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1931ZB369676San Francisco 1931-1976. volumes 20-26 28-30 32-36 38 39 42 43 45-50 58 62-64 partly bound ex library very good; PRICE IS FOR THE LOT. - If you are reading this this item is actually physically in our stock and ready for shipment once ordered. We are not bookjackers. Buyer is responsible for any additional duties taxes or fees required by recipient's country. Photos available upon request. San Francisco unknown
1960049519New York City Ny: The Worker 1960. 1st Edition . Soft cover. Near Fine. Annotated Illustrations Throughout. 96 Pp. Card Covers Printed Entirely In Red; Paper Loss Along Fore Edges Of Rear Cover Surface Only And Not Affecting The Lettering And Last Two Leaves A Few Small Holes Not Affecting Lettering. Signed By Eight Prominent Figures At The Worker The Daily Worker In Those Years; From The Library Of William Gropper <br/> <br/> The Worker paperback
174752088à Amsterdam: Chez Pierre Mortier 1747. Fine. Chez Pierre Mortier à Amsterdam 1747 10 x 17 cm relié First edition. The French edition was expanded with additions and corrections communicated by Berkeley to Bouillier before he began his translation. Title page in red and black. Contemporary brown speckled sheep binding. Raised-band spine richly decorated roulette at foot. Red morocco title-label. Headcap torn away. Tailcap worn. Joints cracked at head and foot. 2 wormholes on spine. Small nibbling to last leaf in upper margin on less than one cm. Fairly good copy. Tar water was a medicine used since the Middle Ages composed of pine or birch tar. Its use spread in 18th-century England. Berkeley describes for the first time its use in a wide variety of cases and wonders whether it might not be the universal panacea. He extrapolates as to its efficacy from a study of mind and soul of which ether would be the divine instrument and the thing that binds beings together. Tar water would be used in various forms until the end of the 19th century. Bergson particularly appreciated the philosophical qualities of the treatise. Chez Pierre Mortier unknown
1896616247 uniform volumes each illustrated with numerous coloured and black & white plates including lithographs and engravings complete with 122 illustrations in total" Published by Edward Arnold hardcover
173226337London: J. Tonson 1732. 2 vols. 8vo pp. 14 356; 8 218; engraved vignette title-pp.; bound with as issued An Essay towards a New Theory of Vision pp. 12 215-351; several woodcuts in the text; full contemporary calf double gilt rules on covers unlettered spines in 6 compartments volume designations in 1; some moderate chipping and cracking of the spines but all in all a good and reasonably sound set. Rothschild 372 citing the first edition of the same year: "Alciphron was written in America where Berkeley had gone to await funds which never came for his projected College in the Bermudas. J. Tonson unknown
2012DADAX1613771762IDW 2012-07-10. 10/28/12. hardcover. New. 8.60x1.40x11.30. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. IDW hardcover
1950mon0000103474Collins 1950-01-01. Hardcover. Good. in x in x in. Ex-library book usual markings. Hardback/Hardcover. Clean copy in good condition. Collins hardcover
1938005474UK: Collins 1938. 1st Edition 1st Printing. Hardcover. Near Fine/Very Good. Vultures Ltd Signed & Inscribed by Berkeley Gray First Edition Collins 1938. No inscriptions lightly foxed edges. Covers are near fine in original near VG dust jacket. Not clipped and correctly priced 7/6. SIGNED BY BERKELEY GRAY directly to ffep. <br/> <br/> Collins hardcover
1767158145London: Printed by assignment from the executors of the late Mr. Tonson for J. Beecroft 1767. Stated fourth edition though in fact a re-issue of the third edition sheets of 1752 with a cancel title page. In Alciphron first published in 1732 Berkeley rebuts the insurgent secular intellectual trends of the early Enlightenment. Countering the views of Locke Mandeville and the third Earl of Shaftesbury who collectively manifest as the conceited free thinkers Lysicles and Alciphron Berkeley defends traditional Christianity and his own idealist epistemology. Octavo 206 x 129 mm. Nineteenth-century half calf green calf label marbled sides sprinkled edges. 19th-century bookplate of one Daniel Frazer to front pastedown. A little rubbed small chip at foot of rear joint binding firm scattered light foxing else clean slight paper fault to A8 not affecting text; a very good copy. ESTC N15774; Keynes 25; Jessop 169. unknown
1890224792J. B. Lippincott. Good. 1890. Hardcover. A Good Read ships from Toronto and Niagara Falls NY - customers outside of North America please allow two to three weeks for delivery. First American edition. Some scratches to front board. Moderate rubbing on edges. PO name on ffep. Some writing on facing title page. ; 8vo 8" - 9" tall . J. B. Lippincott hardcover
1939419795New York: Doubleday Doran & Company for The Crime Club 1939. Hardcover. Very Good/Good. First American edition. Owner's small bookplate on front pastedown binders glue offsetting on endpapers and pastedowns very good in an about very good foxed and edgeworn dustwrapper with internal tape repair on chipped top spine end. A mystery novel especially scarce in jacket. Doubleday, Doran & Company for The Crime Club hardcover
189129399London / New York: Hildesheimer & Faulkner / Geo. C. Whitney 1891. Very good plus. Striking chromolithographed shape book of the classic nursery rhyme with cover image of a realistic late Victorian shoe. 6.25'' x 8.25'' approx. Original thread-bound stiff paper wrappers. Illustrated by Berkeley with lovely chromolithographs. 14 pages. A couple creases and nicks to wrappers. Light foxing to leaves. Marvelously intact. Hildesheimer & Faulkner / Geo. C. Whitney unknown
16981547London: Printed for L. Meredith at the Star in St. Paul's Church-Yard 1698. Newly reprinted with additions being the Fourth Impression. . Leather Bound. Very Good. pp. 11 192. 12mo. Full calf over boards; four raised bands to spine five compartments. Newer endpapers. Engraved head-pieces. Light rubbing to the leather extremities superficial surface cracks to the leather on the spine unaffecting the binding which remains tight sound. The leather exterior has recently been professionally replenished and treated with a natural leather preserver. Period ink name to the ffep and top margin of the title page extensive period inscription though in neat and quite lovely penmanship to the rear endpapers; the text-block itself remains clean and unmarked. Scarce with only one extant copy in commerce at time of catalogunig. A handsome and remarkably well preserved presentation; very good. See ESTC Citation No. R25278 006091819. <br/><br/> Printed for L. Meredith, at the Star in St. Paul's Church-Yard hardcover
1826240826003London: Henry Colburn 1826. 1st Edition. Hardcover. Very Good. <br /> OVERALL CONDITION: VERY GOOD<br /> <br /> BOOK INFO<br /> <br /> Published in 1826 by Henry Colburn in London. First edition first printing. In mid-nineteenth century 1/2 black morocco over marbled paper fine Riviere binding: Five raised spine bands compartments with gilt emblems or lettering; top edges gilt marbled endpapers bordering in gilt. Octavo 9"x 6" VIII 430 pp.; VII 406 pp. Each volume with a frontispiece. Two volumes complete. <br /> <br /> This first edition of this autobiographical work from socialite author and playwright Elizabeth Princess Berkeley sometimes styled Margravine of Brandenburg-Ansbach. Published only two years prior to the author's death. She was an author and playwright perhaps best known for her travelogues. Early in her literary career she wrote a number of light farces pantomimes and fables some of which were performed in London. She knew Samuel Johnson and James Boswell and became a close friend of Horace Walpole who published her early works.<br /> <br /> CONDITION REPORT<br /> <br /> The books are in VERY GOOD antiquarian condition for 160-year-old binding. Square spines with firm hinges and joints. One gutter between flyleaves cracked. Rubbed extremities and joints. Corners bumped. Some pencil writing and partially erased pencil writing to blank flyleaves in volume I. Pages are quite clean and bright with the exception of some foxing to endpapers and frontispieces and an occasional spot or two of light foxing elsewhere.<br /> <br /> ABOUT THE BINDERY <br /> <br /> This lovely set was bound by hand by world-famous bindery Rivi re now Bayntun-Riviere of Bath England the last remaining private bindery in England that still uses the same antique tools and refined craftsmanship that it has since this book was bound by hand over 160 years ago. This 2-volume set was published between 1840 and 1860 as it is signed simply "Riviere" on the bottom of the first blank flyleaf. Henry Colburn hardcover
200153London: Hurst and Blackett 1861 1st Edition. Half leather 431pp. Very good. Frontispiece illustrations. Light wear. Front hinge a little tender. Attractive copy with raised bands and gilt. Howes B371 "Buffalo hunting around Fort Riley and western Kansas." Wagner-Camp 368. Sabin 4883. Hurst and Blackett Paperback
2002ANAIS-075510210XHouse of Stratus Ltd 2002-01-01. paperback. Good. 20.1x13.5x2.8. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. House of Stratus Ltd paperback
182027212Richard Priestley 1820. New edition. Hardcover. Good Condition/not applicable. A good complete and sound set. Binder's dark blue buckram bindings lettered in gilt. Cloth slightly faded. No inscriptions. 4 lxxv 411; 4 455; 4 476 pp. Volume II with the folding plate of Tabula Lusoria Volume III with the folding plate of "The City of Bermuda Metropolis of the Summer Islands." Keynes 'Bibliography of George Berkeley' p. 262. Size approx. 11" by 8.5". Quantity Available: 1. Category: Mathematics; Pictures of this item not already displayed here available upon request. Inventory No: 27212. . Richard Priestley hardcover
20072-1412946166Sage Pubns Ltd 2007. Hardcover. New. 161 pages. 9.25x6.25x0.50 inches. Sage Pubns Ltd hardcover
197035425Berkeley: Berkeley Political Poster Workshop 1970. Original illustrated poster silkscreened in black on white repurposed computer listing paper with perforated tractor strips measuring ca.38cm x 56cm 15" x 22". A Fine copy / A. <br /> <br /> A simple powerful anti-war image by an uncredited Berkeley student. The image is reproduced from a 1968 AP photograph of the bodies of US Marines on Hill 689 in Khe Sanh South Vietnam. The poster "is an indirect invocation of the political order in the United States and for those who remember a reminder that both Lyndon Johnson in 1964 and Richard Nixon in 1968 won the presidency with promises of peace - which were then contradicted by their actions." Benson Thomas W. Posters for Peace: Visual Rhetoric and Civic Action. One of some 600 designs created by Berkeley student members of the Political Poster Workshop in 1970; on average fewer than 100 copies of each design were printed for distribution on and around campus. Not individually listed in OCLC though we note copies held at Yale and Penn State. WILLIAMS 28. Berkeley Political Poster Workshop unknown
197055917Berkeley: Berkeley Political Poster Workshop 1970. Original illustrated poster silkscreened in black and burnt orange on repurposed computer listing paper with perforated tractor strips measuring 38cm x 56cm 15" x 22". Thin strip of toning a few tiny splits; Near Fine. <br /> <br /> Among the most striking designs created by Berkeley student members of the Political Poster Workshop in 1970 depicting a young Vietnamese boy carrying his baby brother on his back. On average fewer than 100 copies of each design were printed for distribution on and around campus. This variant not in WILLIAMS 4973: Berkeley Protest Posters 1970 - see p.118. Berkeley Political Poster Workshop unknown
83078Berkeley: Political Poster Workshop 1970. Original silkscreen in red printed on white poster paper measuring 77.74cm x 58.5cm 29" x 23". Short repaired tear in left margin; hand-inked date 7/2/70 at upper right else Near Fine. Unlike the majority of BPPW posters this one is not printed on repurposed computer paper but rather on higher-quality poster paper in a larger than usual format. <br /> <br /> One of some 600 designs created by Berkeley student members of the Political Poster Workshop a student anti-war graphics collective over the course of the 1970 academic year; on average fewer than a few hundred copies of each design were printed for distribution on and around campus. Not in Williams. unknown
19035696Berkeley California: The Church; Printed by thePress of Standard Publishing Company 1903. Octavo 23.25 x 14 cm. iv 171 i pages. Advertisements. Index. Evident first edition but subsequent to an 1884 publication with different subtitle author statement and publisher. A generous church cookbook with seven hundred recipes; noteworthy among them: Squash Muffins Celery Root and Hearts of Artichoke Mussel Bordelaise Clam Patties Spanish Meat Pie Coffee Fruit Cake Lemon Cocoanut Cake Cookies with Sherry Monterey Pudding Gooseberry Pudding Pineapple Blanc-Mange Strawberry Mousse. ~ Congregationalists answered the call from President Daniel Coit Gilman 1831-1908 of the University of California to build a hall and organize a fellowship of moral vision within reach of the campus community. The “local church†emphasis of Congregationalist governance had already attracted the largest Protestant presence in San Francisco. After ten years of planning members of Berkeley First Congregational were called to new quarters by a recently cast bell on 30 September 1884 at the corner of Durant Avenue and Dana Street. Thus the early version of The Berkeley Cook Book subtitled A Collection of Choice and Tested Recipes celebrated the dedication of the 1884 church while its younger sibling of 1903 would have appeared in time to honor the building’s twentieth anniversary. ~ In another twenty years they would move again to a grander brick complex on Channing Way still only a few city blocks from campus designed by the Bay Area architect Horace Gardner Simpson. It served successive generations for ninety years but in September 2016 was gutted by fire and the building’s fate is undetermined as of this writing. ~ Clean and bright. Lightly wear at fore-corners and spine. Stapled in olive wrappers titled in brown. Very good. OCLC locates three copies also four copies of The Berkeley Cook Book: A Collection of Choice and Tested Recipes by the Ladies of Berkeley Oakland: Pacific Press 1884; Cook page 27; Brown 57 with different pagination; not in Cagle. [The Church; Printed by the]Press of Standard Publishing Company unknown
1972232591972. Prison and IncarcerationSocial activism Prison reform organizing conference broadside. Attica and San Quentin prison organizing stand at the center of this January 1972 Berkeley conference broadside which opens with a Brecht quote "Slave who is it that shall free you.all of us or none" and declares that "no one in America today is more a slave than the inmates in American prisons." The text ties prison struggle to "class and racial oppression" names the murders at Attica and San Quentin and frames the prison system as a site of beatings drugs "behavior modification" and brain surgery schemes. The conference was held just a few months after the 1971 Attica uprising during which prisoners revolted against inhumane treatment and racial discrimination in a violent struggle that left 39 dead. The conference roster grounds the prison rights moment Bay Area Black liberation featuring figures including Afeni Shakur Fay Stender and former Soledad Prison chief psychiatrist Frank Rundle. <br /> "Slave Who Is It Shall Free You . . . All of Us or None." The Struggle Inside. Prison Action Conference. Berkeley 1972. Single-sheet broadside 8.5 x 11 inches for a prison action conference scheduled for January 28-30 in Pauley Ballroom UC Berkeley printed on both sides. Recto features two halftone prison photographs and a dense typed manifesto arguing that prisoner demands had moved "from traditional demands for food and shelter to demands for civil and religious rights and finally to a general challenge to the prison system and the society which fosters it." It announces the conference as "a forum for self education and exploration of potential action to assist the prison movement" with key speakers Afeni Shakur a defendant in the Panther 21 trial Fay Stender a Berkeley attorney with years of prison movement experience and Frank Rundle former chief psychiatrist at Soledad Prison. Verso gives the full three-day program: Friday evening remarks by Stender and Shakur; Saturday sessions on "Medical Repression in Prisons" "Adult Authority and Indeterminate Sentencing" "Economics of Prisons" "Juvenile Reformatories and Detention" and "Prisoners Demands"; and Sunday sessions on "Women in Prison" "Defense of Political Prisoners" "Military Prisons" "Prison-Community Communications" "Prisoners Organizations" "County Jails and Pre-trial Detention" plus a closing "Panel Discussion on Racism." <br /> The broadside illustrates the actions and intentions of the Berkeley prison movement at a time when prison rebellion legal defense anti-racist analysis and ex-prisoner testimony were being brought before public audiences in the aftermath of the Attica Uprising. Afeni Shakur's appearance links the handbill to the political world of the Black Panther movement while the inclusion of sessions on women in prison political prisoners juvenile detention county jails and medical repression demonstrate the intersectional goals of the movement and the broadening of post-Attica activism from outrage over one massacre to a larger indictment of prison administration and criminal punishment. Some light staining; otherwise very good condition. A Bay Area prison movement piece that preserves both the rhetoric and the working program of organizing against U.S. imprisonment in the immediate aftermath of the 1971 Attica Uprising. unknown
1902009229Westminster: Archibald Constable & Co. Ltd. 1902 xiv 403pp 1 16pp printed on laid paper with deckled page edges bound in red cloth inner hinges starting but holding complete with all six maps being three full page maps one partial folding map and two folding maps in back slightly toned. This appears to be an working copy as there are occasional editorial marking and corrections in pencil. Covers are scuffed with a sunned spine and bumped corners. The interior shows foxing to the preliminary pages inscription on the front free endpaper "For N.O.J.H. Oct. 31 1902". From the personal collection of Dr. Brooks Ryder 1918-1995 graduate of Harvard College Harvard School of Public Health and Tufts Medical School. Known for his Public Health expertise overseas throughout East Africa and Indonesia. Archibald Constable & Co. Ltd. hardcover
1947140202Los Angeles: Twentieth Century-Fox 1947. Final Draft script for the 1948 film. Copy belonging to Robert Arthur who play Ken McLaughlin with his name on the front wrapper in manuscript pencil. <br /> <br /> A mare has been lured away by a wild stallion angering the mare's owner Beaver Greenway a horse owner with a drinking problem. Meanwhile Ken McLaughlin Arthur returns home with a new horse who has developed altitude sickness. Based on the third book in Mary O'Hara's "My Friend Flicka" trilogy. Nominated for one Academy Award. <br /> <br /> Set in Wyoming shot on location in Wyoming Utah and Ohio USA. <br /> <br /> Blue titled wrappers noted as Final on the front wrapper rubber-stamped copy No. 84 and production No. 133 dated April 7 1947. Distribution page present with receipt removed. Title page present dated April 7 1947 noted as Final Script with credits for screenwriter Martin Berkeley. 129 leaves with last page of text numbered 127. Mimeograph duplication. Pages Very Good with dampstaining at the edges of a few leaves wrapper Very Good with some dampstaining on the front and rear wrappers. Bound internally with three gold brads. Twentieth Century-Fox unknown