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2003075538Macmillan Publishers Limited 2003. 1st Edition 1st Printing. Hardcover. Very Good/Very Good. Very good clean tight condition. First edition first printing. Text free of marks. Jacket in mylar cover. Professional book dealer since 1999. All orders are processed promptly and carefully packaged. <br/> <br/> Macmillan Publishers Limited hardcover
2004x-0195177533Oxford Univ Pr 2004. Paperback. New. 1st edition. 528 pages. 9.00x6.25x1.50 inches. Oxford Univ Pr paperback
ING9780195177534Oxford University Press. New. Special order direct from the distributor Oxford University Press unknown
2003DADAX0195166051OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS 2003-08-07. Teacher and W/Limited CD / Wish Upon a Sta ed. hardcover. New. 6.50x1.75x9.25. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS hardcover
16224115-nnew. unknown
200083074Arnisdale and Loch Hourn Community Association 2000. Pages clean and bright binding firm light shelf wear to edges of soft covers but otherwise neat. Soft. Good. 4to. Arnisdale and Loch Hourn Community Association Paperback
GOR005196347Paperback. Very Good. paperback
418101Arnisdale and Loch Hourn Community Association. Paperback. Good. THERE ARE NO TARIFFS OR CUSTOMS DUTIES ON BOOKS. Good condition with light signs of use minimal shelf wear and slight sunning to spine. Signed by author with dedication on title page. Arnisdale and Loch Hourn Community Association paperback
2037175 Cadogan Square S.W.1. London 5 November 1930. S1p. 4to. In good condition lightly aged with minor traces of mount on reverse. Addressed to 'Frederick I. Cowles Esq. F.R.S.L. F.R.S.A. F.S.A.' Reads: 'Dear Sir In reply to your letter I should have liked to oblige you but it is impossible for me to do so. The matter would require much more time than I have to spare.' 75 Cadogan Square, S.W.1. [ London ] 5 November 1930. unknown
1341273083.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
19853049Turin: Istituto Bancario San Paolo Di Torino 1985. Hardcover. Very good. Tall 4to 238pp original illustrated boards profusley illustrated some in color -- Corners lightly bumped edges of boards moderately bumped in a couple of places Internally tight & clean. Turin: Istituto Bancario San Paolo Di Torino hardcover
19880036507New York: English & Eichman 1988. First Edition. Softcover Paperback. Near Fine Condition. 15cm x 22.5cm. 52 pages black and white illustrations. Illustrated wrappers. First published book by the American contemporary artist Ron English 1959- being a collection of line drawings. The cover photograph by Charles D. Herold shows English painting a street mural. Introduction by Mark Kostabi. Only 1 copy recorded in OCLC at New York University. Very minor shelf wear. Category: Art & Design; Inventory No: 0036507. BZDB407 Art & Design; Unbranded Ron English Art is a Horrible Waste of the Imagination English & Eichman paperback
6358366343MacMillan pp. 176 . Hardback. New. MacMillan hardcover
1334599688.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
DADAX0789423820Brand: DK ADULT 0000-00-00. First Edition. hardcover. New. 9.50x1.75x12.25. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. Brand: DK ADULT hardcover
0387153179.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
0548517002.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
14915Eleven of the items on his letterhead Royal College of Art South Kensington London SW7. The other two items from 21 Willow Road Hampstead NW. One from 1915 four from 1916 and eight from 1917. The thirteen items are in good condition on lightly-aged paper. All but one bear the purple oval stamp of the Royal Society of Arts and most are docketted. Totalling 10pp. 4to; 3pp. 12mo. The earlier letters are addressed to Wood and the later ones to Menzies. The first letter 14 August 1915 in which Pite proposes becoming a member of the Society is the only one not to concern the course of lectures. On 7 June 1916 he asks if 'the subject of Town Planning which owing to the operation of the Act of 1909 has increasing importance could be included in the Society of Arts series of Cantor Lectures' adding that Wood is 'probably aware of the increasing literature of the subject and that the Royal Institute of British Architects as issued directions to providers & advice to architects on town planning procedure. The subject presents many aspects to the Student and in practice divides itself between the Surveyor <> and architect and naturally has many aspects of public interest and urgency.' He proposes to submit a syllabus 'on the Architecture of Town Planning past & present' stating that he has been 'for many years a member of the Town Planning Committee of the R.I.B.A. & has lectured on the subject at the L.C.C. School of Building'. On 12 June 1916 he writes that he is enclosing 'a syllabus of a course of 5 lectures on Town-Planning' the 'historical aspect' of the subject being 'a large & important one' and ' this comparative study of achieved results' being 'important side by side with present day problems'. On 25 September 1916 he accepts Wood's 'proposals . to deliver a course of four lectures on "Town Planning" to be given weekly from January 29 next'. Among topics dealt with in the rest of the correspondence are the submission of manuscripts and authorship rights. Eleven of the items on his letterhead, Royal College of Art, South Kensington, London, SW7. The other two items from 21 Willow R unknown
13631'Leslie's House' 25 Barnes Place Colombo 7 Sri Lanka. 7 November 1978. 1p. 12mo. Air mail letter on blue paper addressed to Arthur Bourne Academic Press Inc. London Ltd 24-28 Oval Road London NW1 7DX England. In good condition lightly aged and creased. Clarke begins by thanking Bourne for his letter and informing him that he has 'sent a card of thank sic to Dr. Allan Cottey'. 'I am now happily retired with the completion of my last and best novel "The Fountains of Paradise" Playboy January and February - HBJ; Gollancz January. I expect to be back in England in August to attend the World S. F. Con at Brighton and to wind-up my affairs - after which I hope to do all my "travelling" via INTELSAT.' He informs him that the 'underwater business' which he conducted with with a Ceylonese partner Hector Ekanayake brother of his boyfriend Leslie Ekanayake who had died in a motorcycle accident in 1977 is 'now very active' but that he has 'little to do with it' although he hopes 'to start some modest diving again'. He ends with the news that Bill Jovanovich of his American publishers Harcourt Brace Jovanovich has 'persuaded me to join the Board of Sea World and perhaps one day I'll go to one of its meetings at San Diego'. Scan on application. 'Leslie's House', 25 Barnes Place, Colombo 7, Sri Lanka. 7 November 1978. unknown
204853 The Grove Lower Teddington Road Hampton Wick Kingston-upon-Thames. 15 January 1968. 1p. 4to. In good condition lightly aged. The main topic of the letter is Marshall's work preparing his book 'Prepare to shed them now. The Ballads of George R. Sims' London: Hutchinson 1968. A long and characteristic letter. After references to their meeting at the British Museum and to 'that excellent bookseller Mr Wallace of The Guild Hall Bookshop' 'he showed me a selection of the Dagonet Ballads – nothing like as good as the copy you saw' he turns to a 'Sims letter' which Spilstead sent him: 'I cant at the moment date it. He was living in Clarence Terrace Regents Park when he died in 1922. … He was a cagey chap personally. Acknowledged marrying Florence Wykes in 1901 but in 1886 dedicated a book to his gentle wife Bessie.' He continues: 'I think that I have all I want of G. R. S's books from the London Library. My Hutchinson book will be hung on the Dagonet Ballads. I am chiefly interested in visual material. I've located a film of Christmas Day in the Workhouse. But I think there must have been Temperance Lantern Slides of other poems. I'd like to find also engravings etc of Slum Conditions Prostitution East End music halls etc around the 1880's 1890's.' He explains that his life is 'a bit chaotic' with a cousin 'going quitely sic mad in Edinburgh while her octogenerian sic mother wont die'. He has got to go to Scotland 'to see what can unobtrusively be done. Also until I can disentangle what Sims's copyright position is I cant be sure despite Hutchinsons wish to do the book whether they can get the clearances.' Spilstead's invitation to dine at Rule's is 'delightful'; it is one of his favourite restaurants 'Ruled usually Out now that one can't charge what for a free lance sic are legitimate expenses'. He concludes: 'Lunches with daughters are special. I have two beautiful ones – the elder at 21 the actress Anna Calder Marshall just about to play Juliet and St John at Bormingham sic Rep. the younger accessible in London because she works for the Evening Standard'. 3 The Grove, Lower Teddington Road, Hampton Wick, Kingston-upon-Thames. 15 January 1968. unknown
20240On letterhead of 7 Cavendish Buildings Old Cavendish Street W. London 29 July 1899. 1p. 4to. In good condition on lightly-aged paper. The letter reads: 'Dear Sir/ I am very pleased to hear you like my pictures and seem so well acquainted with them - I hope you will go on taking an interest in Art. I am Yours Sincerely Arthur Hacker'. On letterhead of 7 Cavendish Buildings, Old Cavendish Street, W. [ London ] 29 July 1899. unknown
13566On letterhead of the Privy Council Office. 19 September 1872. 6pp. 12mo. In very good condition adhering to leaves removed from an album. Helps begins: 'My dear Martin This is one of the things you excel in - the giving in a comparatively short memoir the real aim and end of a life: so that after reading your "In memoriam" one does not care to hear any more details.' Helps 'really cannot find any fault' in Martin's piece. 'Her. Majesty i.e. Queen Victoria must I think be exceedingly pleased with the book - I mean your work. Then the whole subject of the relation of Stockmar to the occupants of the English throne is most judiciously handled; and there is great skill shown in what is omitted to be said.' He gives 'One single criticism' before complaining that he is 'troubled with cattle plague affairs' and so cannot write at more length. Martin best-known work his biography of Prince Albert 1874-1880 would be similarly praised for its tact and skill see his entry in the Oxford DNB. Helps had edited a volume of the Prince's speeches in 1862. On letterhead of the Privy Council Office. 19 September 1872. unknown
14851Both items on letterhead of 'A. H. Bullen Publisher 47 Great Russell Street Bloomsbury W.C.' 21 April and 4 May 1903. The two items in fair condition on aged and worn paper. ONE: To 'C. Lavers Smith Esq'. 21 April 1903. 2pp. landscape 8vo. He asks 'whether prints are to be had of Nell Gwynne's reputed birthplace at Hereford'. He made enquiries about the house in Hereford on the previous Saturday. 'It was pulled down in 1861; but in 1858 two photographs of it were taken and I found an old photographer who had negatives which he promised to lend to me for a small consideration. I was pleased to get them.' As Lavers-Smith knows 'a great deal more' about the subject he will be pleased to hear whether he has 'seen any old prints of the house. The Hereford people are firmly convinced that Nell was born in their city. They have put up a tablet in the wall behind which the house stood & they have turned the name of the street from Water Lane into Gwynne Street.' In a postscript he thanks him 'for the admirable review of Grammont'. TWO: To 'H. Lavers-Smith Esq. Woodstock Ditton Hill Surbiton'. 4 May 1903. 1p. landscape 8vo. He thanks him for his letter and hopes that 'Mr. Brick will allow me to make a block from his photograph of the house in Drury Lane.' He continues: 'Mr. Goodwin is emphatic on the subject of Nell Gwynne's birthplace. He insists that she was born at Oxford & had nothing to do with the Hereford house. Still the Hereford house was a picturesque old place and I intend to give illustrations of it.' He ends by thanking him for a reference to 'Notes & Queries'. Both items on letterhead of 'A. H. Bullen, | Publisher, | 47, Great Russell Street, Bloomsbury, W.C.' 21 April and 4 May 1903. unknown
11593Undated early 1850s. The two leaves were evidently disbound from a copy of an edition of Dryden's Plutarch in which the grey 4to leaf of writing paper following the 12mo printed leaf was one of those that interleaved the volume. In fair conditon on lightly-aged paper. The two leaves are tipped in onto a larger leaf removed from an album. The printed leaf is 12mo from volume 5 of Dryden's translation with the pages numbered 511 and 612 sic. The two sides of the leaf carry a total of approximately 25 emendations and deletions. Both sides of the 4to leaf carry longer interpolations by Clough those on the verso relating to a page not present. In pencil at foot of recto: 'A. H. Clough's corrections of proof' and on verso also in pencil 'MS Arthur Clough'. Clough began work on his revision of Dryden's translation in the early 1850s. Undated [early 1850s?] unknown
1927biblio688<p>Dust jacket has wear along the edges with small tears. There is a piece of tape on the spine along with reinforcement tape inside of dust jacket. Bottem edge of HC is bent. Dust jacket has some scratches and some creasing. Reinforcement binding was added inside front end page and next page. Dust jacket and pages of book have some discoloration from age. Delivery confirmation is provided where available. BOOK IS COMPLETE WITH ALL 44 ILLUSTRATIONS.</p> Heinemann hardcover