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63666659The McGraw-Hill Company pp. 704 . Papeback. New. The McGraw-Hill Company unknown
64343354The McGraw-Hill Company pp. xxvi 672 1st Edition . Papeback. New. The McGraw-Hill Company unknown
1952210511952. Ives Morgan; Aldrich Ann; Mark Edwina; Flamond Pierre; Brock Lilyan. Lesbian pulp fiction collection 1952-1970 documenting the development of lesbian representation within mid-twentieth-century mass market literature. These works situate same-sex desire within popular fiction at a time when such themes were often constrained by censorship and mediated through pseudonymous authorship. The collection includes both female and male-authored texts with several written by women including figures associated with early pro-lesbian pulp offering insight into how narratives of identity desire and social transgression were constructed and circulated within mid-century print culture.<br /> <br /> Collection comprises 5 mass market paperback novels ranging from approximately 150 to 250 pages and measuring about 4.25" x 7". 1 Ives Morgan pseudonym of Marion Zimmer Bradley. Spare Her Heaven. Derby Connecticut: Monarch Books 1963. First edition. Narrative centers on a charismatic female leader of a communal group presenting themes of sexual autonomy and resistance to conventional gender roles. 2 Aldrich Ann pseudonym of Marijane Meaker. Carol in a Thousand Cities. Greenwich Connecticut: Fawcett Publications 1960. First edition. A collection blending fictional and documentary-style accounts of lesbian life across multiple settings extending Meaker's engagement with reader correspondence and community experience. 3 Mark Edwina pseudonym of Edwin Fadiman Jr. My Sister My Beloved. New York: Berkley Publishing Corporation 1958. A narrative framed around taboo relationships within a domestic setting reflecting mid-century pulp conventions of sensational subject matter. 4 Flamond Pierre. Gays & Dolls. New York: Bee-Line Books 1970. Depicts a suburban milieu in which female same-sex relationships emerge within social networks presented through the stylistic and marketing conventions of later pulp fiction. 5 Brock Lilyan. Queer Patterns. New York: Eton Books 1952. Originally published in 1935 this reissued work presents an early narrative of same-sex attachment framed through conflict and social constraint. Across the volumes cover art frequently depicts pairs of women in stylized poses employing visual tropes of intimacy and tension characteristic of the genre.<br /> <br /> Produced during a period when lesbian themes were marginalized within mainstream publishing these works demonstrate how pulp fiction operated as a primary medium for the circulation of queer narratives. Authors such as Meaker contributed to expanding the range of representation available to readers while the inclusion of both male and female authors highlights the varied perspectives shaping the genre. Light wear to covers and minor handling visible; textblocks remain intact; overall very good condition. This collection offers a representative grouping of lesbian pulp fiction illustrating shifts in authorship and narrative approach across two decades. unknown
1959210341959. Bannon Ann. I Am a Woman. Gardner Miriam. The Strange Women. Sinclair Marianne. The Corruption of Innocence. Henry Joan. Women in Prison. Smith Artemis. The Third Sex. These mid-twentieth century paperback novels document women-authored representations of same-sex relationships and queer social life within a publishing field largely dominated by male writers working under pseudonyms. Issued between 1953 and 1964 these works provide primary evidence of how lesbian identity gender nonconformity and same-sex relationships were depicted in commercially distributed fiction during a period when homosexuality remained criminalized and pathologized in both medical and legal frameworks. Ann Bannon's I Am a Woman part of the Beebo Brinker series occupies a central place in lesbian literary history as one of the earliest widely circulated narratives to present lesbian identity through recurring characters and urban social networks while Marion Zimmer Bradley writing as Miriam Gardner contributed to the genre through emotionally centered narratives of same-sex relationships. Joan Henry's Women in Prison grounded in her own incarceration intersects with carceral studies and gendered confinement while Artemis Smith's The Third Sex addresses both male and female homosexuality within a shared social framework. Several titles align with evaluative frameworks established by Barbara Grier identifying works with sustained lesbian characters and narrative focus situating this grouping within early lesbian reading cultures prior to the emergence of organized gay and lesbian liberation movements.<br /> <br /> Bannon Ann pen name of Ann Weldy. I Am a Woman. Greenwich Conn.: Fawcett Publications 1959. First edition first printing. Mass-market paperback.<br /> Gardner Miriam pen name of Marion Zimmer Bradley. The Strange Women. Derby Conn.: Monarch Books 1962. First edition. Mass-market paperback.<br /> Sinclair Marianne. The Corruption of Innocence. New York: Macfadden-Bartell 1964. First American edition. Mass-market paperback.<br /> Henry Joan. Women in Prison. New York: Permabooks 1953. Second edition. Mass-market paperback.<br /> Smith Artemis pen name of Annselm Morpurgo. The Third Sex. New York: Beacon Signal Books 1963. Second edition. Mass-market paperback.<br /> Group of five paperback volumes spanning 1953 to 1964 each measuring approximately 4.25 x 7 inches and generally ranging between 120 and 250 pages. Illustrated covers follow mid-century pulp conventions frequently depicting women in intimate or emotionally charged poses paired with promotional language such as "I Am a Woman In Love With A Woman-Must Society Reject Me" I Am a Woman and "They were trapped by their forbidden love" The Strange Women. Narrative content includes first lesbian relationships urban social networks carceral environments and negotiated heterosexual marriages as in The Third Sex which presents a marriage of convenience between a gay man and a lesbian woman. The Corruption of Innocence situates its narrative within expatriate and nightlife environments in Paris while Women in Prison provides a semi-autobiographical account of women's incarceration and interpersonal dynamics within institutional confinement.<br /> <br /> These works circulated within an expanding postwar paperback industry that enabled the distribution of controversial subject matter through inexpensive formats even as publishers framed lesbian content through sensationalized language to navigate censorship and obscenity standards. Female-authored contributions introduced perspectives grounded in lived experience emotional interiority and social negotiation contributing to the development of lesbian literary traditions that would later intersect with feminist and gay liberation movements of the late 1960s and 1970s. Clean covers and interiors with tight textblocks; light handling wear including a noted crease to the upper corner of The Strange Women; overall good to very good condition. The grouping offers a concentrated record of women-authored lesbian fiction within mid-century mass-market publishing and supports research into sexuality gender and print culture. unknown
O05A-01558Healthways. Used - Good. Good condition. A copy that has been read but remains intact. May contain markings such as bookplates stamps limited notes and highlighting or a few light stains. Bundled media such as CDs DVDs floppy disks or access codes may not be included. Healthways unknown
35805381-nnew. unknown
35805381like new. unknown
2021x-110842256XCambridge University Press 2021. Hardcover. New. 225 pages. 9.02x5.98x0.44 inches. Cambridge University Press hardcover
ria9781108422567_inpHardcover. New. New Book; Fast Shipping from UK; Not signed; Not First Edition; This exploration of human choice in international legal and political decision making will be of use to scholars students and practitioners interested in the neurobiology of how people choose and the history of how personal choice has hardcover
ria9781108435550_inpPaperback. New. New Book; Fast Shipping from UK; Not signed; Not First Edition; This exploration of human choice in international legal and political decision making will be of use to scholars students and practitioners interested in the neurobiology of how people choose and the history of how personal choice has paperback
2021x-1108435556Cambridge University Press 2021. Paperback. New. 225 pages. 9.02x5.98x0.37 inches. Cambridge University Press paperback
B9781108435550Paperback / softback. New. This exploration of human choice in international legal and political decision making will be of use to scholars students and practitioners interested in the neurobiology of how people choose and the history of how personal choice has affected decisions about international peace and security. paperback
B9781108422567Hardback. New. This exploration of human choice in international legal and political decision making will be of use to scholars students and practitioners interested in the neurobiology of how people choose and the history of how personal choice has affected decisions about international peace and security. hardcover
19300001287DETROIT FLORIDA CALIFORNIA. Good. 1930. On offer is the fascinating original manuscript diary of Miss Anne Bernstein b. May 28 1914 of Michigan the diary starts out with her first living in Dryden and then a year later the family moves to Detroit. This is a very unique diary inasmuch it is a travel diary of the many many trips Anne made from her teens as a high spirited young woman on road trips or hitchhiking on numerous short and long distance trips in 1930 to vacation trips holiday excursions hospital stays weekned visits etc. a mature and sometimes married woman would take over the next 25 years until 1955. Through Anne's travel lists and narrative we are in truth documenting her adult life. The first page lists 12 different trips in the summer through to Thanksgiving. In 1931 the entries become somewhat more detailed and the 'Ran away from home' makes for an ominous entry in green ink. But with all her rebelliousness and running around partying and boys Anne is at heart a very nice Jewish girl who gets married to Benjamin Bradley at the Heights Temple in Cleveland by Rabbi Rosenthal. Over 88 pages of entries we see a life and get an intimate look at what Anne was like and her experiences including her single years hitchhiking all over the place her marriage to Ben Bradley the birth of her children including twins the family's move to Florida living in California with her husband because he's in the Navy her horse racing and everything in between. Plus she seems to love to drink and smoke and on numerous occasions "swears off of both" but that promise to herself doesn't last too long. Here are some snippets of this super diary: "July 5th 1930 Hitch hiked to Almont Imlay Romeo Clifford North Branch and Kingstom. 160 miles." "September 5th 1931 Labor day. To parade at Romeo with mother father Sammy Lily Niki and I. Then to Detroit and new home at 16161 Roselawn." "July 30th 1932 To Lakeville to swim with mailman. Also back with him on his afternoon route." "July 4th 1933 Race at Dryden. I came in first. Beat Allison and Higbee's horses." "Labor Day 1933 Spent weekend at farm with family. Horse races at Race Track. Sam won Farmer's race. I won the heavy pong race." "October 7th & 10th 1934 With Morrey Lily mother and me to Florida. Lower Michigan Ohio Kentucky Tennessee Georgia Florida. Miami Beach. 1665 James Ave .Arrived in Florida nice trip. Stayed at Villa D'este Hotel on Biscayne Blvd." "November 15th 1934 Got a job at "Petrie's" Flagler St. Miami Florida. Met Esther Weinberg and Mrs. Petrie." "February 14th 1935 Valentines Day. Met Allen Serlin and swore off smoking forever. Not for Allen for Sammy Broke resolution June 1935. See New Year's eve 1936." "December 31st 1935 New Year's eve. Lily Harold mother and I quietly saw the new year in at our apt. at 642 Michigan Ave. Miami Beach Florida. Went swimming today also." "January 7th 1937 Thursday. Arrived in Miami 11:00 a.m. Rented an apt with Sherman's at Seville Plaza at 642 Michigan Miami Beach. Saw William's Fish Kaplain's Sangerman's Neham's George and Stacey." "February 6th 1937 Saturday. Decided to leave Sherman's at 642 Michigan. Saw Mrs. Titelbaum at Blackstone. Engaged as governess for Arline 8 years old and Carol 4 ½ years old. Room board and salary." "March 27th 1937 Friday. Moved to our new flat at 3200 W. Philadelphia. Good luck and happiness I hope." "November 18th 1938 Left for Cleveland with Lily via Mercury. Dinner on train. Ben and Harvey met us at the station. Checked in to Hollender Hotel. To Ohio Villa. Saw Marian and Cal Smith." "April 22nd 1939 5:30 Mercury to Cleveland. Ben gave me a gorgeous engagement ring Tuesday April 25th." "August 30th 1939 To bed at 11:30. Spent an absolutely sleepless night. Heard war declared over radio by Hitler. Sept. 1st 5:00 Det. time." "September 25th & 26th 1939 New York. Ben Bradley and I were married at Heights Temple Cleveland by Rabbi Rosenthal." "October 1st 1939 Took cab to Lakeview Rd. Rented an apartment at Sovereign Hotel. Married life is marvelous. I have a wonderful Husband. Now: Mrs. Ben Bradley!" "November 25th 1942 Ben enlisted in U.S. Navy 1st class petty officer." "February 25th 1943 Arrived in Los Angeles after a perfect trip. Took a bus to Oxnard and cab to Port Hueneme Ben's C. B. Camp. Finally met Ben at USO at Oxnard. Spent night at home of Ben Rich." "February 24th 1945 Hitch hiked to Van Nuys Cal. To Helen Cole's "Golden Egg Ranch". The diary was kept in a 3 ½" x 5 ¾" journal titled "My Travels" which really describes Anne's life the best. She doesn't seem to stay in one place for very long. The cover is worn and pulling away a bit from the binding and a few pages are torn out but overall G.; Manuscript; 16mo - over 5¾" - 6¾" tall; DEPRESSION ERA HITCHHIKING TRAMPING TRAVEL JUDAICA JEWISH JUDAISM FEMINISM GENDER STUDIES WOMEN'S STUDIES HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH DIARY JOURNAL LOG KEEPSAKE WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS DIARIES JOURNALS LOGS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL PERSONAL HISTORY CANADIANA TRAVEL GERMANY ANTIQUITÉ CONTRAT VÉLIN MANUSCRIT PAPIER ANTIKE BRIEF PERGAMENT DOKUMENT . unknown
2014G1490823263I3N10WestBow Press 2014. Hardcover. Good. Former library book; Pages can have notes/highlighting. Spine may show signs of wear. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More Spend Less.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed. WestBow Press hardcover
2010Q-3540429409Springer 2010-01-27. Paperback. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Springer paperback
198800482BARDIC VOICES ONE Hypatia Press 1988 first edition fine in gray pictorial boards without dust-wrapper as issued. Of 825 copies SIGNED by all the authors this is noted as a PC copy. We don't know if this indicates that it is out of series or 1/75 remaining publishers copies. Edited by Alan Bard Newcomer. Hypatia Press hardcover
199010567PULPHOUSE THE HARDBACK MAGAZINE #6 Pulphouse Publishing 1990 first edition as new without dust-wrapper as issued bound in full leather and designated as a "Red Staff" edition SIGNED by the editor Kristine Kathryn Rusch as well as contributors Charles de Lint Avram Davidson George Alec Effinger Steve Perry Joyce Thompson Bradley Denton Darrell Schweitzer Richard Paul Russo Emma Bull et.al. 1/10 copies. Never offered for sale. Pulphouse Publishing hardcover
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B9781498226516Hardback. New. hardcover
A9781108427548Hardback. New. Mass incarceration is an overwhelming problem and caring about reform often leads to paralysis about what to do and where to start. This book introduces the key issues that need our immediate attention providing concrete direction about effective solutions systemically and relationally because criminals are persons with inherent dignity. hardcover
45840177like new. unknown
ria9781498283922_inpHardcover. New. New Book; Fast Shipping from UK; Not signed; Not First Edition; Life happens at the intersection of faith and culture. Whether we are Christians or not we all have some narrative about the way the world ought to be that shapes how we view the world and live our lives. In this book Anthony Bradley hardcover
B9781498283922Hardback. New. hardcover
B9781433111839Hardback. New. Suitable for courses in African American studies race and religion political economy social ethics and theological ethics at upper-level undergraduate or graduate level this book offers opportunity for a trajectory of dialogue between theologians and political economists about poverty human dignity and justice in ways previously unexplored. hardcover