131 résultats
1980400371980 Paris, Stock, 1980, in 8° broché, 241 pages ; couverture illustrée.
1986829801986 Paris, Stock, 1986, in 8° broché, 377 pages ; illustrations hors-texte.
23290Paris, Stock, 1980. In-8°, 240p. Broché, couverture illustrée.
197881394Paris, 1978, in-8, 302pp, broché, Très bel exemplaire ! 302pp
Z11705BROCHE STOCK 1978
195453609NY: British Book Center 1954. First American edn. 8vo pp. 136. An excellent copy in sl. soiled dj. Variant blue cloth binding with black spine lettering 1/4" wider than the maroon cloth trade edition. British Book Center unknown books
1954108844New York: The British Book Centre Inc 1954. Hardcover. Near Fine. First American edition. Near fine with a small chip out of the foot and some offsetting on the half-title page and the rear fly and pastedown from a laid in newspaper article. Lacking the dustwrapper. (The British Book Centre, Inc hardcover books
1975WRCLIT20523Chicago: Swallow 1975. Pictorial wrappers. First edition. "Advance Readers Copy Uncorrected Proofs." Wraps slightly darkened but about fine. Swallow paperback books
1975707105Chicago IL: Swallow Press. 1975. Advance Reading Excerpt. Very Good in stapled wrappers. Unless otherwise noted our first editions are first printings. First Edition. Softcover. Very Good. Swallow Press paperback books
54970Claire met Anais Nin at the memorial service for publisher Alan Swallow in the basement of St. Mark's Church in New York City in 1966. A year later after Claire living in Washington DC had started his literary magazine Voyages Nin "spent much time and effort . acting like an upwardly eager associate editor. gushing with ideas and possibilities for future issues . she became deeply involved with every issue including an early issue featuring women writers in 1968. She sent me manuscripts from her friends on both the east and west coasts and some from abroad. She was my most indefatigable advisory editor throughout the life of the publication which ended in the early 1970s." Nin apologizes that there was no time to talk at the Washington cocktail party wants him to send a copy of the new issue of Voyages to her LA address . talks about the Alan Swallow book . asks for help with a documentary film that is being made about her . wonders if his university would be intersted in a copy. The third leaf give Nin's opermission to use her recollections about Alan Swallow in the forthcoming book. Signed "love Anais unknown books
200018337San Francisco 2000. First edition one of 500 copies. Wrappers as new. Contains previously unpublished letters from Nin. <br/><br/> unknown books
1996265509Los Angeles: Anais Nin Foundation 1996. Paperback. 136p. essays fiction memoirs poetry and correspondence very good trade paperback literary journal in pictorial wraps. Anais Nin Foundation paperback books
197272081Chicago 1972. Chicago: 1972. Period reel-to-reel audio recording preserved in an Ohio State University box with manuscript titles on the rear panel. Digitized in early 2020 into wav recordings which are provided on a USB key. The recording is 28 minutes 37 seconds in length. Nin 1903-77 the French-born diarist and passionate eroticist is interviewed by Robert Cromie of the Chicago Tribune for the PBS television program Book Beat. In the course of their wide-ranging conversation which was recorded shortly after the publication of The Diary of Anais Nin Volume Four 1944-1947 1971 she discusses her literary approach: "it's played all kind of the roles the Diary you know it was the story of growth of a woman it was also a notebook and many of the characters in the novels I would start taking from reality from the Diary and then of course they go through a transformation which fiction always does and they will become composites. So there will be two people in one portrait and they change but nevertheless the base of it was in truth in the truth of the Diary and you can find similarities." Nin also speaks to her complicated relationships with writer Gore Vidal and filmmaker Maya Deren among others and the publication of Under a Glass Bell 1944 by her own printing Press which she named Gemor Press. When asked about Henry Miller's bohemian lifestyle she recalls "he was very generous with everything with his ideas with his stories with his life . he's generous to other writers too which is something that we kept from the Paris days and we never understood when we came to New York the absence of fraternity. But then of course the New York scene was different. The French writer never made any money. There was something rather uncommercial about being a writer and we were always helping each other and inspiring each other and encouraging each other and I miss that. Henry continued to encourage writers and I did too. Somebody said the history of art is the history of friendship. Should be." She also touches on a number of topical issues musing on the future of the Diary and sharing her thoughts on feminism: "There's one aspect I'm very much involved in with the creativity of the woman the liberation of the woman. There's an aspect which is very militant which I'm not involved with and you know there are many factions as you know it's already divided into many factions. I'm interested in showing the writing of women their capacities inspiring them and the Diaries of course have meant a great deal to women because it's unusual to have the story of a woman's growth. We never had a record of that and I was always interested in the growth of plants I would watch plants grow. I think I love to see the growth of human beings and I found the only one I could really record scientifically completely was my own and I think this became the story of growth for other women: examining the conflicts and the obstacles and watching day by day how you could expand without damaging others how could you grow without being destructive and all the problems that a woman has. unknown books
194754339NY: Dutton 1947. First Edition. 8vo pp. 182. Black cloth. Front hinge barely beginning tender edges slightly scuffed and bumped o/w VG in little chipped and somewhat soiled dj. Dutton unknown books
194753610NY: Dutton 1947. First Edition. 8vo pp.182. A fine copy in near fine dj. Inscribed by the author: "Bill said nobody cared To Bill one who cares for Voyages and its editor Anais" Franklin A10a. An association copy: William Claire met Anais Nin at the memorial service for publisher Alan Swallow in the basement of St. Mark's Church in New York City in 1966. A year later after Claire living in Washington DC had started his literary magazine Voyages Nin "spent much time and effort . acting like an upwardly eager associate editor. gushing with ideas and possibilities for future issues . she became deeply involved with every issue including an early issue featuring women writers in 1968. She sent me manuscripts from her friends on both the east and west coasts and some from abroad. She was my most indefatigable advisory editor throughout the life of the publication which ended in the early 1970s." Claire later organized a memorial service for her in Washington DC. Dutton unknown books
5209NY DUTTON 1947. FIRST EDITION VERY GOOD. F. NY, DUTTON, 1947 unknown books
195939568London:: Peter Owen. Very Good in Very Good dust jacket. 1959. Hardcover. Preface by Lawrence Durrell. First edition thus. Previous owner's name on front free endpaper else very good in a very good minor edge wear strip of age toning on rear panel dust jacket. . Peter Owen, hardcover books
19641601Nin Anaïs. <b>Collages</b>. Chicago: The Swallow Press Inc. 1964. Third Printing. <br /><br />Octavo 8 1/2 x 5 3/8 inches; 215 x 135 mm 122 pages in perfect-bound wrappers.<br /><br /><b>INSCRIBED</b> by Anaïs Nin on the front end paper to the late art historian Peter Selz: "To Peter Selz / for a delightful / and interesting / evening / with friendship / Anaïs Nin." Ostensibly a novel it's actually a collection of stories revolving around a young painter named Renate. Laid in is a 1971 black-and-white photo of Nin 1903-1977 by Jill Krementz. <br /><br />CONDITION: Soiling rubbing and slight fading to wrappers internally clean and bright. A Very Good copy. The Swallow Press Inc. books
196453619London: Peter Owen 1964. First English edition. Small 8vo pp. 170. A fine copy in price clipped dj rear cover little soiled. Peter Owen unknown books
1961226355London: Neville Spearman 1961. First. hardcover. fine/fine. 146pp. Thin 8vo cloth d.w. London: Neville Spearman 1961.First English Edition.<br/><br/> Date cancelled on copyright page.<br/><br/> Neville Spearman unknown books
1932406713Paris: Edward W. Titus 1932. A fine unopened copy in a near-fine jacket lightly toned and with some modest chipping at extremities light soiling to the rear panel. 8vo. 10 146 2 pages. Original blue cloth gilt-lettered on front cover and spine unopened; printed dust jacket. FIRST EDITION of the author's first book number 491 of 500 copies numbered on the colophon and with publisher's stamped slip with number from an edition of 550 of which 50 were for the press. PRESENTATION COPY inscribed on the front free endpaper: "For Richard who accompanies me faithfully on the inner-outer voyage started with this book / Love Anais / February 21 1973." The recipient is most likely Richard Centing co-founder of the first Anais Nin periodical. Centing invited Nin to Ohio State to give lectures and championed her work internationally. Franklin A1. <br/><br/> Edward W. Titus hardcover books
196453608Chicago: Swallow 1964. First U. S. edition fourth printing. 8vo pp. 110. Introduction by Henry T. Moore. Paper wraps. Owner's name inside cover o/w VG. Nin's first book originally published in Paris in 1932 in a limited edition. Swallow unknown books
196443182Chicago: Swallow 1964. First U. S. edition third printing. 8vo pp. 110. Introduction by Henry T. Moore. Paper wraps. Owner's bookplate inside cover lower edge of leaves slightly rippled cover somewhat soiled o/w VG. Nin's first book originally published in Paris in 1932 in a limited edition. Swallow unknown books
196436994Chicago: Swallow Press 1964. Fourth printing. 8vo pp. 110. Paper wraps. Cover slightly soiled o/w a VG tight copy. Swallow Press unknown books
193253607Paris: Edward W. Titus 1932. First Edition. 8vo pp. 146. A fine copy in near fine dj. One of 550 copies this copy not numbered. Franklin A1a. Nin's first book. According to the Ohio University Press which issued a later edition of the work "In 1932 two years after D. H. Lawrence's death a young woman wrote a book about him and presented it to a Paris publisher. She recorded the event in her diary: 'It will not be published and out by tomorrow which is what a writer would like when the book is hot out of the oven when it is alive within oneself. He gave it to his assistant to revise.' Edward W. Titus unknown books