Knopf, 1965.
Let us catalogue this copy's myriad faults: The book is slightly cocked, and there is a blemish on the spine. The yellow and black jacket is darkened on the spine, with fraying at the top and bottom. There is also some irregular browning to the jacket's front panel. But you know what? This is probably the best copy out there. There's a more or less equivalent copy ("a few small closed tears and a little wear at the extremities") for $81, but otherwise five crappy copies and five crappier ex-library copies, none for less than $25. There can't be a lot of demand for Andric, but whatever there is outpaces the supply. This novel appeared after he won the Nobel, so Knopf's print run must have been a reasonable size. But they have all disappeared somewhere.
I often would pass up books from Allan that I thought he had a decent chance of selling to a real customer, because he would insist I take them for less because I was a friend. (I let him get away with this, yes.) He had for years a fine copy of Andric's The Devil's Yard (Grove) which I resisted and resisted and then he finally sold it. My bad: I've never seen a fine copy since.
I can soup up this copy: in Allan's collection of jackets, there is a fine one for this book. But there will still be a blemish on the spine.
Allan's price: $50.
Update: Found the mint jacket. It is marked by Allan "variant," and it is, although I would say "first state." This jacket is dated 3/65; the jacket that was on the book is 4/65. The differences: the second state shifts the price, inital cap and line about the typography to black from red; on the rear flap,a 50th anniversary device replaces the Borzoi dog; on the rear panel, the words "Ivo Andric's Bosnian Chronicle," the publications that provided the four blurbs and the "translated from the Serbo-Croation by Joseph Hitrec" line are now in black instead of red. These are all very minor changes, but someone at Knopf was being a perfectionist.