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3642692842.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
2011DADAX3642692842Springer 2011-11-23. Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1984. paperback. New. 8.27x0.32x11.02. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. Springer paperback
2011SONG3642692842Springer 2011-11-23. Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1984. paperback. Used: Good. 8.27x0.32x11.02. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. Springer paperback
2012x-3642692842Springer-Verlag 2012. Paperback. New. reprint edition. 136 pages. German language. 11.02x8.27x0.24 inches. Springer-Verlag paperback
452693Marvel. Hardcover. Good. THERE ARE NO TARIFFS OR CUSTOMS DUTIES ON BOOKS. The sinister Shadow King is desperate to escape from the mental prison he was placed in centuries ago - and he'll destroy Storm to do it! But will his freedom also unleash the horrifying swarm of the alien Brood And will even the X-Men be enough to battle a being who has plotted our death and destruction for ages A hardback book in good condition with minor scratches on the dust jacket and minor wear to the corners of the dust jacket. Copyright © Marvel Marvel hardcover
190894502Stuttgart, Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt, 1908. 290 S. Mit sehr zahlr. s/w Abb. zumeist auf Taf. (= Klassiker der Kunst in Gesamtausgaben, Bd. 12). 26 cm. Bordeauxrotes OLn. mit dekorativer Goldpräg und Kopfgoldschnitt.
2007222809Gütersloh: Gütersloher Verlags-Haus, 2007. 100 S., Ill. OPp., gebundene Ausgabe.
9866Aurum, 1988. In-8* reliure editeur, sous jaquette illustree, 244 pages.Bon etat.
19289596Berlin : Knaur, [1928]. [487] S. 8°. Vollst. Ausg. OLwd mit Goldpräg. u. Kopfbuntschnitt ohne SU.
19971300364PN. New. 1997. Soft Cover. Date is original print. This is a reprint edition . PN paperback
1270338226.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
49146125like new. unknown
196440399ABStuttgart, Enke (= Beiträge zur Sexualforschung, 31. Heft), 1964. 8°, 101 S., original Kartonage (Paperback), Erstausgabe schönes, sauberes Exemplar
199926829Würzburg Arena, 1999. 272 S. 21 cm, Broschiert ,
199436924Bornheim-Merten : Lamuv-Verlag, 1994. 382 S. Ill. 8°. 10. Aufl. OKt. (Tb). (Lamuv-Taschenbuch ; 38)
197595949S[ank]t Gallen, Erker-Verlag, [ 1975]. XL, 209 S. Mit zahlr. s/w u. einigen farbigen Abb. 28 cm. OLn. mit illustr. SU.
19818030125München: Schirmer/Mosel [1981]. ca. 80 S., m. zahlr. schw/w (farb.) Fotogr., 26cm x 21cm Broschiert
198929406Frankfurt am Main : Eichborn, 1989. [80] S. 4°. Ill. OPpbd.
24309To the editor of "Story" magazine where Mann had been frequently published since its inception and numous anthologies. "I was very interested to learn about your plan of a television series based upon the work and the authors in "The World's Best" and I am quite willing to cooperate in this series. As for the story most suitable for this purpose I am looking forward to your suggestions." <br/><br/> unknown books
24308On Mann's letterhead written to the New York Post columnist thanking him for "the flattering invitation" presumably to write a column for him as a guest. Mann is "-- in principle -- interested in your proposition but I cannot at this moment give you a definitive answer. A week or so from now I shall know whether or not a piece of work which I have undertaken to complete before the middle of February will be ready in time for me to accept any additional obligations. You shall have my final reply as soon as possible. Meanwhile I should be glad to be advised as to the fee involved in my proposed guest-performance." <br/><br/> unknown books
1930263154Poschingerstr. 1 Munich 1930. One page signed in black ink. 1 vols. 4to. Old folds pinhole tear at center else fine. One page signed in black ink. 1 vols. 4to. The Nobel laureate thanks the photographer. German author Thomas Mann was awarded the Nobel prize in lterature in 1929 and Alfred Eisenstaedt was there to take his picture. Mann writes the young photographer to acknowledge receipt of photographs reading in part: «Die Aufnahmen sind ebenso wohlgelungen wie die vorigen besonders gefallen mir die Grossaufnahmene von mir allein und von mir mit meiner Frau. Ich freue mich auch diese hübschen Andenken menem kleinen nordischen Reiseerinnerungen-Archiv einfügen zu können und begrüsse Sie mit widerholten Dank.» I am especially pleased with the large format portraits of me alone and of me with my wife. I will be happy to add these lovely mementos to the small archive of my northern tour. Mann 1875-1955 left Germany for Switzerland in 1933 after the Nazi rise to power.<br/><br/>With one-page typed letter signed from Walter Israel editor of Funkstunde radio magazine introducing Eisenstaedt to radio announcer Alfred Braun who reported from Stockholm on the 1929 Nobel Prize ceremony. unknown books
1938959751938. Near Fine. Single sheet of Letterheaded Palace Hotel stationery San Francisco. 28 x 22 cm. Portion of contents of letter: "First allow me to congratulate you on your upcoming award of the detree of Doctor of Philisophy in Psychology on May 21st. I have received the Program of the Final Examination and I am looking forward to visiting with you before then." He then invites Goodlett dinner with him the following evening at The Palace Hotel. Horace Mann Bond November 8 1904 - December 21 1972 was an American historian college administrator social science researcher and the father of civil-rights leader Julian Bond. He earned graduate and doctoral degrees from University of Chicago. He was the first president of Fort Valley State University in Georgia in 1939 and later served as the first African American President of Lincoln University in Pennsylvania. Goodlett 1914-1997 got a PhD in psychology from the University of California at Berkeley in 1938. He later graduated Meharry Medical College and was a practicing physician in California. He was also the owner of Reporter publishing company which published several newspapers in Northern California. He was also active in the Democratic Party and an important supporter of Willie Brown. unknown
28288This American film and television director was only the third director to win both an Academy Award and a Cannes Palme d'Or for the same film "Marty" 1955; other films include "Desire Under the Elms" 1958 "The Dark at the Top of the Stairs" 1960 "A Gathering of Eagles" 1963 and "David Copperfield" 1969. TLS 1p 8½" X 11" Los Angeles CA 1978 November 3. Addressed to noted Lincoln/Civil War scholar ARNOLD F. GATES 1914-93. Near fine. On "Richmond-Confederate Productions Inc." letterhead Mann chats with this friend from his days in New York in the 1950s. "I was involved in doing a television film during the early part of the summer" he writes "and then was off to Ireland where I spent the last two months preparing a film which unfortunately has collapsed because of a failure in the financing plans. So now I am back here not knowing for sure what I will be doing next but left free to try to catch up on my old correspondence! Maybe sometime we will be able to get the Robert E. Lee project off the ground. Money has been promised from various sources but as yet hasn't materialized. I have learned to count on nothing in this crazy business so it may happen with surprising suddenness or it may not happen at all." Signed simply "Del" in green marker. Mann directed a number of made-for-television movies around this time making it difficult to determine exactly which film he was filming "during the early part of the summer." And it seems this film involving General Lee never came to pass for nothing resembling this appears in the Mann filmography. An interesting letter. unknown
1950022175Pacific Palisades 24 March 1950. Letter. Near Fine. Single-spaced typed letter on 8-1/2" x 11" personal stationery to Philip Blair Rice editor of THE KENYON REVIEW thanking him for sending an issue of the periodical "with the article by R. P. Blackmur about my novel 'Doctor Faustus'. But it is my desire to tell you that the repeated perusal of the study has given me great satisfaction and that quite apart from its topic I admire Mr. Blackmur's work as a highly distinguished critical achievement." Mann mentions Blair's own essay on Mann's book also published in THE KENYON REVIEW: "'The Merging Parallels' a study I have not forgotten. Together with this new comment it is included in my collection of personal and public reactions to this work of my old age which is particularly close to my heart." <br/><br/> unknown
1941020957Pacific Palisades CA 5 October 1941. Letter. Light creases from mailing. Near Fine. A superb three-page TYPED LETTER SIGNED TLS on Mann's personal stationery to Louis B. Mayer president of MGM Studios commending Mayer for the Studios' contracting of 5 refugee writers in order to allow their immigration to the United States to escape death during World War II: Alfred Doeblin Alfred Polgar Hans Lustig Wilhelm Speyer and Walter Mehring. In part: "It is not my custom to interfere in matters which do not directly concern me; however I should like to take the liberty of presenting to you with confidence a matter which is close to my heart and which is a source of worry for me as well many other well-meaning people. It was one of the finest and most meritorious deeds during these turbulent years which destroyed so much life and happiness a deed which will certainly never be forgotten when the fantastic tale of the emigration of European culture is told that two great Motion Picture Companies in Hollywood decided to give emergency contracts to a number of German and Austrian writers which not only enabled these men to immigrate into the United States but also secured if only for a certain time a basis for their existence." Mann spends most of the letter arguing for the rehiring of these writers for another year not "for unproductive and merely humanitarian purposes" but because "the value of the agreement for the Company has already been demonstrated." An important letter revealing Mann's solidarity with refugee writers during the rise of Fascism in Europe. Mann himself emigrated to the United States in 1939 following the German occupation of Czechoslovakia. The outbreak of World War II on 1 September 1939 prompted Mann to offer anti-Nazi speeches in German to the German people via the BBC and in October 1940 Mann began monthly eight-minute broadcasts recorded in the U.S. and broadcast by the BBC to Germany condemning Hitler and the Nazis. In doing so he was one of the few publicly active opponents of Nazism among German expatriates in the United States. <br/><br/> unknown