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192029467AB1920. München Phantasus-Verlag 1920. Quarto. 4 58 3 Seiten. Mit elf 11 ganzseitigen Original-Bleischnitten und vier 4 kolorierten Bleischnitt-Initialen von Otto Nückel. Hardcover / Originales Halbpergament. Einband minimal fleckig. Sonst in sehr gutem Zustand mit nur geringen Gebrauchsspuren. References: Bürgin I 1a / Potempa E 4 2 / Rodenberg S. 457 / Schauer II 99 Erste Einzelausgabe des Erstlingswerkes. Nummer 98 von nur 150 numerierten und signierten Exemplaren der Ausgabe Gesamtauflage 220. Auf handgeschöpftem Bütten gedruckt und in Halbpergament gebunden. Druckvermerk von Thomas Mann und von Otto Nückel einem der bedeutenden Vertreter des Expressionismus signiert. hardcover
052120058XNew. Brand new and still unused unknown
047145351XNew. Brand new and still unused unknown
0198507445New. Brand new and still unused unknown
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0226503348New. Brand new and still unused unknown
1816013667Dedham: H. Mann and Company 1816. Title continues; "Also an appendix comprising a dissertation on dysentery. and observations on thre winter epidemic 1815-16 denominated peripneumonia notha." Rebacked with original paper labels laid-down. Label chipped with three letters MED missing from title. Original blue paper-covered boards printed front and rear covers. Hinges rather crudely repaired long ago. Top of covers water-stained as well as top edge. Fore-edge untrimmed. Cover printing is readable but faded a bit. See photos. Many pages are browned at periphery some foxing and staining. Owner's embossed stamp at foot of front free endpaper of Ira M. Rutkow M.D. noted bibliographer of military history. The author was an Army surgeon during the American Revolution and also served during the War of 1812. According to Rutkow GS4 this is probably the best and most vivid picture of early 19th century American military life. Garrison and Morton 2161.1 calls it "the primary record of medicine during the War of 1812". 318pp. First Edition. Quarter Cloth Printed Boards. General Cover Wear and Soiling/No Jacket. Tall Octavo. H. Mann and Company Hardcover
1901008007American Medicine 1901 27 pages. First separate printing. In printed blue wraps. Small chip to bottom right corner of cover and first page tape repairs to reverse side of front cover but altogether a very good copy of a rare item. SIGNED and inscribed on the front cover: "Compliments of / M. D. Mann." Matthew D. Mann 1844-1921 was one of the physicians who attended President William McKinley after he was shot by Leon Czolgosz at the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo New York in 1901. There were five doctors available and Mann a gynecologist took the lead in bringing McKinley to his house and operating on him. Mann decided to leave the bullet in the body and also did not clean the wound. From that infection McKinley died on September 13 1901 a week after he was shot. Later Mann was called on to give reports of McKinley's last words. The U.S. Congress authorized the payment of $10000 to Doctor Mann in 1902 for his efforts to save the life of the President. Signed by Authors. 1st Edition. Soft cover. Very Good. American Medicine paperback
1898178388Berlin: Fischer 1898. First. hardcover. very good. Small 8vo 3/4 suede over mottled bronze paper boards. Berlin: S. Fischer 1898. First Edition. A collection of six short stories. His first published book written when Mann was twenty three years old. The binding is unlettered and worn with dust soiling to suede; internally fine aside for light foxing on last several pages and one or two spots on preliminary pages. A very good copy.<br/> <br/> Ownership signature of art historian Meyer Schapiro.<br/> <br/> Fischer unknown
193019758Frankfort-am-main Germany: S. Fischer. Very Good with no dust jacket. 1930. Hardcover. Beige flexible cloth titled in gilt. Two volume set. Early edition flat signed by Mann to the ffep of volume 1. Text in German. Ex-college library with pockets stamps and blindstamped title page etc. The condition of these volumes is near fine excluding library markings and the contents are unmarked. ; 8vo 8" - 9" tall; Signed by Author . S. Fischer hardcover
1916019198Berlin : S. FISCHER 1916. 1st Edition . Hardcover. Good. D.C. HEATH and COMPANY. Near Fine/ 1933 . B00K: Good/Near Very Good/ $2525.80 BUDDENBROOKS: Verfall Einer Familie. Spine Title Shows: 2. Erster Band; German Edition / Deutsche Ausgabe/ MANN Thomas S. FISCHER 1916 Berlin 1sT Edition Small H/c. Brown Leather Spine With Title In Small Polished Gold Letters Hard Cover Book: Good/Near Very Good/ Shelf Edge And Corner Wear. Brown Spot On Bottom Edge Of Front Cover. 477 Numbered Pages Printed On 0ff~White Paper That Are Clean And tight To The Spine In Very Good/ Condition. Light Age Browning On Page Edges. Polished Gold Edging On Outside Edges Of Pages. D/j: None. = No Odors No Writing No Names No Rippling Not Stuck Together No Book Plate Not X~Library No Remainder Or Other Marks. = Description Applies To This B00K Only. = This B00K Is Hard To Find Will Be Packaged And Shipped = Carefully To Avoid Shipping Damage And Will Make It An Excellent Addition To Your Own Personal Library Collection Or As A Gift For The Discriminating Reader / Collector. = WORLD WIDE SHIPPING AVAILABLE. = B00K: In der Nähe sehr gut/gut / $3516 BUDDENBROOKS: Verfall Einer Familie. Erster Band; Deutsche Ausgabe / Deutsche Ausgabe / MANN Thomas S. FISCHER 1916 Berlin 1. Auflage Kleine H/c. Braun Leder Wirbelsäule mit Titel In kleinen polierten goldene Lettern Hardcover Buch: In der Nähe sehr gut/gut / Regal Kante und Ecke tragen. Brauner Fleck am unteren Rand des vorderen covers. 499 nummerierte Seiten gedruckt auf 0ff ~ White Paper sind sauber und eng die Wirbelsäule In sehr gutem / Zustand. Leichten altersbedingten Browning auf Seitenränder. Goldrand an Außenkanten der Seiten poliert. Satin-Seite Marker. D/j: keiner. = Keine Gerüche keine Schrift keine Namen keine Plätschern nicht verklebt kein Buch-Platte nicht X ~ Bibliothek kein Rest oder andere Marken. = Beschreibung gilt für diese B00K nur. = Diese B00K ist schwer zu finden verpackt und ausgeliefert werden wird = sorgfältig um Transportschäden zu vermeiden und bildet es eine hervorragende Ergänzung zu Ihrer eigenen persönlichen Bibliothekansammlung oder als Geschenk für den anspruchsvollen Leser / Sammler. = WELT WEITEN VERSAND SOFORT VERFÜGBAR. <br/> <br/> S. FISCHER hardcover
1930470136Stockholm: Imprimerie Royale. P. A. Norstedt & Soner 1930. Softcover. Fine/Near Fine. First edition. Octavo. Illustrated reproducing photographic portraits of Thomas Mann and the other Nobel Laureates. White printed wrappers. Text in Swedish French and English. A fine partially unopened copy in original very good or better unprinted glassine dust jacket with light wear and tanning on spine. Includes the address by Fredrik Book awarding Thomas Mann the 1929 Nobel Prize in Literature "1929 Ars Nobelpris I Litteratur" and Thomas Mann's acceptance speech. Also prints a brief biographical essay about Mann. The other Nobel Laureates for that year were Prince Louis-Victor de Broglie Arthur Harden Hans von Euler-Chelpin Frederick Gowland Hopkins and Christiaan Eijkman also printing remarks by each of the scientists during "Les conferences Nobel." Mann was awarded the 1929 Nobel Prize in Literature principally for his novel Buddenbrooks which is now recognized as one of the classic works of 20th century literature. Very scarce. OCLC appears to locate a single copy in Sweden. Imprimerie Royale. P. A. Norstedt & Soner unknown
194215626Los Angeles: Plantin Press 1942. Original edition of the first book published by the Pazifische Presse. The Pazifische Presse was the sole representative on the west coast of the United States of those publishers who left Germany and Austria following the rise to power of National Socialists in 1933. Many European refugees came to America and though most settled in New York a large number did go to Los Angeles which became an important center of German-speaking immigration. Artists authors and intellectuals such as Thomas Mann Theodore W. Adorno Bertolt Brecht Fritz Lang and Arnold Schoenberg were but a few who represented the community of Germans exiled from their native land and who produced major works to address the world crisis. <br /> <br /> The Pazifische Presse was founded by Ernst Gottlieb and Felix Guggenheim both of whom had emigrated to the west coast in around 1939. The publisher “afforded its participants an arena for presenting the best of Weimar culture not only for the emigree community but for their American friends and colleagues†Jaeger p. 9. They announced the initial publication of seven volumes by distinguished authors who themselves had immigrated to the United States. These included Thomas Mann the Nobel Laureate for literature in 1929 Franz Werfel Bruno Frank Leonhard Frank Alfred Neumann Fredrich Toberg Alfred Döblin and Lion Feuchtwanger. Many of these renowned writers continued to publish during their exile; some even went on to screen writing positions in Hollywood. Most of the authors were selected based upon a personal relationship between them and the publishers.<br /> <br /> Gottlieb and Guggenheim worked with Saul and Lillian Marks of the renowned Plantin Press of Los Angeles to print their material. Founded in 1931 and named after Christopher Plantin the famous sixteenth century printer from Antwerps the Marks built a strong reputation as printers of artistic and beautiful works. Each of the first seven volumes of a total of eleven books ultimately released were printed at the Plantin Press in a run of 250 copies; the first 150 copies were the “Subscriber editions†signed by the author and bound in half-leather. The remaining 100 copies were a more simply bound unsigned trade edition.<br /> <br /> “The novella Thamar is a partial pre-printing of the fifth section of Joseph der Ernährer Joseph the Provider; consequently the volume is the German first printing of this part of the text. The first edition of the complete text of Joseph der Ernährer Joseph und seine Brüder. Der vierte Roman was later published in December 1943 at the Bermann-Fischer Verlag Stockholm Potempa D8.1 . . . As part of Joseph’s legend this excerpt depicts the story of the young woman Thamar and her education by Jacob†Jaeger p. 25.<br /> <br /> Thomas Mann 1875-1955 was probably Germany’s most influential author of the twentieth century receiving the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1929. He lived in Munich where he wrote some of his most successful novels like Buddenbrooks 1901 Death in Venice 1912 and The Magic Mountain 1924. After the Nazi takeover his family emigrated to Switzerland then to Princeton before settling in Southern California where he finished his great tetralogy Joseph and His Brothers in 1942. Thomas Thedoe Heine 1867-1948 was recognized as one of Germany’s most talented illustrators. Plantin Press unknown
193186608Paris: A. Fayard & Cie 1931. Fine. A. Fayard & Cie Paris 1931 14 x 22.50 cm 2 volumes brochés First edition on ordinary paper of the French translation established by Maurice Betz. A handsome copy. Fine autograph inscription signed by Maurice Betz: ""A Claude Aveline cette montagne enchantée qui n'a plus de secrets pour l'auteur de Madame Maillard avec l'amicale sympathie de Maurice Betz."" ""To Claude Aveline this magic mountain which no longer holds secrets for the author of Madame Maillard with the friendly sympathy of Maurice Betz."" A. Fayard & Cie unknown
182929111Stuttgart Fr. Brodhag'sche Buchh. 1829. Boards with the year 1830. Folio. Text and plates inserted in the orig. printed cardboard. Plates uncut and all as issued. 430 pp. and 24 lithographed plates of which 22 are in beautiful original handcolouring. Sign.: Auf Stein radiert von J.G.M. <br/><br/><em>A fine copy of a rare work on poisonous plants also listing the appropriate antidotes."In dem gleichen Jahren um 1830.brachte Joh. Gottlieb Mann mit seinem selbstlithographierten Bildern deutscher und ausländischer Arzneipflanzen ein brauchbares dabei künstlerisch aussprechendes Werk auf dem Markt." Nissen ZBI I:p. 219. - Pritzel No. 5787. - Nissen ZBI: No. 1273. - BMC NH III:1233. </em> hardcover
2012260416JR003Overveen: Braches 2012. Hardcover. Very Good Condition. 18.2 x 12 x 1.7 cm. A very presentable copy with minimal wear. Light wear to cover. Internally clean and fresh with unmarked and uncreased pages. Size: 18.2 x 12 x 1.7 cm. 712 pp. Text is in German. Shipped Weight: 1-2 kilos. Category: Literature & Literary; Tod in Venedig Mann Thomas; German Language; Add. Inventory No: 260416JR003. . Braches hardcover
192821291London: Martin Secker 1928. A first edition first printing of 'Death in Venice' published by Martin Secker in 1928. A very good book with bookplate to the front pastedown SIGNED 'Thomas Mann/London/17th May 1949' signed at a PEN meeting in Knightsbridge. Spine sunned with some spotting. Wear to the corners. 'Der Tod in Venedig' Berlin 1912 - an English translation by Kenneth Burke was published in New York in 1924. A the first British appearance of Mann's disturbing mythic tale of longing in which an author fixates on a teenaged boy. Martin Secker unknown
199548267HOFFMANN & CAMPE 1995. 1. hardcover. Sirmkovrilo! HOFFMANN & CAMPE hardcover
2015Discovery-9781285428253CENGAGE 2015. Paperback. New. CENGAGE paperback
2015Discovery-9781285428253CENGAGE 2015. Paperback. New. CENGAGE paperback
184456150Boston 1844-45. 1. MANN Horace Seventh Annual Report of the Board of Education; Together with the Seventh Annual Report of the Secretary of the Board. Boston: Dutton and Wentworth 1844. First edition. Octavo 25cm. Original brown paper wrappers with printed title on front untrimmed; 1991pp. Inscribed "J. F. Bumstead Esq. / with best regards from / Horace Mann" on front wrapper. With a few contemporary pencil annotations. A fresh copy edges gently rubbed one or two small stains to wraps: Very Good or better. <br /> <br /> This copy presented by Mann to J. F. Bumstead-plausibly Josiah Freeman Bumstead 1797-1868 who authored primary school primers readers and spellers published by Ticknor and other Boston firms in the 1840s.<br /> <br /> 2. MANN Horace. The Common School Journal vol. VI no. 5; March 1 1844. Containing the "Seventh Annual Report of the Secretary of the Board of Education to the Board of Education." PRESENTATION COPY FROM SAMUEL MAY TO ADIN BALLOU. Octavo 26cm. Original paper wrappers printed on front; 64-200pp. Inscribed to "Rev. Adin Ballou / with the best regards of / Sam J. May - / Let all that have eyes read / or all that have ears hear this / admirable document -" With one or two minor marginal pencil marks. Ex libris and discard stamp of Swarthmore College to final leaf. Textblock sound though rubbed but front cover detached rear cover lacking; some staining to outer leaves minor foxing: Good.<br /> <br /> Presentation copy from Samuel Joseph May 1797-1871 to Adin Ballou 1803-1890 founder of the Hopedale Community. May was one of Mann's allies in establishing the Massachusetts state school system and both he and Ballou were members of the New England Non-Resistance Society a peace organization founded by William Lloyd Garrison. <br /> <br /> 3. Association of Masters of the Boston Public Schools. Remarks on the Seventh Annual Report of the Hon. Horace Mann Secretary of the Massachusetts Board of Education. Boston: Charles C. Little and James Brown 1844. Octavo 23cm. In original brown paper wrappers printed in black on front; 144pp. Inscribed "B. A. Gould" to front upper cover--possibly pioneering Boston astronomer Benjamin Apthorp Gould 1824-1896. With occasional marginal pencil marks. A fresh copy with one or two tiny chips to spine: Very Good or better. <br /> <br /> 4. MANN Horace. Reply to the "Remarks" of Thirty-One Boston Schoolmasters on the Seventh Annual Report of the Secretary of the Massachusetts Board of Education. Boston: Wm B. Fowle and Nahum Capen 1844. Octavo 23cm. <br /> In original dark beige paper wrappers printed in black on front; 176pp. A sound copy with losses at head and tail of spine joints partly split but holding internally clean: Very Good. <br /> <br /> 5. ASSOCIATION OF THE MASTERS OF THE BOSTON PUBLIC SCHOOLS. Barnum Field; Wm A. Shepard; S. S. Greene; Joseph Hale. Rejoinder to the "Reply" of the Hon. Horace Mann Secretary of the Massachusetts Board of Education to the "Remarks" of the Association of Boston Masters Upon His Seventh Annual Report. Boston: Charles C. Little and James Brown 1845. First edition. Octavo 22cm. Original beige wrappers printed in black on front; 55 1 56 40 64pp. Inscribed "The Misses Adams / 1 May 1922" on verso of title page. A sound fresh copy with split at front upper joint chip at tail minor dirt to wraps but internally clean: Very Good. <br /> <br /> Five pamphlets on Horace Mann's 1844 annual report to the Board of Education including two presentation copies of different editions of the report itself and three responses. Mann had toured Europe with his new wife Mary Peabody and friend Samuel Gridley Howe and studied schools in eight countries with special interest in the Prussian school system. His 1844 annual report comparing American and European school systems was received with great offense by Boston schoolteachers. "A group of thirty-one schoolmasters. . . published a sharply worded critique of his seventh Annual Report" targeting "Mann's recommendations for teacher training as well as his opposition to corporal punishment." However this group "soon faced Mann's wrath in the form of written rejoinders" and were ultimately vanquished when "Mann's allies were elected to the Boston School Committee." <br /> <br /> Despite the controversy Mann's efforts to "merge the best that he found in European educational systems with the principles of the growing American common school movement" saw remarkable success. Under his direction the Board of Education spent over $2 million on improved school buildings increased teacher salaries by over 50% opened fifty new high schools commissioned uniform school textbooks from Boston publishers and alotted time for student exercise-shaping the public school system as we know it ANB. All the titles in this collection are uncommon in the book trade. unknown
1964168704Los Angeles: Twentieth Century-Fox 1964. Early Draft script for the 1966 film two years before its release here under the working title "Cartel of Evil The Not So Secret Agent." Copy belonging to Twentieth Century-Fox President Darryl Zanuck and producer Richard Zanuck with the manuscript ink annotations of Darryl Zanuck's initials and Richard Zanuck's name on the top right of the front wrapper with manuscript blue ink annotations on five pages in what appears to be Darryl Zanuck's hand.<br /> <br /> Secret agent Derek Flint is a smooth-talking Renaissance man-martial arts master polyglot ballet dancer-who works for the international intelligence agency Z.O.W.I.E. When several fellow agents are discovered mysteriously murdered his agency tasks Flint with finding and stopping the killers leading him on a groovy wild goose chase across the world. <br /> <br /> Set in Rome Marseilles and Washington DC and shot on location in Washington DC and California.<br /> <br /> Blue titled wrappers rubber-stamped copy No. 46 dated April 24 1964. Title page present dated 4/24/64 with credits for screenwriter Hal Fimberg. 111 leaves with last page of text numbered 111. Mimeograph duplication rectos only. Pages Near Fine wrapper Near Fine bound with two gold brads. Twentieth Century-Fox unknown
19177474New York: Arthur H. Moss 1917. Limited Edition. Loose Leaves in Portfolio. Very Good. Harold True cover illustration. Folio. 17 leaves printed recto. Black & white gravure reproductions of fifteen sketches and photographs on heavy cream paper plus historical foreword and map in stiff textured gray paper portfolio with titles and illustration printed in black on the cover six flaps. Black on yellow label for The Quill a Magazine of Greenwich Village affixed to back cover and introduction leaf. Cover with light stains and small edge chips a few leaves with creased corners else crisp and bright complete set intact. This undated "folio de luxe" of romantic street scenes was announced as a limited edition in The Quill Vol. 1 No. 6 of November 1917. Several of these images had appeared in the pages of that magazine of Village artistic and bohemian life. In his historical résumé Dr. I. L. Nascher credits John George Brown the painter of "ragged urchins" and Albert Bierstadt with establishing the first artist's studios there.<p>Quite scarce: OCLC locates only two institutional copies Brooklyn and Philadelphia. Now preserved in a clear archival sleeve with acid free backing. Arthur H. Moss unknown