The Day of the Triffids - First Edition by John Wyndham
The Day of the Triffids
By John Wyndham
First edition, first impression, published by Michael Joseph in 1951.
Octavo. Original pale green cloth, spine lettered in silver; white endpapers. With the original pictorial dust jacket designed by Patrick Gierth, priced 10s. 6d. net to the front flap.
The binding is clean and firm, with the cloth fresh and even in tone with one faint and unobtrusive mark to lower board and one or two tiny dings to bottom edge of lower board, visible upon close inspection. Internally, the text is clean throughout, the paper very gently toned, with no inscriptions or markings. A small bookseller’s label is affixed to the bottom corner rear pastedown. A near fine copy.
The dust jacket is complete and unrestored; some chipping and rubbing to spine ends and corners with a couple of small tears to top edge of upper panel. The spine panel remains bright and clearly legible, the vivid yellow ground retaining good colour, and the price is not clipped. Very good.
A landmark of modern British science fiction, 'The Day of the Triffids' is John Wyndham's best-known and most enduring novel. It exerted a profound influence on post-war speculative writing, effectively redefining the catastrophe novel through its fusion of apocalyptic scenario, biological menace, and social realism. Wyndham's emphasis on societal collapse, moral ambiguity, and the fragility of civilisation shaped the direction of later British and international science fiction, anticipating themes developed by writers such as J. G. Ballard and John Christopher among others. Its vision of mass blindness and ecological threat has echoed through film, television, and literature for decades, establishing the novel as a foundational text of the genre.

