19 571 résultats
1836041575New York: The New York Mirror Co 1836 1837 1836. 1st Edition . Hardcover. Very Good. Full Page Plates. 52 Issues Complete In Publisher's Binding Marbled Boards With Leather Spine Gilt. Full Page Plates And Musical Melodies In Some Issueswear Paper And Leather Worn At Edges Of Boards But Binding Solid Contents Clean Except For Light Foxing At Edges Of The Full Page Plates. P. 119/120 Has Upper Corner Torn Away Removing About 1/2 Of Text. Long Closed Tear Pp 303/304. Pp 215/216 Excised.Includes The First Appearance In America Of An Up-And-Coming Young British Writer Charles Dickens Writing As " Boz" Or As "Excerpts From Dickens": "The Fashionable Dancing Academy" P. 122; "Miss Evans And The Eagle" P. 134; "The Bloomsbury Christening" Pp. 146-47; "The Steam Excursion" Pp. 162-63; "Meditations In Monmouth Street" Pp. 177-178; "The Great Winglebury Duel" Pp. 186-87; "A Christmas Dinner" Pp. 202-203; "Excerpt From 'Pickwick;" P. 294; "Minns And His Cousin" Pp. 305-306; "Our Next Door Neighbors" Pp. 314-315; "The Parlour Orator" Pp. 322-323. P. 328 Has Short Review Of Mary Shelley's "Falkner" "By The Author Of Frankenstein. This Work Exhibits A Greater Range Of Her Powers Than The Book By Which Mrs. Shelley Is Best Known But It Must Not Be Denied That It Lacks All That Strange And Terrible Interest Which Give Its Particular Character To Frankenstein. <br/> <br/> The New York Mirror Co 1836 1837 hardcover
18483786London: Bradbury & Evans 1848. First Edition. Hardcover. Very Good. 5 1/2 X 8 5/8 Inches. First English Edition in book form. Two volumes bound in half calf leather over marbled boards. Marbled gutters. Engraving vignette on title-page of volume one shows the "hook" on the left hand. "Captain" misspelled on page 324 of volume two. All plates present. Plate at 366 starting a bit. Contemporary name on both front end pages. Varying degrees of foxing to all 40 of the original engraved illustrations. A handsome set overall. Bradbury & Evans hardcover
18953851London: Ernest Nister 1895. First Edition. Cloth. Very Good. Harold Copping Fred Barnard Paget Wenner Thompson. 7 3/8 X 9 1/8 Inches. 96 PP. Original decorated publisher cloth binding. All 12 origianl full-page illustrations intact. Numerous other illustrations throughout. Light wear to edges and spine. Hinges a bit weak but holding nicely. Ernest Nister unknown
1937ST12683-352bBloomsbury: Nonesuch Press 1937. FIRST EDITION. 258 x 162 mm. 10 1/8 x 6 3/8". 130 pp. 2 leaves. <br/> Publisher's blue buckram upper cover with gilt lettering and publisher's device smooth spine with gilt titling. With older acetate jacket front flap taped to front pastedown. With printer's device on title page nine vignettes in the text and 11 lithographic reproductions of sample leaves and bindings of earlier editions of Dickens. Dreyfus 108. ◆Half-inch white spot to front board head of spine a little frayed small adjacent areas along top edge of boards rather rubbed a little rubbing to corners small glue stain to rear free endpaper but a very good copy internally fresh and clean.<br/> <br/> This substantial hardbound prospectus issued for one of the masterworks of the press contains essays on the illustrators of Dickens' works by Arthur Waugh "A Bibliographical List of the Original Illustrations to the Works of Charles Dickens Being Those Made under his Supervision" compiled by Thomas Hatton and a "Retrospectus" examining earlier editions of the complete works in addition to the description of the forthcoming Nonesuch edition and an order form for subscribers. Nonesuch Press unknown
1915233070London and Philadelphia: William Heinemann and J. B. Lippincott Co 1915. Early American Trade Edition. Twelve full-page colored illustrations numerous black and white illustrations in the text. 167 pp. 1 vols. 8vo. Original red cloth gilt-stamped and lettered. In pictorial split with 2 inch loss to spine at bottom. Rackham Arthur. Early American Trade Edition. Twelve full-page colored illustrations numerous black and white illustrations in the text. 167 pp. 1 vols. 8vo. Latimore and Haskell p.45 William Heinemann and J. B. Lippincott Co unknown
1931233020New York: The Limited Editions Club 1931. First edition thus; No. 164 of 1500 copies signed by Rackham. 6 full page Illustrations in black and white and 14 smaller illustrations all in black and white by Arthur Rackham. xxxii 129 pp. 1 vols. 4to. Original tan cloth decorated in black in gilt with Rackham design t.e.g. Small leather bookplate of Adolph Lewisohn. Slight darkening to spine else fine in original decorated tan paper over boards slipcase minor wear. Rackham Arthur. First edition thus; No. 164 of 1500 copies signed by Rackham. 6 full page Illustrations in black and white and 14 smaller illustrations all in black and white by Arthur Rackham. xxxii 129 pp. 1 vols. 4to. Latimore and Haskell p. 67; LEC Bibliography #27 The Limited Editions Club unknown
1961108296<p>Cleveland:: World Publishing Company. Very Good in Very Good dust jacket. 1961. Hardcover. Stated first edition. Two inch piece cut out at the top of the half-title page else very good in a very good age toning dust jacket. ; 110 pages .</p> World Publishing Company, hardcover
1913220929London: Hodder & Stoughton 1913. First Edition thus. Illustrated with 7 tipped-in colur plates by Thomson. 1 vols. Snmall4to. Red gilt pictorial cloth. Fine. Thomson Hugh. First Edition thus. Illustrated with 7 tipped-in colur plates by Thomson. 1 vols. Snmall4to. Hodder & Stoughton unknown
18828778London: MacMillan & Co 1882. Hardcover. Good. 4 3/4 X 6 1/2 Inches. 278 PP. All 15 full-page maps of the city of Paris intact at front of volume. A failed businessman Charles Dickens Jr. eldest son of Dickens is best known for his three travel guides this being the final one. Appears to be missing the advertising section at rear. PO bookplate to front pastedown. Light wear at edges and hinges. A rare book in commerce. From the personal collection of Levitt Ellsworth Custer June 18 1863 - January 3 1924 an Ohio dentist and competitive balloonist. MacMillan & Co hardcover
1843331194London: Wiley & Putnam 1843. First. hardcover. very good-. 8vo full polished calf with gilt decorated spine raised bands leather labels gilt top by Riviere. London: Wiley & Putnam 1843. First Edition.<br/> <br/> Written in response to the negative portrayal of American literature by Dickens in his "American Notes". Joints strengthened & inner hinges taped; light foxing on preliminary blank pages otherwise a good clean copy.<br/> <br/> Wiley & Putnam unknown
186843442Philadelphia; New York; Boston; J.B Lippincott 1868. Hardcover. 1st edition first printing of Author's only book. Original Publisher's Cloth Brown cloth cover stamped in gold 16mo 7-124 pages; 15 cm. Singerman 2085 for the 126 page edition. <br> Singerman notes that he the "compiler saw the rarer 124 page edition without the publisher's statement about Dickens. " <br> This is that true rarer first printing dedicated to Charles Dickens but without reproducing his warm letter thanking her as appeared in later printings. <br> The success of this book meant that later editions appeared the same year in London as well as in the US published by Lippincott but with more pages 141 & 126 respectively and with the Dickens letter reproduced. <br> Includes some poems with Jewish themes such as "Judith 'Oh forget not that I am Judith! /And I know where sleeps Holofernes' " "Hear O Israel 'The God of Jacob is our Shield' " etc. <br> <br> Menken 1835-1868 was "Internationally famous for her starring role in the equestrian melodrama Mazeppa in which she was stripped on stage to a flesh-colored body stocking lashed to the back of the 'wild horse of Tartary' and sent flying on a narrow ramp above the theater. Adah Isaacs Menken consistently defied social mores. She cropped her black hair and smoked cigarettes and publicly disparaged conventional married life. Menken represented an early example of the cult of personality blurring her private life with her public persona. <br> She married four times in the course of seven years. Her second marriage in 1859 was to the heavyweight boxing champion of the world John C. Heenan. <br> One of the most glamorous celebrities of the 1860s Menken also cultivated a literary following. She wrote poetry and developed relationships with the likes of Walt Whitman Charles Dickens Dante Gabriel Rossetti Alexandre Dumas and Algernon Swinburne. George Sand was a close friend to the actor and was godmother to Menken's second child. <br> A major bone of contention to this day is the authenticity of her Jewishness. Though scholars have some evidence that Menken was raised a Catholic and converted to Judaism only after marrying her first husband Menken herself once publicly rebuked a journalist who labeled her a convert by announcing that she was 'born in that faith Judaism and have adhered to it through all my erratic career. Through that pure and simple religion I have found greatest comfort and blessing.'<br> Whatever her origins it is clear that Menken was fervently Jewish in her adult life. <br> After moving to Cincinnati with her first and only Jewish husband Alexander Isaacs Menken Adah learned Hebrew fluently studied classical Jewish texts and contributed many poems and essays to The Israelite a weekly founded by Rabbi Isaac M. Wise. Her poems indicate a passionate temperament deeply committed to a kind of proto-Zionism and even messianism. Many are collected in the posthumously published volume Infelicia this volume. <br> Menken viewed herself as a modern Deborah calling on Jews to rise up against persecution in Turkey and protesting the kidnapping of a six-year-old Jewish boy in Bologna by representatives of the Catholic Church. She was one of the few Jews in America to protest when Lionel Nathan was denied the seat in the English Parliament to which he had been elected. And at the height of her acting career she refused to perform on Jewish High Holidays. On her deathbed at age thirty-three suffering from what may have been peritonitis or tuberculosis or both and treated by the personal doctor of Napoleon III Menken was visited by a rabbi. <br> Adah Isaacs Menken died on August 10 1868 in Paris. She is buried in the Jewish section of Montparnasse Cemetery" Ackerman 2014. <br> <br> The book is cited in Podeschi J. B. Dickens & Dickensiana B2952; Wolff R. L. 19th cent. Fiction 4738. <br> <br> For more on this important work see "Infelicia and Other Writings: Adah Isaacs Menken" review by Deka Mayuri. In Legacy Amherst Mass. 2003 Vol.20 1 p.204-205; as well as "ADAH ISAACS MENKEN'S 'INFELICIA.'" In Notes and queries 1922-06 Vol.s12-X 217. <br> <br> OCLC: 2581404. Lacks blank endpapers Light wear to cloth about Very Good- Condition. B AMR-45-45-DLB. Philadelphia; New York; Boston; J.B Lippincott hardcover
G0746084838I4N00Usborne Export. Paperback. Very Good. May have limited writing in cover pages. Pages are unmarked. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More Spend Less.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed. Usborne Export paperback
1996956111996. Near Fine. 17 x 9 cm. sealed envelope. Dr. Dickens graduated from the University of Illinois College of Medicine Chicago in 1934 and became the first board certified African American OB/GYN in Phildelphia in 1945 or 1946. She later taught at the University Pennsylvania School of Medicine. She shows up online as the female physician who popularized the PAP smear. unknown
197931778Atlanta: MARTA 1979. Soft cover. Good. Bound soft cover. vii 141 pages. Illustrated with copied photographs figures plans etc. Paper cover with title on the front. Pages are one sided. Contents include local history found relics along the construction zone and more. Several black and white photographs of relics and working areas. Light wear and soiling to the covers. MARTA unknown
120837no date. Portfolio Very good. 180 single page illustrations 5 3 / 4 X 8 3 / 4 in a poor grey slipcase with printed label. The slipcase is worn and split. A few of the prints have minor dampstains. Based on the work of Charles Dickens. Fiction Art. Paperback
21138Without place or date. London Circa 1865. 3pp. foolscap 8vo. On a bifolium of laid paper. In fair condition aged and worn. The first poem 'Balooning sic' covers both sides of the first leaf. No evidence has been discovered that this poem was ever published but it is inspired by the exploits of 'Mr. Green' in a humorous essay titled 'Ballooning' which appeared in Charles Dickens's 'Household Words' on 25 October 1851. The choice of two phrases 'pipes & backy' and 'Mounted Meershaums' is given in the present manuscript these variants perhaps suggesting that this item is authorial rather than a transcription. The second poem which covers the recto of the second leaf the verso being undated is untitled in the manuscript but is Harry Sydney's 'It's just as well to take it in a quiet sort of way' which was published in 1865 in London by Henri D'Alcorn George Henry Stannard Allcorn. ONE: 'Balooning sic'. 2pp. The poem is forty-eight lines long divided into twelve stanzas each stanza followed by the refrain 'Fal de ral.' The present poem begins: '1st. Verse When the London people used to think of going out of Town They'd take a Stage & that would to the Country take 'em down But Mister Green has lately proved as clear's the sun at noon The finest way to take the air is to take an air balloon - Fal de lal. 2. The other day when Mister Green went out just for a fly He took up two companions for a ride towards the sky Though Lords & Butler thus ventured up they found the difference soon For they were all reduced to Carmen when they rode in the Balloon Fal de ral.' The poem describes their journey made without 'fears of Highwaymen'. In the ninth stanza the travellers 'take their pipes & backy out' and the word 'backy' is glossed with the variant reading for 'pipes & backy' at the foot of the second page: 'Mounted Meershaums out.' The final stanza reads: '12. Now we find that different trav'lers will travel diff'rent ways Some like a railroad some a stage & some a Horse & Chaise Some being fond of water think a steam boat quite exquisite But there's nothing like an air balloon to pay a flying visit. Fal de ral'. TWO: Untitled Harry Sydney's 'It's just as well to take it in a quiet sort of way'. 1p. Twenty-four lines in eight stanzas. Begins: '1 We smile at the unnecessary trouble people take For fortune is not regulated by the fuss we make. I don't advise indifference but this I mean to say: Its just as well to take things in a quiet sort of way.' The poem was hugely popular being described as 'a certain sort of comic singing which I can't stand' by a character in Fun magazine 2 September 1865. The American impressario Tony Pastor 1837-1908 published a version of the poem in New York in 1868 without the following stanza of the present manuscript: 'To rise in your opinion most earnestly I hope But promise you I'll never mount the trapeze or the rope: I fancy in the long run that common sense will pay; And its just as well to take things in a quiet sort of way.' Without place or date. [London? Circa 1865.] unknown
184867827London: Bradbury & Evans 1848. First edition in book form early issue. Leather Bound. Very Good. H. K. Browne. 624pp. Octavo 21.5 cm Bound in a contemporary Bayntun binding of full brown leather with gilt stamped ornamental designs on the spine the publication date at the foot of the spine and double gilt-ruled borders on the covers. All edges gilt. Turn-ins gilt. Two brown silk ribbon page-markers. With the frontispiece and engraved half title and 38 plates by Halbot Knight Browne "Phiz". Extra-illustrated with twelve illustrated plates depicting the leading characters. No Errata. Second spine label mostly perished. Light rubbing to the extremities. Barely visible numerical notation on the front free endpaper. Faint contemporary ownership marking at the head of the title page. Paper repairs to pp. 113/14 and repair to fore-edge margin of p. 127/28. The following was noted during collation: "Captain Cuttle consoles his Friend" is facing p. 86 rather than p. 87. "Poor Paul's Friend" is facing p. 178 rather than p. 179. "Solemn Reference is made to Mr. Bunsby" is facing p. 239 rather than p. 238. "On Arrival" faces p. 564 not p. 565. Dark plate at p. 547 the first published example of a dark plate. Smith 8. Eckel p. 74-76. Collins extract from the third volume of The New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature pp. 798/99.<br /> <br /> P. 70- "f" is not missing in "familiar." Not all of the gaps in spacing present. P. 253- "remains" with dot. P. 324- "Captain" present. Page number present on p. 431. Else all other internal flaws present as are listed in Smith. This title was first published in twenty monthly parts between October 1846 and April 1848 with the full title Dealings with the Firm of Dombey and Son: Wholesale Retail and for Exportation. Dombey and Son set in a socially decaying industrialized London explores the themes of betrayal cruelty and deceit. It is the story of Mr. Dombey a wealthy shipping merchant whose wife dies while giving birth to their second child- Paul a long-desired son and heir. After Paul's birth the elder child Florence a girl becomes neglected. Paul eventually dies and Dombey's hopes are shattered. Bradbury & Evans unknown
185767699London: Bradbury and Evans 1857. First edition in book form first issue. Leather Bound. Very Good. H. K. Browne. 625pp. Octavo 21.5 cm Bound in a contemporary Bayntun binding of full brown leather with gilt stamped ornamental designs on the spine the publication date at the foot of the spine and double gilt-ruled borders on the covers. All edges gilt. Turn-ins gilt. Vignette title page. Two brown silk ribbon page-markers. The spine title labels are absent. Light rubbing to the extremities. Barely perceptible numerical notation on front free endpaper. No white slip in the center of p. 481. All plates present. "An Unexpected After-Dinner Speech" facing p. 488 rather than p. 489. "Mr. Merdle a Borrower" facing p. 531 rather than p. 530. "At Mr. John Chivery's Tea-Table" facing p. 549 not p. 548. With three-line errata on page xiv. "Rigaud" is found on pp. 469-474. "B 2" on p. 371. "William" for "Frederick" on p. 317 line 27. All internal flaws as listed in Smith are present. Eckel pp. 82-85. Smith 12. Collins extract from the third volume of The New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature p. 803. With illustrations by H. K. Browne. A novel which criticizes the archaism of imprisonment for debt. "Little Dorrit" originally appeared in twenty numbers between 1855 and 1857. Bradbury and Evans unknown
187067791London: Chapman and Hall 1870. First edition in book form early issue. Leather Bound. Very Good. S. L. Fildes. 190pp. Octavo 21.5 cm Bound in a contemporary Bayntun binding of full brown leather with gilt stamped ornamental designs on the spine the publication date at the foot of the spine and double gilt-ruled borders on the covers. All edges gilt. Turn-ins gilt. Half title vignette. Two brown silk ribbon page-markers. Spine labels absent. Light rubbing to the extremities. Faint numerical notation to front free endpaper. Tiny loss to the top fore-edge corners of pp. 101-106. Lacks publisher's catalogue at rear. Eckel p. 96-98. Smith Part I: 16. With all the internal flaws listed in Smith with the exception of the last flaw. With twelve illustrations by Samuel Luke Fildes and a portrait.<br /> <br /> Dickens' final and unfinished novel. Dickens died after having written six parts one-half of which were published. John C. Eckel writes "The solution of the plot was never disclosed and this stamps 'Drood' as one of the best unfinished mystery stories in literature. Chapman and Hall unknown
185067740London: Bradbury & Evans 1850. First edition in book form first issue. Leather Bound. Very Good. H. K. Browne. 624pp. Octavo 21.5 cm Bound in a contemporary Bayntun binding of full brown leather with gilt stamped ornamental designs on the spine the publication date at the foot of the spine and double gilt-ruled borders on the covers. All edges gilt. Turn-ins gilt. Half title vignette. Two brown silk ribbon page-markers. The spine label with the author's name is detached but tucked in. Light rubbing to the extremities. Minor numerical notation to front free endpaper. Small dark patches on p. 275 and the recto of the plate opposite from the spine label having been tucked in. The plate titled "Mr. Peggotty's Dream Comes True" is facing p. 496 rather than p. 512. 1850 date on both title pages. Errata with six lines. All plates present. With "recal" on first line of p. 16. Period after "and" on p. 30. Comma slightly apart from "mother" on p. 34. All other flaws called out in Smith are present. Eckel pp. 77-78. Smith Part I: 9. With illustrations by H. K. Browne.<br /> <br /> David Copperfield originally appeared serially in twenty numbers bound in nineteen monthly parts. A largely biographic novel which was not hugely popular in the beginning but grew to be one of Dickens' most popular works. Dickens also thought of this work as one of his favorite works. In "David Copperfield" Dickens relates a number of significant early personal experiences including his work in a factory his schooling and reading and his development into a successful novel writer. Bradbury & Evans unknown
8704Marseille, Club du Livre, sans date (1948), 3 volumes in 8° brochés, sous doubles emboitages, couverture illustrée rempliée.
1950873171950 Paris, Imprimerie Nationale, André Sauret, 1956, 2 volumes in 8° brochés, 340 et 354 pages ; couvertures rempliées ; étuis.
1946818351946 Marseille, Club du Livre, 1946, 3 forts volumes in 8° brochés, chemises étuis.
200914390Marseille, Club du livre , s.d. ; in-8, cartonnage de l'éditeur sous boitage . Les 3 volumes. En 3 volumes illustrations de berthold mahn - très bon état.
200914389Marseille, Club du livre , s.d. ; in-8, cartonnage de l'éditeur sous boitage . Les 3 volumes. En 3 volumes illustrations de berthold mahn.