The Sacred Giraffe; Being the Second Volume of the Posthumous Works of Julio Arceval
Title | The Sacred Giraffe; Being the Second Volume of the Posthumous Works of Julio Arceval |
Year for Search | 1925 |
Authors | Madariaga [y Rojo], Salvador de ed. [written by](1886-1978) |
Tertiary Authors | Arceval, Julio [pseud.] |
Date Published | [1925] |
Publisher | Harper and Brothers |
Place Published | New York |
Keywords | Male author, Spanish author |
Annotation | The novel begins in a future society where women dominate but men are beginning to gain some recognition as being more than decorative. The novel is then concerned with how this state of affairs came about and how Europe and the white race disappeared. |
Additional Publishers | UK ed. London: Martin Hopkinson, 1925. Also published as La jirafa sagredo, o El buho de plata. Novela cuasi una fantasia, dedicada en prueba de gratitud a A.J.C. Pues con ella está en dueda esta libro en más de una manera, por Julio Arceval. Madrid, Spain: Mundo Editorial Latino, [1925]. |
Info Notes | The author was Spanish but also wrote in English. The book is initially set in England, and the book that is supposedly reproduced is said to have been written in English. |
Pseudonym | Julio Arceval [pseud.] |
Holding Institutions | MoU-St, PSt |
Author Note | (1886-1978) |
Full Text | [1925] Madariaga [y Rojo], Salvador de, ed. [written by] (1886-1978). The Sacred Giraffe; Being the Second Volume of the Posthumous Works of Julio Arceval [pseud.]. New York: Harper and Brothers. U.K. ed. London: Martin Hopkinson, 1925. Also published as La jirafa sagredo, o El buho de plata. Novela cuasi una fantasia, dedicada en prueba de gratitud a A.J.C. Pues con ella está en dueda esta libro en más de una manera, por Julio Arceval. Madrid, Spain: Mundo Editorial Latino, [1925]. The author was Spanish but also wrote in English. The book is initially set in England, and the book that is supposedly reproduced is said to have been written in English. MoU-St, PSt The novel begins in a future society where women dominate but men are beginning to gain some recognition as being more than decorative. The novel is then concerned with how this state of affairs came about and how Europe and the white race disappeared. |