555 résultats
hardback (no D/J), GOOD CONDITION with photographs, index, pages browned. some foxing.
199 pages, illustrated, index, introduction by Tim Rice. eng
VG/good . dj has some los to edges with rubbing and creased edges. clean tidy copy internally. the odd small tarnish marks.internally, and to edges of textblock owner stamp to ffep
VG/VG. not price-clipped. no inscriptions. internally a lovely clean copy. This is a reprint of the 1935 edition.. Illustrated. Size approx 6.5 x 9.75". 283 pages
VG/VG. not price-clipped. no inscriptions. internally a lovely clean copy. This is a reprint of the 1935 edition.. Illustrated. Size approx 6.5 x 9.75". 283 pages dj is a tad sunned to spine.
16 pages, illustrated, preview of the 1999 English cricket season issued with The Times on Tuesday April 13th, 1999. eng
A small number of classified section listings highlighted with pale colour. No other marks or inscriptions to contents. No creasing to covers. A very clean very tight copy and no bumping to corners. 131pp. This issue includes EF Benson and 'Mapp and Lucia', Jean Rhys, Kenneth Grahame and 'Wind in the Willows', cricket magazines, Hank Janson pulp fiction, F Scott Fitzgerald and Dylan Thomas.
No marks or inscriptions to contents. Tiny crease to lower corner of front cover. A very clean very tight copy with bright boards, faint ink marks to rear, rusty staples and no bumping to corners. 32pp. Scarborough Cricket Club weekly programme and scorecard.
No marks or inscriptions. No creasing to covers or to spine. A very clean very tight copy with bright unmarked boards, traces of storage, price-clipped first page and no bumping to corners. 95pp. Cricket highlights from the Yorkshire and England batsman.
No marks or inscriptions. Some creasing to covers. A very clean very tight copy with bright unmarked boards and no bumping to corners. 95pp. A concise study of cricket in all its forms.
114 pages. Features: Tribute to Tunnicliffe; Numbers 1 to 32 London (great photos of address numbers); The Appeal of Blue Peter; Four Paws for Freedom; London's Keystone Personalities; Charles Ledger - Adventurer Extraordinary; Belloc in Love; Mechanical Music in the West Country; Back to the Peacock Days of Cricket; History in Wax; A Penchant for Pin Cushions; The Man of the Mask; The Noble Chianti; Marianne North - the travels of a happy artist; Winter in Old Russia; Childhood in the 19th Century; and more. Average wear. Sticker removal mark in upper corner of front cover. A sound copy of this great issue. Book
Single sheet, 8vo., a near fine copy. Signed simply 'Tedder' in the writer's usual manner, the letter is written to Geoffrey Moore, founder of the Buccaneers Cricket Club, and demonstrates the airman's keen and continuing interest in the sport. Tedder was President of Surrey County Cricket Club from 1953 to 1958. The letter regretfully declines Moore's invitation to attend the Buccaneer's annual dinner (held at Lords): 'I've already got a date I can't budge!'. Marshal of the RAF Arthur William Tedder, 1st Baron Tedder (1890-1967) was one of Britain's most distinguished air commanders. Educated at Whitgift School and Magdalene College, Cambridge, he transferred from the Dorsetshire Regiment to the Royal Flying Corps in 1916, serving in France from 1915- to 1917 and in Egypt from 1918 to 1919. He was then commissioned in to the (new) Royal Air Force where was appointed Director of Training from 1934 to 1936, after which he became Commander RAF Far Eastern Forces. During WWII he was head of RAF Middle East Command, controlling Allied air operations in the Mediterranean and North Africa, including the evacuation of Crete and the defeat of Rommel; his air power was a vital component of Montgomery's victory at El Alamein. Having been promoted to Air Marshal, Tedder then took part in the early planning for D-Day, and was subsequently appointed Deputy Supreme Commander Allied Forces Europe (the most senior such British position) immediately beneath General Eisenhower, on whose behalf he signed at the German Surrender in 1945. In 1947 he delivered the Lees Knowles lecture, afterwards published as 'Air Power in War'. Following his retirement he served as Chancellor of Cambridge University and Vice-Chairman of the Board of Governors of the BBC. Founded in 1930, The Buccaneers is one of the oldest and most famous 'wandering' clubs in English cricket (a 'wandering' club has no fixed home ground but plays consistently as an 'away' team relying on the hospitality of the 'home' clubs against which it competes). The Club's history has been written twice, by Clifford Bax in 1956 and more recently by Howard Spencer. ORIGINAL DOCUMENTS SIGNED BY TEDDER ARE EXTREMELY SCARCE.
Single sheet, 8vo., a near fine copy. Signed simply 'Tedder' in the writer's usual manner, the letter is written to Geoffrey Moore, founder of the Buccaneers Cricket Club, and demonstrates the airman's keen and continuing interest in the sport. Tedder was President of Surrey County Cricket Club from 1953 to 1958. The letter regretfully declines Moore's invitation to attend the Buccaneer's annual dinner (held at Lords). Marshal of the RAF Arthur William Tedder, 1st Baron Tedder (1890-1967) was one of Britain's most distinguished air commanders. Educated at Whitgift School and Magdalene College, Cambridge, he transferred from the Dorsetshire Regiment to the Royal Flying Corps in 1916, serving in France from 1915- to 1917 and in Egypt from 1918 to 1919. He was then commissioned in to the (new) Royal Air Force where was appointed Director of Training from 1934 to 1936, after which he became Commander RAF Far Eastern Forces. During WWII he was head of RAF Middle East Command, controlling Allied air operations in the Mediterranean and North Africa, including the evacuation of Crete and the defeat of Rommel; his air power was a vital component of Montgomery's victory at El Alamein. Having been promoted to Air Marshal, Tedder then took part in the early planning for D-Day, and was subsequently appointed Deputy Supreme Commander Allied Forces Europe (the most senior such British position) immediately beneath General Eisenhower, on whose behalf he signed at the German Surrender in 1945. In 1947 he delivered the Lees Knowles lecture, afterwards published as 'Air Power in War'. Following his retirement he served as Chancellor of Cambridge University and Vice-Chairman of the Board of Governors of the BBC. Founded in 1930, The Buccaneers is one of the oldest and most famous 'wandering' clubs in English cricket (a 'wandering' club has no fixed home ground but plays consistently as an 'away' team relying on the hospitality of the 'home' clubs against which it competes). The Club's history has been written twice, by Clifford Bax in 1956 and more recently by Howard Spencer. ORIGINAL DOCUMENTS SIGNED BY TEDDER ARE EXTREMELY SCARCE.
VG/VG hardback. dj has some creasing to edges. clean tidy copy internally. the odd small tarnish marks.
32 pages. Features: Children and Dogs Amuse Each Other; Britain Without Sign-posts; Cover photo of Mrs. Michael Menzies (the former Kay Stammers) playing tennis; Some Candidates for the New Derby - Photos of 11 fine horses; Wilfred Taylor - Broadcasting the Derby; Sport Lives On; Rapier Sums Up the New Derby; Winchester Avoid Defeat by the M.C.C. (cricket news); Derbys and Oaks of the Last War - photos of winning horses from 1915-1918; Now is the time to know something about a rifle - Sir Pelham Warner changes his bat for a gun - brief article with 13 photos; Bombay Hunt's Gymkhana (near Bombay) - 13 photos; How They Race at Beersheeba - six photos of camel racing in Palestine; Stowe Too Strong for Bedford - 14 cricket photos with brief captions; Roehampton Sunday - six photos of the Red Cross Lawn Tennis Tournament, including photos of Murray Deloford, Mrs. Frank Strawson, Miss G.M. Harvey, and Rosemary Thomas; Photos of theatre stars Evelyn Laye and Robert Helpmann (in drag); Movie news and photos; Centuries Plentiful in Public Schools Cricket; Sergeant Braddock rejoins marines at age 52; Openings along coverfold, otherwise clean and unmarked with moderate wear. A worthy example of this vintage wartime issue Book
1st edition. Hardback in dustjacket. VG/VG (price clipped). 14661. eng
1st edition. VG in pictorial boards. Foreword by Allan Border. 12601. eng
1st edition. Hardback in a protected dust jacket. VG/VG. Pages yellowing. Jacket illustration by Graham Thompson. ISBN 0297790617. 19492. eng
VG/VG . clean tidy copy internally.
No marks or inscriptions. A very clean very tight copy with unmarked black cloth boards and no bumping to corners. Dust jacket not price clipped or torn with minor trace of label removal to front and slight crease to upper rear edge. 240pp. Mini-biographies of over eighty cricket stars from the memory of EW Swanton who has been writing cricketing obituaries for the Daily Telegraph and The Cricketer for more than fifty years. Illustrated.
318 pages, illustrated, index, edge wear to yellowed dust jacket eng
318 pages, illustrated, index, page edges tannd, fading to covers, edge wear and small tears to dust jacket. eng
318 pages, illustrated, index, price clipped and yellowed dust jacket eng
2nd impression, 318 pages, illustrated, index, price clipped dust jacket with slight loss around the spine area, from the library of Gerald Brodribb with his bookplate loosely inserted. eng
1165 pages, illustrated, statistics, light foxing to page edges, previous owner name and bookplate on inside front cover. eng