Thus Spake Zarathustra, a book for All and None, by Friedrich Nietzsche
The first English edition of Nietzsche’s masterpiece, which famously pronounces the death of God and describes the philosopher’s concept of the will to power (among many others), the first three parts written in a series frenzied creative bursts of just 10 days each, and which remains one of the most influential works of philosophical discourse ever written. Published by H. Henry & Co., London, 1896, this is the first English translation, produced by Alexander Tille, a Lecturer on German Literature at the University of Glasgow (Macmillan, published their own US edition in the same year and it is unknown which came first). A Very Good copy.
The first English edition of Nietzsche’s masterpiece, which famously pronounces the death of God and describes the philosopher’s concept of the will to power (among many others), the first three parts written in a series frenzied creative bursts of just 10 days each, and which remains one of the most influential works of philosophical discourse ever written. Published by H. Henry & Co., London, 1896, this is the first English translation, produced by Alexander Tille, a Lecturer on German Literature at the University of Glasgow (Macmillan, published their own US edition in the same year and it is unknown which came first). A Very Good copy.
The first English edition of Nietzsche’s masterpiece, which famously pronounces the death of God and describes the philosopher’s concept of the will to power (among many others), the first three parts written in a series frenzied creative bursts of just 10 days each, and which remains one of the most influential works of philosophical discourse ever written. Published by H. Henry & Co., London, 1896, this is the first English translation, produced by Alexander Tille, a Lecturer on German Literature at the University of Glasgow (Macmillan, published their own US edition in the same year and it is unknown which came first). A Very Good copy.