The Loch Ness Monster
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6b R. T. Gould. London: Geoffrey Bles, 1934. First Edition.
Notes
The Loch Ness Monster and Others, first published in London by Geoffrey Bles in 1934, stands as a monumental landmark in cryptozoology as the very first book ever written about Scotland's famous lake cryptid. Compiled during the absolute peak of the initial 1933–1934 "Nessie Fever," the text documents over fifty detailed eyewitness accounts, custom sketches, and early photographic evidence—including the iconic Hugh Gray photo and the historic "Surgeon’s Photograph". Rather than treating the subject with tabloid sensationalism, the book applies a rigorous, highly analytical framework to the mystery. The text systematically reviews and dismisses various conventional explanations like floating logs, optical illusions, mats of rotting vegetation, or errant birds and fish. Instead, it concludes with a groundbreaking, sophisticated defense of the creature's existence, proposing that the inhabitant of the loch is an unknown type of prehistoric marine animal or land-locked sea serpent.
The intellect behind this pioneering investigation was Lieutenant Commander Rupert Thomas Gould (1890–1948), an extraordinary British naval officer, horologist, and legendary polymath. Gould was fiercely analytical and had a passion for researching unexplained historical anomalies. He traveled directly to Loch Ness in 1933 to interview local witnesses firsthand, filter out fabrications, and map out physical geographic sightings. His background as an elite navigator and technical writer lent unprecedented scientific credibility to a subject that mainstream academics routinely ignored. Gould's balanced, rationalistic style treated cryptozoology as a serious field of empirical inquiry, establishing him as the definitive grandfather of modern monster hunting.
The historical legacy of this 1934 volume is immense, serving as the primary cultural catalyst that codified the modern myth of the Loch Ness Monster. By organizing disjointed local folklore into a structured, highly compelling book-length scientific thesis, Gould permanently transformed Nessie from a regional Scottish news clipping into an enduring, multi-million dollar international pop-culture phenomenon. For antiquarian book dealers and collectors, the 1934 Geoffrey Bles first edition—originally issued in a vibrant yellow cloth binding—is considered a premier, highly coveted holy grail of 20th-century fortean and cryptozoological literature. It documents the exact genesis of modern lake monster lore, remaining a prized and influential masterpiece that established the blueprint for all subsequent investigative cryptozoology writing.
Description
Yellow canvas binding with red lettering to cover and spine. Photographs and figures throughout. Some foxing to final pages. Sun fading to spine. Fine condition.
The Loch Ness Monster