2 716 résultats
192016446London:: William Rider & Son c1920-1940. 70 x 118 mm. 2.75 x 4.75 inches. Single card. Original Rider Waite Tarot deck card. The Chariot. Card VII. from the Major Arcana. From the original early editions of William Rider & Sons printing of A.E. Waites tarot deck. Excellent condition. Full color. Brown crackle backed design. A rare and beautiful card from the most famous tarot deck ever printed. At time of description we locate no other comparable singles for sale. We find only one complete deck of Pam C printing for sale at five thousand dollars. 70 x 118 mm. 2.75 x 4.75 inches. The Rider-Waite tarot is likely the most popular and famous tarot card reading deck ever printed. It was first printed and published by William Rider & Son in 1909 printed 1910 after the instruction of well known occultist and academic mystic A. E. Arthur Edward Waite. It was illustrated by Pamela Colman Smith. It is estimated that over 100 million copies of the Rider-Waite deck have circulated over the last century. The symbols and imagery were influenced by the 19th-century magician and occultist Eliphas Levi as well as teachings of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. The first printing was extremely limited. The Pam A deck was published from 1910-1920. Pam C was published 1920-1928. Pam B published 1931-1940. The deck was not printed again until much later in the 1970s. The difference between the early editions are distinct by outline artwork colors and lettering. The letters A B. C. and D were given at random and do not always refer to the order of publication. The easiest way to clarify which edition is by the ÒThe SunÓ card in each deck it is a bit more distinct in each edition. However because our deck was incomplete in the first place and missing ÒThe SunÓ card we could only match by color and design. Our strong belief backed by experience and reference is that our cards for sale are from the PAM C 1920-2928 or PAM B 1931-1940 decks. The colors designs and brown crackled backs support this. Please see The World of Playing Cards Rider Waite Tarot Early Editions for reference. William Rider & Son, unknown
192016449London:: William Rider & Son c1920-1940. 70 x 118 mm. 2.75 x 4.75 inches. Single card. Original Rider Waite Tarot deck card. Ace of Pentacles. from the Minor Arcana. From the original early editions of William Rider & Sons printing of A.E. Waites tarot deck. Excellent condition. Full color. Brown crackle backed design. A rare and beautiful card from the most famous tarot deck ever printed. At time of description we locate no other comparable singles for sale. We find only one complete deck of Pam C printing for sale at five thousand dollars. 70 x 118 mm. 2.75 x 4.75 inches. The Rider-Waite tarot is likely the most popular and famous tarot card reading deck ever printed. It was first printed and published by William Rider & Son in 1909 printed 1910 after the instruction of well known occultist and academic mystic A. E. Arthur Edward Waite. It was illustrated by Pamela Colman Smith. It is estimated that over 100 million copies of the Rider-Waite deck have circulated over the last century. The symbols and imagery were influenced by the 19th-century magician and occultist Eliphas Levi as well as teachings of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. The first printing was extremely limited. The Pam A deck was published from 1910-1920. Pam C was published 1920-1928. Pam B published 1931-1940. The deck was not printed again until much later in the 1970s. The difference between the early editions are distinct by outline artwork colors and lettering. The letters A B. C. and D were given at random and do not always refer to the order of publication. The easiest way to clarify which edition is by the ÒThe SunÓ card in each deck it is a bit more distinct in each edition. However because our deck was incomplete in the first place and missing ÒThe SunÓ card we could only match by color and design. Our strong belief backed by experience and reference is that our cards for sale are from the PAM C 1920-2928 or PAM B 1931-1940 decks. The colors designs and brown crackled backs support this. Please see The World of Playing Cards Rider Waite Tarot Early Editions for reference. William Rider & Son, unknown
192016447London:: William Rider & Son c1920-1940. 70 x 118 mm. 2.75 x 4.75 inches. Single card. Original Rider Waite Tarot deck card. The Emperor. Card IV. from the Major Arcana. From the original early editions of William Rider & Sons printing of A.E. Waites tarot deck. Excellent condition. Full color. Brown crackle backed design. A rare and beautiful card from the most famous tarot deck ever printed. At time of description we locate no other comparable singles for sale. We find only one complete deck of Pam C printing for sale at five thousand dollars. 70 x 118 mm. 2.75 x 4.75 inches. The Rider-Waite tarot is likely the most popular and famous tarot card reading deck ever printed. It was first printed and published by William Rider & Son in 1909 printed 1910 after the instruction of well known occultist and academic mystic A. E. Arthur Edward Waite. It was illustrated by Pamela Colman Smith. It is estimated that over 100 million copies of the Rider-Waite deck have circulated over the last century. The symbols and imagery were influenced by the 19th-century magician and occultist Eliphas Levi as well as teachings of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. The first printing was extremely limited. The Pam A deck was published from 1910-1920. Pam C was published 1920-1928. Pam B published 1931-1940. The deck was not printed again until much later in the 1970s. The difference between the early editions are distinct by outline artwork colors and lettering. The letters A B. C. and D were given at random and do not always refer to the order of publication. The easiest way to clarify which edition is by the ÒThe SunÓ card in each deck it is a bit more distinct in each edition. However because our deck was incomplete in the first place and missing ÒThe SunÓ card we could only match by color and design. Our strong belief backed by experience and reference is that our cards for sale are from the PAM C 1920-2928 or PAM B 1931-1940 decks. The colors designs and brown crackled backs support this. Please see The World of Playing Cards Rider Waite Tarot Early Editions for reference. William Rider & Son, unknown
192016451London:: William Rider & Son c1920-1940. 70 x 118 mm. 2.75 x 4.75 inches. Single card. Original Rider Waite Tarot deck card. King of Pentacles. from the Minor Arcana. From the original early editions of William Rider & Sons printing of A.E. Waites tarot deck. Excellent condition. Full color. Brown crackle backed design. A rare and beautiful card from the most famous tarot deck ever printed. At time of description we locate no other comparable singles for sale. We find only one complete deck of Pam C printing for sale at five thousand dollars. 70 x 118 mm. 2.75 x 4.75 inches. The Rider-Waite tarot is likely the most popular and famous tarot card reading deck ever printed. It was first printed and published by William Rider & Son in 1909 printed 1910 after the instruction of well known occultist and academic mystic A. E. Arthur Edward Waite. It was illustrated by Pamela Colman Smith. It is estimated that over 100 million copies of the Rider-Waite deck have circulated over the last century. The symbols and imagery were influenced by the 19th-century magician and occultist Eliphas Levi as well as teachings of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. The first printing was extremely limited. The Pam A deck was published from 1910-1920. Pam C was published 1920-1928. Pam B published 1931-1940. The deck was not printed again until much later in the 1970s. The difference between the early editions are distinct by outline artwork colors and lettering. The letters A B. C. and D were given at random and do not always refer to the order of publication. The easiest way to clarify which edition is by the ÒThe SunÓ card in each deck it is a bit more distinct in each edition. However because our deck was incomplete in the first place and missing ÒThe SunÓ card we could only match by color and design. Our strong belief backed by experience and reference is that our cards for sale are from the PAM C 1920-2928 or PAM B 1931-1940 decks. The colors designs and brown crackled backs support this. Please see The World of Playing Cards Rider Waite Tarot Early Editions for reference. William Rider & Son, unknown
192016462London:: William Rider & Son c1920-1940. 70 x 118 mm. 2.75 x 4.75 inches. Single card. Original Rider Waite Tarot deck card. Queen of Swords. from the Minor Arcana. From the original early editions of William Rider & Sons printing of A.E. Waites tarot deck. Excellent condition. Full color. Brown crackle backed design. A rare and beautiful card from the most famous tarot deck ever printed. At time of description we locate no other comparable singles for sale. We find only one complete deck of Pam C printing for sale at five thousand dollars. 70 x 118 mm. 2.75 x 4.75 inches. The Rider-Waite tarot is likely the most popular and famous tarot card reading deck ever printed. It was first printed and published by William Rider & Son in 1909 printed 1910 after the instruction of well known occultist and academic mystic A. E. Arthur Edward Waite. It was illustrated by Pamela Colman Smith. It is estimated that over 100 million copies of the Rider-Waite deck have circulated over the last century. The symbols and imagery were influenced by the 19th-century magician and occultist Eliphas Levi as well as teachings of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. The first printing was extremely limited. The Pam A deck was published from 1910-1920. Pam C was published 1920-1928. Pam B published 1931-1940. The deck was not printed again until much later in the 1970s. The difference between the early editions are distinct by outline artwork colors and lettering. The letters A B. C. and D were given at random and do not always refer to the order of publication. The easiest way to clarify which edition is by the ÒThe SunÓ card in each deck it is a bit more distinct in each edition. However because our deck was incomplete in the first place and missing ÒThe SunÓ card we could only match by color and design. Our strong belief backed by experience and reference is that our cards for sale are from the PAM C 1920-2928 or PAM B 1931-1940 decks. The colors designs and brown crackled backs support this. Please see The World of Playing Cards Rider Waite Tarot Early Editions for reference. William Rider & Son, unknown
2001054927Pomegranate Communications 2001. Book. Very Good. Tarot Deck. Boxed set includes 64 cards 104-page paperback book and the Gaiastar Map. Moderate wear to outer box otherwise Near Fine. Pomegranate Communications paperback
2007174423New York: Aperture 2007. First edition and first printing. Hardcover. 163 pages. Features essays by Jock Reynolds and Taro Nettleton and includes an interview of Bey by Carrie Mae Weems. A collection of intimate color portraits. A very fine copy in photo illustrated boards. No dust jacket as issued. An as new copy and still in the publisher's shrinkwrap that has been slit open to verify edition. Aperture unknown
2002051438Hay House 2002. Book. Near Fine. Tarot Deck. Boxed set includes a 44-card deck and 111-page instruction booklet. Hay House unknown
200680937New York: HarperCollinsPublishers 2006. First Edition Stated First Printing Stated. Hardcover. Very good/Very good. Dennis Wong Map and Wei Leng Tay Photographer. xx 442 2 pages. Dramatis Personae. Notes on Sources and Further Reading. Index. Karl Taro Greenfeld born 1964 in Kobe Japan is a journalist novelist and television writer known primarily for his articles on life in modern Asia and both his fiction and non-fiction in The Paris Review. Born in Kobe Japan to a Japanese mother and an American father the writers Fumiko Kometani and Josh Greenfeld Greenfeld grew up in Los Angeles and went to college in New York City graduating from Sarah Lawrence in 1987. He served as an Assistant Language Teacher on the JET Programme in Japan from 1988-89. A regular contributor to publications such as GQ The Atlantic and Vogue Greenfeld was the managing editor of Tokyo Journal before becoming the editor of Time Asia from 2002-2004 and editor-at-large at Sports Illustrated from 2004-2007. He was the Tokyo correspondent for The Nation. He is the author of three books about Asia: Speed Tribes: Days and Nights with Japan's Next Generation and Standard Deviations: Growing Up and Coming Down in the New Asia and an account of the breakout of the SARS virus China Syndrome: The True Story of the 21st Century's First Great Epidemic. His novel Triburbia is about a group of families living in the Tribeca neighborhood of Manhattan. His novel The Subprimes about a woman who may or may not be the messiah and the band of impoverished homeless Americans she comes to lead. He is a Henry Crown Fellow of the Aspen Institute and a Knight-Bagehott Fellow of Columbia University. Derived from a Kirkus review: Former Time Asia editor Greenfeld probes the SARS outbreak and the Chinese government's efforts to deny its existence. "Yoga instructors in Santa Monica and investment bankers in New York have no idea of the role that a few scientists doctors and public health officials in Hong Kong play in keeping them hale and hearty" writes Greenfeld. A horseracing track in Hong Kong marked the debut there of what became known as SARS-Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome-and its management feared that this new disease would result in the deaths of at least a thousand thoroughbreds and the loss of millions of dollars. That management and the doctors and epidemiologists called to the case were right to worry that the disease might jump across species. Indeed elsewhere in China people were becoming sick soon dying in droves. The race to discover the cause of SARS which first appeared in the fall of 2002 makes a fascinating story and Greenfeld recounts it vividly and coherently; yet as he points out much of that story of scientific detection and international teamwork remains little known simply because other world events-chiefly the U.S. invasion of Iraq-kept the story off the front page. The Chinese government refused to acknowledge the problem and that Chinese doctors discouraged Western disease specialists from offering aid; by the sixth month of the outbreak which lasted slightly more than a year. Hundreds died by the time a cause and remedy were found. A taut scientific thriller well told. Kirkus ended its review by writing "Suffice it to say that conditions are ripe for a replay of the disease; keep an eye out for a grim sequel." Few would challenge the assertion that COVID-19 is that grim sequel. HarperCollinsPublishers hardcover
2018049485Llewellyn Publications 2018. Book. As New. Tarot Deck. As new still in shrinkwrap. Llewellyn Publications unknown
2013041854Devera Publishing 2013. Book. Fine. Tarot Deck. 2nd Edition. Boxed set of cards with booklet in clean crisp condition. Devera Publishing unknown
2002022783Saint Paul Minnesota U.S.A.: Llewellyn Worldwide Ltd 2002. Book. Good. Soft cover. Book only no cards! Reading curl to cover. 269pp. Llewellyn Worldwide Ltd Paperback
2022060862Flora Rudolph 2022. Book. Near Fine. Tarot Deck. Boxed deck of oracle cards with instruction cards. Flora Rudolph unknown
146455Iwasaki Shoten. First Edition. Paperback. Like New/Like New. First Edition Later Printing. Not price-clipped ¥1000E price intact. Published by Iwasaki Shoten 1987. Octavo. Pictorial wraps in dust jacket. Book is like new; clean with no writing or names. Sharp corners and spine straight. Binding tight and pages crisp. Dust jacket is like new. 211 pages. ISBN: 9784265800407. 100% positive feedback. 30 day money back guarantee. NEXT DAY SHIPPING! Excellent customer service. Please email with any questions or if you would like a photo. All books packed carefully and ship with free delivery confirmation/tracking. All books come with free bookmarks. Ships from Southampton New York. Iwasaki Shoten paperback
1985PC13Tokyo Japan: Organizing Committee for the Mori Yoshitoshi Exhibition 1985. 152 pages. Catalogue that accompanied the 1985 exhibitions in Tokyo and Leiden of the kappazuri prints of Mori Yoshitoshi 1898-1992. Profusely illustrated in color. The book is in almost as-new condition. First Edition. Paperback. Fine-. Illus. by Mori Yoshitoshi. 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall. Book. Organizing Committee for the Mori Yoshitoshi Exhibition Paperback
2723482243.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
ria9798324725303_inpPaperback. New. New Book; Fast Shipping from UK; Not signed; Not First Edition; N/A paperback
44046049like new. unknown
4061324888.Gtankobon_hardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
2001__4623033236unknown 2001. Tankobon Hardcover. New. Japanese language. 8.27x5.83x0.79 inches. unknown hardcover
0944483453.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
SONG8417552618BLACKIE BOOKS 2019-09-04. hardcover. Used: Good. 0.00x0.00x0.00. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. BLACKIE BOOKS hardcover
0714871265.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
20131-0062187929HarperCollins 2013. Hardcover. New. 320 pages. 9.00x6.00x1.05 inches. HarperCollins hardcover
19941-0060170395HarperCollins 1994. Hardcover. New. 10.00x6.75x1.25 inches. HarperCollins hardcover