9 970 résultats
1017760551.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
1313344931.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1313344869.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1313344915.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1999B14JS1227Lund Humphries London 1999. 1st Edition. HARDCOVER. Folio size in grey boards gilt lettering to spine 168pp colour plates etc __CONDITION : An extremely well preserved AS NEW unread and unmarked copy in an AS NEW complete Dust Jacket. An excellent copy. . __To see more of our Art Monographs etc type DBBARTIST in the Keywords search box __We always ship in PROTECTIVE CARD PARCELS Lund Humphries, London hardcover
11642Various Places: Various Publishers. Very Good. 1958-1983. Hardcover. NOZOMI. The Written Part. No Place: By the Author 1969. 8vo. Typed mimeographed sheets folded and stapled. 'For Ruth Witt-Diamant' inscribed on front endpaper. Typed letter signed by the poet to Witt-Diamant regarding her 27th birthday and preparations to depart Japan for San Francisco State University and ' Do you have a dog Ruth I wish I can have a dog. If I can keep a dog I will call him Jeremiah'. NOZOMI. O Wonder! No Place: By the Author 1970. 8vo. Typed mimeographed sheets folded and stapled. Inscribed in purple pen "To Mrs. Witt-Diamant" above printed quotation front page 'Why do you ask my name seeing it is wonderful ' "from Nozomi Jan. 1970. EDWARD MYCUE: Damage Within The Community. Inscribed with holograph letter geeting card and notes to Ruth Witt-Diamant. San Francisco: Panjandrum Press 1977. 2nd Printing. Unpaginated; illustrated blue wrappers. Inscribed by the author: "for Ruth Witt-Diamant with a love note and a hand full of blossom." Signed also by the author on title page. In addition: a one page h. L. S. 1973 soliciting response on the poem A Fight for Air. Mycue states that he typed up a copy for her but the typescript is not included here. "Your very definitely lucid about your reactions: that's why I would be glad for some kind of response from you." The greeting card note written on a folded Asian Art Museum card reproducing Monkeys by Mori Sosen "Ruth we really enjoyed last evening . . . Here's the poem Root Route & Range this IS included in a 7 page mimeograph seen earlier in its more jack-in-the-box form Ed & Richard; P. S. also enclosed is a poem by Juliet Garfinkel your former student . . . . This piece The Children's Poem is also present in a typed manuscript signed by Garfinkel. The book shows slight age toning to spine. VICTOR M. DI SUVERO: Consider Now. With holograph note to Ruth Witt-Diamant. San Francisco: By the author July 1983. Unpaged; 11" x 8.5; Xeroxed on one side of thick ivory stock; bound in 'report' folder with clear mylar front cover. With a holograph note on the author's letterhead to Ruth Witt-Diamant founder of the Poetry Center at San Francisco State University. "Dear Ruth Here is this one - I hope you like it and that we'll have a chance to chat again soon - about the Academy and all the rest of it - Best wishes Victor" dated with home address phone etc. ROBERT PETERSON: Leaving Taos. N. Y. : Harper & Row 1981. First Edition. ISBN: 0060908750. 8vo; wrappers. Inscribed by the author "with affection & respect" to Ruth Witt-Diamant. LAWRENCE FIXEL: The Book of Glimmers. Berkeley & London: Cloud Marauder Press; Menard Press 1979. 1st Edition. 53 pp. ; 8vo; white wrappers. Inscribed "for Ruth Witt-Diamant with love Larry February 1980." Laid in is a broadside announcement printed on card stock for "Once and Upon" A Memorial Retrospective of Paintings Madeline Gleason; Gallery Become One Haight Street at Market San Francisco 1980. DIANE MANN ed. 58 Franciscan. Ruth Witt-Diamants copy of the1958 Yearbook for San Francisco State University. San Francisco: San Francisco State University 1958. 209 pp. ; 4to; white fabricoid with alligator illustration on front cover; black & white photos with commentary & name captions throughout; local advertising. Light soil to covers. Ruth Witt-Diamant was the founder of the Poetry Center in 1953 and a long time educator in poetics at San Francisco State University. Her ownership name is written in pen on top edge of front endpaper with a note "see page 23" which is a two page spread featuring the Poetry Center with a photo of her seated in her office along with photos of Center activities showing Charles Olson in front of a classroom Kenneth Rexroth Witt- Diamant and others in discussion and a photo of Lawrence Ferlinghetti Robert Duncan possibly Dan Langton and one fellow we cannot identify. Laid in is a Xerox copy of an article on Ruth Witt-Diamant and the founding of the Poetry Center in West View and an envelope with her written return address in San Francisco. ; 8vo 8" - 9" tall . Various Publishers hardcover
192429468AB1924. Two Volumes complete set. New York Knopf 1924. Octavo. 389 359 pages. Original Hardcover with the very rare original dustjackets in breathtaking condition now in protective collector's Mylar. Unusually Fine condition with the meaningful letter by Nobel Laureate Thomas Mann. The letter accompanying this amazing set of "Buddenbrooks" is of significance because it is reflecting Thomas Mann's willingness to already engage with serious admirers during his first year of Exile in the US. While exiled in Switzerland Mann must have been still able to feel a connection to his "Heimat"; by language and geography. Now in America one can only imagine the consolation of him knowing that his whole family had not only successfully sheltered from Nazi Germany but found a new home in which they were welcomed and were able to continue their very own pursuit of happiness through Literature continue their ability to work and find meaning in this new world. Especially Thomas Mann's earnest remark towards Brown Taylor mentioning of his daughter Erika Mann lecturing at Colby College must have given him a sense of peace and calm only a father can understand who has uprooted his family into the abyss of the unknown. Mann knew very well of fellow exiles and their struggles. Letters like these are not merely an autograph they are reflecion of states of mind and of great importance for our understanding the psychology of endurance. Holger Smyth Ireland April 2021 Almira Brown Taylor later Almira T. Campbell was born on 26 May 1920 in Hyde Park Massachusetts the daughter of Arthur Balcom and Mildred Victoria Fuller Taylor. She obtained her Associate of Arts degree from Colby Junior College in 1940 her Bachelor of Arts degree from Mount Holyoke College in 1942 and a Bachelor of Science in Library Science from Simmons College in 1943. She worked at the Yale Law School Mt. Holyoke College Mt. Hermon School Stoneleigh Prospect Hill School and the F. L. Boyden Library at Deerfield Academy. Taylor married Vincent Alexander Douglas Argyle Campbell in 1953. The couple had one daughter Faith. Taylor died on 12 October 2016. Source: Almira T. Campbell obituary on Legacydotcom The majority of Almira Brown Taylor's collection of autographs is now in the David M. Rubenstein Rare Book Manuscript Library Durham North Carolina. hardcover
63-0787San Francisco: A. Mann c. 2009. Black and Colored Ink On Rag. Tattoo Design. Oblong. 11.5 x 16 inches. Very Good. [San Francisco: A. Mann, c. 2009?]. unknown
63-0782San Francisco: A. Mann c. 2009. Black and Colored Ink On Rag. Tattoo Design. Oblong. 11.5 x 16 inches. Very Good. [San Francisco: A. Mann, c. 2009?]. unknown
63-0785San Francisco: A. Mann c. 2009. Black and Colored Ink On Rag. Tattoo Design. Oblong. 11.5 x 16 inches. Very Good. [San Francisco: A. Mann, c. 2009?]. unknown
63-0783San Francisco: A. Mann c. 2009. Black and Colored Ink On Rag. Tattoo Design. 11.5 x 16 inches. Very Good. [San Francisco: A. Mann, c. 2009?]. unknown
63-0786San Francisco: A. Mann c. 2009. Black and Colored Ink On Rag. Tattoo Design. Oblong. 11.5 x 16 inches. Very Good. [San Francisco: A. Mann, c. 2009?]. unknown
63-0784San Francisco: A. Mann c. 2009. Black and Colored Ink On Rag. Tattoo Design. 11.5 x 16 inches. Very Good. [San Francisco: A. Mann, c. 2009?]. unknown
191358552Seattle WA: Bungalow Publishing Co. Inc.; Otis Publishing Co. Oct. 1913-March 1918. Sixteen vols. Tall 8vo. 7.5 x 10.5 in. 80; 4-A 747-812 5-A - 14-A w/ large folding “Supplement Bungalow†plan 24 x 36 in.; 4-A 67 6-A-14-A w/ Plan; 4-A 65-132 5-A - 12-A; 4-A 133-200 5-A-12-A w/ Plan; 4-A 201-266 5-A - 14-A w/ Plan; 4-A 207-332 5-A - 12-A w/ Plan; 4-A 333-398 5-A - 14-A w/ Plan; 4-A 399-451 6-A - 12-A; 4-A 451-506 9-A-12-A; 4-A 507-560 5-A - 10-A; 4-A 629-697 6-A - 12-A w/ Plan; 4-A 697-765 6-A - 12-A w/ Plan; 80 w/ Plan; 80 w/ Plan; 64 pp. With 100’s of photo illustrations diagrams floor plans 10 issues include the large Supplement folding working plans sized 24 x 36 in. Colour-illustrated softcovers all w/ colour photos of bungalows minor dustsoiling edgewear some occasional chipping at Head & foot of spine creasing a couple w/ folds at corners toning to plans occasional offset toning still a VG set of original periodicals from the library of Millard Armstrong 1874-1958 longtime Portland Oregon millwright carpenter home builder and later high school teacher and Albany OR dairy farmer. First editions of 16 original issues of this Craftsman bungalow promotional magazine issued by noted Seattle entrepreneur and real estate developer Jud Yoho 1882-1968 known as “The Bungalow Craftsman†in Seattle’s active market prior to World War I. Bungalow Magazine had been originally launched 1908-1912 by Henry Wilson in Los Angeles but Yoho took over the magazine moved the publishing to Seattle and during its 6 year run attracted a nationwide audience. With the slogan of “an illustrated monthly magazine devoted exclusively to artistic bungalow homes†modeled on Gustav Stickley’s Craftsman magazine this glossy periodical featured Seattle bungalows and articles about California residences Eastern Craftsman homes and occasionally lifted articles directly from the Craftsman. The Bungalow Magazine attracted a nationwide audience included feature articles on a variety of Craftsman style homes their technology and mechanical systems and amateur projects in furniture design and construction to enhance the prospective home owner’s bungalow. At the time Yoho and his firms were actively constructing speculative houses in Seattle’s northern neighborhoods served as new advertising for many of the Pacific Northwest’s builders small architects and real estate developers. The innovative inclusion of “Supplement Bungalow Plans†not only presented the potential reader and home owner with a sample home but Yoho and other connected “Craftsman†home builders pioneered a technique of easy home financing and extended home ownership to many who could not otherwise have purchased a home. As the Craftsman bungalow craze waned in Seattle during World War I Yoho divested his interest and began producing his “Colonial Homes†plan books and during the severe post-World War I recession moved to Arkon OH where he opened an architectural and building firm with D.E. Hooker former editor of The Bungalow Magazine. Original individual issues seldom appear in the market and almost never with the original large folding plan supplements and this archive includes nearly all of the last two years of magazines 14 of 15. No copies or runs located in Worldcat Seattle Public Lib. houses nearly a complete run. See: Lawrence Kreisman & Glenn Mason The Arts and Crafts Movement in the Pacific Northwest 2007 pp. 159-167; Jud Yoho “The Bungalow Craftsman†and the Development of the Seattle Suburbs Perspectives in Vernacular Architecture Vol. 6 1997 pp. 231-243; Erin Doherty Jud Yoho and the Craftsman Bungalow Company: Assessing the Value of the Common House 1997; Jud Yoho & Dennis Andersen Craftmsan Bungalows Edition de Luxe Book Club of Washington 2007. Bungalow Publishing Co., Inc.; Otis Publishing Co., paperback
191858553Seattle WA: Otis Publishing Co. Jan. 1918. Tall 8vo. 7.5 x 10.5 in. 80 pp. With photo illustrations diagrams floor plans 1 large Supplement folding working plan sized 24 x 36 in. Colour-illustrated softcovers all w/ colour photo of Colonial shake-sided bungalow minor dustsoiling minor shelfwears slight creasing to couple corners very minor offset toning from laid-in folded Plan still a NF copy from the library of Millard Armstrong 1874-1958 longtime Portland Oregon millwright carpenter home builder and later high school teacher and Albany OR dairy farmer. First edition of one of the last issues of this Craftsman bungalow promotional magazine issued by noted Seattle entrepreneur and real estate developer Jud Yoho 1882-1968 known as “The Bungalow Craftsman†in Seattle’s active market prior to World War I. Bungalow Magazine had been originally launched 1908-1912 by Henry Wilson in Los Angeles but Yoho took over the magazine moved the publishing to Seattle and during its 6 year run attracted a nationwide audience. With the slogan of “an illustrated monthly magazine devoted exclusively to artistic bungalow homes†modeled on Gustav Stickley’s Craftsman magazine this glossy periodical featured Seattle bungalows and articles about California residences Eastern Craftsman homes and occasionally lifted articles directly from the Craftsman. The Bungalow Magazine attracted a nationwide audience included feature articles on a variety of Craftsman style homes their technology and mechanical systems and amateur projects in furniture design and construction to enhance the prospective home owner’s bungalow. At the time Yoho and his firms were actively constructing speculative houses in Seattle’s northern neighborhoods served as new advertising for many of the Pacific Northwest’s builders small architects and real estate developers. The innovative inclusion of “Supplement Bungalow Plans†not only presented the potential reader and home owner with a sample home but Yoho and other connected “Craftsman†home builders pioneered a technique of easy home financing and extended home ownership to many who could not otherwise have purchased a home. As the Craftsman bungalow craze waned in Seattle during World War I Yoho divested his interest and began producing his “Colonial Homes†plan books and during the severe post-World War I recession moved to Arkon OH where he opened an architectural and building firm with D.E. Hooker former editor of The Bungalow Magazine. Original individual issues seldom appear in the market and almost never with the original large folding plan supplements. No copies or runs located in Worldcat Seattle Public Lib. houses nearly a complete run. See: Lawrence Kreisman & Glenn Mason The Arts and Crafts Movement in the Pacific Northwest 2007 pp. 159-167; Jud Yoho “The Bungalow Craftsman†and the Development of the Seattle Suburbs Perspectives in Vernacular Architecture Vol. 6 1997 pp. 231-243; Erin Doherty Jud Yoho and the Craftsman Bungalow Company: Assessing the Value of the Common House 1997; Jud Yoho & Dennis Andersen Craftmsan Bungalows Edition de Luxe Book Club of Washington 2007. Otis Publishing Co., paperback
2012225421Saint Louis Art Museum/Yale U. Press 2012. First edition first printing. Hardcover in dust jacket. Fine in fine dust jacket in mylar cover. Saint Louis Art Museum/Yale U. Press hardcover
1927016409Pendleton Oregon: Printed by J. T. Arneson Printing Co. 1927. Hardcover. Good. Yellow cream-colored boards with black title on front cover. Somewhat worn. Binding shaken but intact. Some soiling and notations on pages. Several additional recipes fixed to supplied blank pages. 172 pages. Rare. No copies located in WorldCat institutions. One of the earliest cookbooks published in Pendleton Oregon. Issued in December 1927 it precedes the American Legion Auxiliary 1936 cookbook by nearly a decade. Originally owned by Edith Janet Laing Hudson who was born in Pendleton in 1901 seven entries in the cookbook are credited to her aunt Fannie Laing aka Mrs. James T. Laing. Both of Edith's Canadian grandfathers Robert Laing and John Dand were Umatilla County pioneers having settled there in the early to mid-1880s both farming in the Cold Springs area just north of Pendleton. She married Elmer Hudson in 1924. They moved to Bend in 1931 and together owned and operated the Maytag Appliance Store from about 1941 until their retirement in 1967 a little vintage Maytag Blue Cheese Cookbook is tucked in. Contents: Weights and Measures Table Appointments and Table Service Cocktails and Sauces Soups Fish and Sauces Meats and Their Accompaniments Vegetables Salads and Salad Dressings Breads Cakes and Cake Frostings Cookies Small Cakes and Doughnuts Pies Pastry and Tarts Puddings Frozen Dainties Beverages Sandwiches Eggs and Cheese Relishes Candies Nuts and Popcorn Canning and Preserving Left-Overs Suggestions for the Convalescent Large and Small Recipes Whe the Community Dines Proportions Hints to Housewives Menus. [Printed by J. T. Arneson Printing Co.] hardcover
0883970503.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
198323880AB1983. Baltimore The John Hopkins University Press 1983. 16 x 24 cm. 226 pages. Hardcover / Original dark green hardcover with lettering in gold. Excellent near fine condition with only minor signs of external wear. Very clean and tight copy. Contains among others: The Language of Nature Part 1: Production and Consumption; The Language of Nature Part 2: Exterior and Interior Space; Toward Plot: The Language of Sound; The Language of Generation and the Generation of Plot; The Language of the Drama: From Plot to Point of View; From Inside to Outside the Book: Humor and Pathos etc. etc. hardcover
196929306University Park: The Pennsylvania State University Press 1969. Near Fine. University Park PA: The Pennsylvania State University Press 1969. First Edition Limited Issue of 300 specially printed and bound copies this being #192. Octavo. 138 pp. Brown and gray boards stamped in gilt. Housed in publisher's slipcase. Boards tight in binding and pages unmarked. Slipcase with mild shelfwear and lightly browned along edges else sound and stable. Near Fine. The Pennsylvania State University Press unknown
193928202New York: The Frank A. Munsey Company 1939. Small chip to lower left front corner several tiny edge tears a nearly fine copy. 28202. Octavo single issue cover by Ralph Belarski pictorial wrappers. Pulp Magazine. Includes part one of "Maker of Shadows" a Gees supernatural novel by Jack Mann pseudonym of E. C. Vivian. The Frank A. Munsey Company unknown
1950159424New York: F.J. Low Company 1950. First Edition. First Edition a paperback original. Basis for the 1950 film starring Robinson and Ruby Dee also written by Arthur Mann. <br /> <br /> Very Good in wrappers with moderate rubbing overall and reader's crease to the spine. <br /> <br /> Holroyd p. 264. F.J. Low Company unknown
2983Minor rubbing to boards; light uniform toning throughout; jacket a bit toned and torn. Very good. <p>Thomas Mann. Confessions of Felix Krull Confidence Man: The Early Years. New York: Alfred A. Knopf 1955. First American edition.<br /> Signed in pencil by Larry McMurtry to the front free end paper. <br /> Octavo. 384pp. Publisher's black cloth spine lettered in gilt front board stamped in blind red top-stain original unclipped dust jacket.<br /> From the collection of Larry McMurtry at his home in Archer City Texas. His book with personal brand-mark bookplate. <br /> </p> . unknown
1972400455New York: The Limited Editions Club 1972. Limited edition number 605 of 1500 copies signed by the illustrator. Lacks glassine otherwise fine. Quarto. Illustrated by Felix Hoffmann. Original red quarter morocco marbled boards; publisher's board slipcase. Translated by Kenneth Burke. Introduction by Erich Heller. The Limited Editions Club unknown
184156092Boston: Dutton and Wentworth State Printers 1841. First edition 8vo pp. xvi 328; original cloth-backed tan paper-covered boards; title printed in black on front cover; gilt lettering on spine; ex-Massachusetts Historical Society pressure stamp on title page boards rubbed; corners bumped; some dampstaining; otherwise very good. Bookplate on the front pastedown noting a donation by Rev. S. C. Jackson 1859. Presentation copy inscribed on the front free endpaper by Horace Mann to the Boston Unitarian minister Rev. Ezra S. Gannett. Compiled by Horace Mann the Secretary of the Massachusetts Board of Education. Dutton and Wentworth, State Printers unknown