8 913 résultats
200807552Bruxelles, Dargaud, 1989 ; in-4, 62 pp., cartonnage de l'éditeur. Eo coin plier.
Very Good Russian Original sheet music. Folio. (33 x 26 cm). In Russian and German. 17 p. Musical scores with fine illustrated cover. Tape on spine. Water stains on pages. Otherwise a good copy. [SHEET MUSIC] Geisha [= Die Geisha]. Muz. Sidney Djonsa (Sidney Jones). (Selection). The Geisha, a story of a tea house is an Edwardian musical comedy in two acts. The score was composed by Sidney Jones to a libretto by Owen Hall, with lyrics by Harry Greenbank. Additional songs were written by Lionel Monckton and James Philp. The Geisha opened in 1896 at Daly's Theatre in London's West End, produced by George Edwardes. The original production had the second longest run of any musical up to that time. The cast starred Marie Tempest and C. Hayden Coffin, with dancer Letty Lind and comic Huntley Wright. The show was an immediate success abroad, with an 1896 production in New York and numerous tours and productions in Europe and beyond. It continued to be popular until World War II and even beyond to some degree. The most famous song from the show is "The Amorous Goldfish". Stmped by A. Comendinger who was a legendary musical publisher in Constantinople in 19th and 20th century. This is a rare Russian Edition. This "selected" edition is not in OCLC.
18375083Boston; Philadelphia: Wells and Lilly; P. H. Nicklin and T. Johnson Law Booksellers 1837. Two quarto volumes 4 827-1532pp and 7 2104-2632pp. Tan buckram red and black morocco labels on spine ruled and lettered in gilt. Damp staining to lower page edges of the first third or so of each more pronounced in the earlier volume. Pages tanned and somewhat brittle in volume 4 foxing throughout in volume 2 unused card pockets in front of both. Several ownership markings including signatures from John Neely Bryan in each. <p><br /> Historic set of two statute books from the library of the founder of Dallas John Neely Bryan 1810-1877. Bryan left his home state of Tennessee at an early age with law degree in hand first to Arkansas and in 1839-1841 surveying and settling in the area that would later become Dallas. <br /> <br /> The natural features of the landscape the Trinity River being shallow and crossable at the site perhaps drew Bryan to the area but were also a source for disaster shortly after his settling. Stephen R. Butler in his biography John Neely Bryan: The Father of Dallas pg. 46: <br /> "In 1842. A Trinity River flood damaged the so-called 'Gilbert-Bryan cabin.' John Neely Bryan Jr. described this event: 'Shortly after this first cabin was completed my father went back to Colbert's Ferry for a supply of corn. he found that a rise of the river had occurred during his absence. damaging his books and destroying many of his papers. he had brought with him numerous valuable books and papers pertaining to his profession.'" <br /> <br /> </p> <br /> <p>These volumes were later rebound and owned by Maurice Eugene Locke who established a practice in the city in 1891 and built one of the great law libraries of the West. The stamp of a "John B. Seymour" is also present in each perhaps owning the books between Bryan and Locke. We find no record of John Neely Bryan's signature at auction. This wonderful piece of Dallas history also presents a rare case where water damage adds to rather than detracts from the appeal. </p> . Wells and Lilly; P. H. Nicklin and T. Johnson, Law Booksellers unknown
194184633New York: Harcourt Brace & World Inc 1941. Octavo 20.5cm; light green cloth-covered boards with titling and decorations stamped in black on spine and front cover; dustjacket; 309pp; black and white illustrations throughout. Inscribed by author on half-title page: "This is Karl Burkhardt's book inscribed with the good wishes of his friend the author - Stephen W. Meader". Light sunning and rubbing to board edges with light crinkled effect to lower margin of text; Good. Dustwrapper price-clipped tanned with shelf-soil light residue to rear flap and tiny chips and tears to extremities; Good. Meader's illustrated chapter book intended for young readers focuses on two friends that open a blueberry farm in the Pocono Mountains of Pennsylvania to maintain small business success in their hometown as commercial farms raise prices. 84633. Harcourt, Brace & World, Inc unknown
84635Chicago: The Reilly & Lee Co. Reprint ca. 1927-1930. Octavo 23.5cm; green cloth-covered boards with titling and decorations stamped in black on spine and illustrated metallic-gold front cover label; pictorial endpapers; 256pp; 16 full-page in-color plates with black and white illustrations throughout. Previous owner's name and initials inked to front pastedown and endpaper with inked name to ownership page. Modest shelf-wear and soil rubbing to board edges light peeling to cover label tiny chips and tears to margins throughout with crinkled effect to pp.65-68 off-setting to pages surrounding full-color illustrations two 2.5" tears to margins of p.165 illustration page and 7" tear to rear endpaper; Good.<br /> <br /> "The story is most notable for the return of the Wizard whose real name we learn is Oscar Zoroaster Phadrig Isaac Norman Henkle Emmannuel Ambrose Diggs to the Land of Oz. Though still a "humbug" circus Wizard Baum greatly expands upon his character and at the story's conclusion he is accepted as an honored member of Princess Ozma's court. For the 16 full-page plates Neill prepared magnificent color paintings rather than black and white drawings to be colored later by the printer as had been the practice for Baum's previous Oz books" see Bienvenue & Schmidt The Book Collector's Guide to L. Frank Baum p.33. BIENVENUE & SCHMIDT 36. 84635. The Reilly & Lee Co unknown
198088277London: Simon and Schuster UK LTD 1980. Later Edition First Impression. Quarto 28cm; white paper-covered boards with titling stamped in red and black on spine and titling and decorations stamped in red and black on front cover; pictorial endpapers; dustjacket; 65pp; black-and-white and pink illustrations throughout. Light shelf-wear with upper corners gently nudged and erased markings to front endpaper; Very Good. Dustwrapper unclipped priced £12.99 has modest shelf-wear and trace soil; Very Good. <br /> <br /> First published in 1955 this the first of Thompson's Eloise series and includes Knight's drawings. It received a television play 1956 and film adaptation 2003. 88277. Simon and Schuster, UK LTD unknown
195885478Spain: Editorial Molino 1958. No edition remarks. Text in Spanish. Octavo 17.5cm; pictorial paper-covered boards; pictorial endpapers; 16pp; illus; cardboard doll illustration to rear pastedown. Libro Muñeco. Spanish bookshop stamps to front pastedown and front endpaper. Modest shelf-wear with rubbing to board edges 1" tear to lower edge of title page and slight crease with small tape mend to cardboard neck of character; Very Good. Cardboard character attached to rear of book enjoys different dresses as the story develops. 85478. Editorial Molino unknown
84637Chicago: The Reilly & Lee Co. Reprint ca. 1934 to late 1950s. Octavo 23.5cm; orange cloth-covered boards with titling and decorations stamped in black on spine semi-script publisher's imprint and illustrated front cover label; pictorial endpapers; 295pp; black and white illustrations throughout. Spine-tanned with rubbing to board edges light crinkle effect to spine tanning to edges of textblock and shelf-soil to covers and text; Good.<br /> <br /> Cover label on this printing is the reissue created in 1929 and often called the "Sexy Ozma" cover. Despite present hardships for Baum he continued to discontinue his Oz series as he moved to L.A. with Maud for a lower cost of living. "In this 'final' chapter of the Oz saga Baum at last resolved the issue that had so long puzzled his child readers: what would it take for Dorothy to accept Ozma's offer to live forever in Emerald City instead of on the bleak Kansas prairie The answer proved to be the impending foreclosure of Uncle Henry's farm. When Dorothy's guardians old and in ill heath explain to the child that they all would have to seek new work in the big outside world in order to survive the girl gives Ozma the prearranged signal to transport her to Oz taking her uncle and aunt with her" see Bienvenue & Schmidt The Book Collector's Guide to L. Frank Baum p.46. <br /> <br /> Artist's name misprinted on cover label as was common: "From the first book he illustrated to the last one published during his lifetime Lucky Bucky in Oz 1942 Neill often signed his drawings 'Jno' sometimes followed by a period rather than John with 15 of Thompson's 19 official Oz titles carrying that attribution on the cover" see Bienvenue & Schmidt The Book Collector's Guide to L. Frank Baum p.125. BIENVENUE & SCHMIDT 49. 84637. The Reilly & Lee Co unknown
84642Chicago: The Reilly & Lee Co. Reprint ca. 1933 to late 1950s. Octavo 23.5cm; red cloth-covered boards with titling and decorations stamped in black on spine with semi-script publisher's imprint and illustrated front cover label; pictorial endpapers; 261pp; black and white illustrations throughout. Previous owner's name erased from ownership page. Spine-faded with shelf-wear and rubbing to board edges; Good.<br /> <br /> "Publication of The Hungry Tiger of Oz in 1926 brought a flurry of promotional gimmicks including a revival of The Ozmapolitan newspaper that had originally been used by Reilly & Britton to promote The Marvelous Land of Oz in 1904. The paper urged children to join the Ozmite Club and receive 'a special Ozmite pin to wear a newspaper of their own Oz secrets parties games picnics etc.'" see Bienvenue & Schmidt The Book Collector's Guide to L. Frank Baum p.96.<br /> <br /> Artist's name misprinted on cover label as was common: "From the first book he illustrated to the last one published during his lifetime Lucky Bucky in Oz 1942 Neill often signed his drawings 'Jno' sometimes followed by a period rather than John with 15 of Thompson's 19 official Oz titles carrying that attribution on the cover" see Bienvenue & Schmidt The Book Collector's Guide to L. Frank Baum p.125. The Reilly & Lee Co unknown
198482298Boston: David R. Godine 1984. First Edition. First Printing. Small quarto 23.5cm; light blue paper-covered boards with titling stamped in gilt on spine and decorations embossed in black on front cover; pictorial dustjacket; 67-333pp.; frontispiece; black and white woodcut illustrations throughout. Signed in full by Hall and Azarian on title page. A fresh Fine copy. Dustjacket unclipped priced $11.95 withlight wear to exremities else Fine. <br /> <br /> The Robert Frost Medal winning poet's fifth children's book centered on a man in New England. Azarian is an award-winning picture book artist for her woodcuts. 82298. David R. Godine unknown
190484477Philadelphia: The John C. Winston Co ca. 1904. Issued at a later date by Winston but still carrying the Porter & Coates 1883 copyright date; has the same number but lesser quality engravings" see Marshall The Night Before Christmas 151. Octavo 20cm; red cloth binding with pictorial paper-covered boards; 48pp; black and white illustrations throughout. Gift tag with note on front pastedown and light off-setting to front endpaper with inked gift inscription 1908 to front flyleaf. Modest shelf-wear and soil rubbing to board edges with first gathering of leaves mostly detached with only a few threads intact light interior wear and 1.5" tear to lower margin of "So up to the housetop" illustration page; Good. <br /> <br /> "The date of circa 1904 for the appearance of this edition is verifiable as the date the John C. Winston Co. purchased the plates and stock from Henry T. Coates & Co. that in 1895 had taken over the Porter & Coates publishing house" see Marshall The Night Before Christmas 151. This text includes illustrations drawn and engraved by William T. Smedley Frederic B. Schell Alfred Fredericks and Henry R. Poore under the supervision of James W. Lauderbach. Text first published as "Account of a Visit from St. Nicholas" 1823 and later published as "The Night Before Christmas" and "'Twas the Night Before Christmas". MARSHALL 151. 84477. The John C. Winston Co unknown
84639Chicago: The Reilly & Lee Co. Reprint ca. late 1940s to late 1950s. Octavo 23.5cm; light brown cloth-covered boards with titling stamped in black on spine and illustrated front cover label; pictorial endpapers; 15-3408pp; black and white illustrations throughout. Spine vignette which varies between a TikTok and Woozy among earlier printings not present on this reprint. Previous owner's poetic gift inscription inked to ownership page with previous owner's name inked to front endpaper. Spine ends lightly nudged with rubbing to board edges tanning to edges of textblock and occasional marginal folds and creases to text; Good. <br /> <br /> Baum acceded to publisher and public request to return to Oz as his financial stability continued to decline and first published The Patchwork Girl of Oz 1913. "Proving once again that Oz is a modern fairyland Baum used wireless radio to reestablish communication through the Barrier of Invisibility surrounding Oz and reclaim his position as Royal Historian. The return to Oz was both a critical and popular success. Baum's invention of Scraps the Patchwork Girl embodies the vitality and absurdity of Oz like no other grotesques since the original debut of the Scarecrow the Tin Woodman and the Cowardly Lion" see Bienvenue & Schmidt The Book Collector's Guide to L. Frank Baum p.50. It received a silent film adaptation and a wooden Woozy toy but both were not nearly as successful as the story itself. This text concludes with pages of synopses on other books in the Oz saga. BIENVENUE & SCHMIDT 54. 84639. The Reilly & Lee Co unknown
85235London and New York: Frederick Warne and Co n.d. Octavo 25.5cm; brown cloth spine over pictorial paper-covered boards with titling stamped in black on spine; 48pp; colorful illustrations to frontispiece and throughout text. Ex-library copy with previous bookplate residue to pastedowns stamp to title page and 1950 date stamped to copyright page. Modest shelf-wear with black ink to front cover loss of paper to corners and board edges soil to covers and interior crack to gutter pp.16-17 and tiny marginal chip to p.29/30; Good. Based on German folklore from the Middle Ages Browning's illustrated poem tells the story of children being lured away from their town and it was adapted into a stop-motion animated film 1981. 85235. Frederick Warne and Co unknown
194084588Chicago: Reilly & Lee 1940. First Edition. First Printing released in various colors of cloth bound in 16-page gatherings. Octavo 23.5cm; green cloth-covered boards with titling and decorations stamped in black on spine and pictorial label on front cover; pictorial endpapers; 318pp; black and white illustrations throughout. Shelf-soil with foxing slight spine lean and wear to hinges occasional marginal creases to text and 7" tear to p.309/310; Good. Lacking dustjacket. <br /> <br /> "The tradition of a new Oz book for the Christmas season had been unbroken since Baum resumed the series in 1913 and Neill wrote and illustrated his first Oz book under intense pressure to meet the deadline for publication in 1940. Published as The Wonder City of Oz the book was inexplicably and heavily rewritten by Reilly & Lee with often incongruous and baffling results particularly the inclusion of an 'Ozlection' between Ozma and Jenny Jump for rule over Oz. As Neill had already completed his illustrations when the original manuscript was submitted many of the drawings were rearranged and even modified in an attempt to reflect the changes in the story" see Bienvenue & Schmidt The Book Collector's Guide to L. Frank Baum pp.125-126. BIENVENUE & SCHMIDT 126. 84588. Reilly & Lee unknown
195984634New York: Harcourt Brace and Company 1959. First Edition. Octavo 21cm; light peach cloth-covered boards with titling stamped in black on spine; dustjacket; 192pp; black and white illustrations throughout. Inscribed on half-title page: "For Karl Burkhardt - who loves Ocracoke as I do - this book is inscribed by the author Stephen W. Meader". Trace soil to covers and edges of textblock with light creases to text margins; Good. Dustwrapper price-clipped tanned with shelf-soil 0.5" tear to upper front spine fold and tiny tears chips and rubbing to extremities; Very Good. Meader's illustrated chapter book intended for young readers tells the story of a boy who is unhappy with his move from a busy city to Ocracoke North Carolina until he begins hunting fishing fighting large storms and meeting wild ponies. 84634. Harcourt, Brace and Company unknown
183310428Boston: Hilliard Gray and Company 1833. Half Leather. near Very Good binding. Octavo. xliii 1 736 pp. First edition thus. Rebound in modern calf-backed boards. The binding is sharp without wear; the textblock has early dampstaining with tideline heavier to the preliminary pages after which the tidelines are intermittent and generally minor; foxing and pencil marginalia throughout. <br /> <br /> Issued the same year as the 3-volume first edition this is an abridged version of the U.S. Supreme Court Justice's most important and enduring work on the history of constitutional law in America. In his "Legal Bibliography" J. G. Marvin describes Story's credentials as its author thus "The judicial station of the author his opportunities for hearing constitutional questions mooted and settled for the last quarter of a century his habits of patient and thorough investigation give a weight and value to Judge Story's writings upon Constitutional Law which few similar works can claim." Further he describes Commentaries as an essential work for the student of constitutional history "written with great candour and characterized by extended research and careful examination of the vital principles upon which our government reposes" p. 669. Early editions of Story's Commentaries are fairly uncommon in the trade. Marvin p 669. Howes S-1047; Sabin 92292; Oxford American National Biography. Hilliard, Gray, and Company unknown
200811683Bruxelles, Dupuis, 1953 ; in-4, 32 pp., broché, couverture illustr. Eo petite usure du livre rousseur , usure de la coiffe coter 100€ vendu 40€.
201118657Bruxelles, Dupuis, 1954 ; in-4, 32 pp., broché, couverture illustr. Eo : comprend 6 autres histoires : échec au feu du ciel / le brésil est malade / Gutenberg / pasteur / Archimède / un voyage tragique :album coter 100€ vendu 45€.
200811662Bruxelles, Dupuis, 1953 ; in-4, 32 pp., broché, couverture illustr. Eo usure du livre , éraflure de la coiffe :album coter 100€ vendu 45€.
200811661Bruxelles, Dupuis, 1953 ; in-4, 32 pp., broché, couverture illustr. Eo usure du livre , éraflure de la coiffe , déchirure sur le 4 plat mais restaurée :album coter 100€ vendu 40€.
200811660Bruxelles, Dupuis, 1954 ; in-4, 32 pp., broché, couverture illustr. Eo petite usure du livre , déchirure haut et bas de coiffe coter 100€ vendu 40€.
200811659Bruxelles, Dupuis, 1954 ; in-4, 32 pp., broché, couverture illustr. Eo petite usure du livre , déchirure bas de coiffe et éraflure coter 100€ vendu 40€.
200811658Bruxelles, Dupuis, 1954 ; in-4, 32 pp., broché, couverture illustr. Eo petite usure du livre , déchirure haut et bas de coiffe coter 100€ vendu 30 €.
200811657Bruxelles, Dupuis, 1954 ; in-4, 32 pp., broché, couverture illustr. Eo petite usure du livre avec rousseur album coter 100€ vendu 45€.
200811656Bruxelles, Dupuis, 1954 ; in-4, 32 pp., broché, couverture illustr. Eo petite usure du livre album coter 100€ vendu 45€.