5 520 résultats
19897961San Francisco: Chronicle Books 1989. Very Good. San Francisco: Chronicle Books 1989. First Edition Wrapper Issue. Slim folio 30.5cm.; publisher's photo-illustrated card wrappers French flaps; 159pp.; color photographs throughout. Light shelf wear else Very Good or better. Inscribed and signed by the photographer on half title: "To Phyllis / with fondest Love / Loomis. Chronicle Books unknown
192914204New York:: Charles Scribner's Sons 1929. First edition. publisher's cloth in dust jacket. A fine copy in a bright fresh jacket with some slight chipping to the top of the spine. 8vo. Contains "The Rich Boy" by F. Scott Fitzgerald and "The Undefeated" by Ernest Hemingway with other works by Conrad Aiken Thomas Boyd Struthers Burt Morley Callaghan Stark Young and Ring Lardner. Charles Scribner's Sons, hardcover
64748P., Hachette (Les Ecrivains par l'Image), 1963, grand in 8° carré relié pleine toile de l'éditeur, jaquette illustrée, 140 pages.
20714Paris, Gallimard (coll. "La Bibliothèque Idéale"), 1961. In-8°, 304p. Broché.
196117966NRF - Gallimard, collection La Bibliothèque idéale, 1961. In-8 broché, couverture illustrée, un peu défraîchie. Illustré de quelques hors-texte en noir.
26240Paris, Mercure de France, 1966. In-8, broché, couverture illustrée (portrait), 378 pp.
1957290581The Selznick Company Inc. 1957. Trade Paperback. 152 leaves printed on one side only. About 11-1/4 by 9 inches. Original production script of the 1957 movie starring Rock Hudson Jennifer Jones and Elaine Stritch from the Selznick archive. Based on the 1929 novel of the same name the movie was harshly criticized by the Nobel Prize-winning author and sank at the box office. It was the last movie produced by David O. Selznick. Very good in wrappers paperback. Bound in white 3-prong folder with title and production information on the cover. Moderately worn and discolored in spots probably from rubbing against other books on a shelf. With the Selznick Company tracking sheet present numbering this copy 19. Screenplay dated February 7 1957.<br> (The Selznick Company, Inc.) paperback
D19684New York. First Edition. Hardcover. Very Good. Hemingway Family Copies of three books belonging to Ernest Hemingway's younger sister Ursula Hemingway Jepson. 1. Decker Mary Bell; Roosevelt Eleanor intro. The World We Saw. New York: Richard R. Smith 1950. First Edition. Blue cloth lettering stamped in silver on spine; 8vo; pp. 281. Inscribed by the author in a lovely hand to Ernest Hemingway's younger sister: "For Ursula Hemingway Jepson -- friend from the first meeting -- Mary Bell Decker / Kansas City Missouri / May 1951." Spine tips gently rubbed; some light bumping at corners and along edges of boards. <br /> <br />2. Aiken Conrad. Costumes by Eros. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1928. First Edition. <br />Blue cloth lettered in gilt on spine; 8vo; pp. 266. Boards lightly rubbed; spine tips and corners gently bumped. A nice copy -- bookplate of Jasper and Ursula Jepson on front paste-down. <br /> <br />3. Finletter Gretchen. The Dinner Party From the Journal of a Lady of Today. New York: <br />Harper & Brothers 1955. First Edition C-E. Cloth-backed blue paper over boards gilt-stamped lettering on spine; 8vo; pp. 236. Boards lightly rubbed and dust-soiled; some faint on prelims and terminals. A nice internally clean copy. Pencilled ownership signature on FFEP "Ursula Hemingway Jepson 1955." <br /> <br/><br/> hardcover
193752254New York:: Charles Scribner's Sons 1937. First edition. publisher's cloth in dust jacket. Some bumping to corners; light use; tight and sound in a price-clipped jacket with some light overall rubbing and edgewear and a sunned spine. 8vo. With a Preface by Ernest Hemingway. Charles Scribner's Sons, hardcover
193744521New York:: Charles Scribner's Sons 1937. First edition. publisher's cloth in dust jacket. Bookplate to pastedown; else just about fine in a very near fine dust jacket which has a short closed tear to the bottom of the front panel and just a touch of the usual rubbing. 8vo. With a Preface by Ernest Hemingway. Charles Scribner's Sons, hardcover
193912703New York:: Modern Age Books 1939. First edition. publisher's illustrated wrappers. Slight wear to joints and edges; nicer than usually encountered. Folio. Preface by Ernest Hemingway. Modern Age Books, unknown
12475New York:: Arden Gallery n.d. First edition. publisher's printed yellow wrappers. The slightest of rubbing to edges; a very nice copy. 8vo. Illustrated. An exhibition for the benefit of the Spanish Children's Milk Fund; Dorothy Parker Chairman. Hemingway contributed a one-page tribute to Milton Wolff on p. 22. Arden Gallery, unknown
197378430Ketchum Idaho 23rd September 1973. Fine. 8vo. Congratulating Prof. Drew on being selected "Distinguished Teaching Professor." unknown
1928002087Brentano's 1928. Soft cover. Very Good. Orange and white covers 8-7/8" tall 64 pp. Light wear and discoloration but generally a nice copy. Includes a fantastic article by Earl Derr Biggers who comments on the increasing brutality of the murder mystery genre but the real monetary value for this issue lies in Malcolm Cowley's article "The Hemingway Legend." "This is the first real pen-picture of Ernest Hemingway that has ever appeared in print. Mr. Hemingway does not give interviews. He does not talk for the press and he is about the hardest man to get hold of in all of Europe." With a portrait by Waldo Pierce. Malcolm Cowley may be partly responsible for Hemingway's rise to fame; well maybe not but he was certainly a critical proponent of the Hemingway "legend" -- the machismo the fantastic stories of his life and adventures etc. and this early article about Hemingway includes the tale of Hemingway attending a boxing match as a reporter and getting so mad at the victorious boxer that he climbed into the ring and knocked him out with one punch. A lovely critical biographical and mythological article spanning pp. 25-29. Brentano's paperback
78431No place dated in pencil by the recipient 1976. Fine. 12mo. Thanking him for his "generous letter." unknown
195867269Hollywood:: Warner Bros. Pictures Inc. 1958. Fine. 8 x 10 inches. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., unknown
195867247New York:: AFI Gallery 1958. First edition. publisher's printed portfolio enclosing sheets as issued. . Fine. Folio. Four illustrations by Leonard Baskin laid in portfolio. AFI Gallery, unknown
1931EH315New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons 1931 Preface by George Bernard Shaw. First edition first printing. Signed and inscribed by Hemingway to his cousin Ruth White Lowry on the front free endpaper with reference to the previous owner Hemingway bibliographer Captain Louis Henry Cohn: "Dear Ruth: - This is really a 2nd hand book because it was the gift of Captain Louis Henry Cohn the great bibliographer - Pauline didn't like it but Shaw and Terry and Capt. Cohn and Lawrence Stallings all did so you may find something in it - I have not read it - They must have been very sure how great they were or very careful to have kept all the letters and been able to find them - Ernest." Publisher's red cloth with front board and spine lettered in gilt red topstain; lacking dust jacket. Very good with toning to spine and board edges heavy dimming to spine gilt some very light scratches to rear board small House of Books ticket Captain Cohn's bookshop to rear pastedown. Overall a uniquely inscribed copy with exceptional provenance. From the personal library of Hemingway's cousin Ruth White Lowry. This book is a collection of correspondence between the great Irish playwright George Bernard Shaw 1856 - 1950 and leading English actress Ellen Terry 1847 - 1928. In 1892 Ellen reached out to Shaw then a 36-year-old music critic to get his opinion on the career prospects of a musical protégé of hers. This began a roughly 30-year correspondence between the two which was marked by flirtation genuine affection and Shaw's repeated attempts to lure Ellen away from Henry Irving's productions at Lyceum Theatre to star in theatrical productions of his own work. With praise from its New York Times review: "It represents the very flower of the minds and hearts-the select harvest of sentiment and wit-of two of the most remarkable personages of our generation." Captain Louis Henry Cohn 1889- 1953 born in Brooklyn New York earned his military rank by fighting in the French Army during World War I. In 1930 Cohn wrote a letter to Hemingway asking him for permission to compile a bibliography of his works. Hemingway begrudgingly agreed and in 1931 the book A Bibliography of the Works of Ernest Hemingway was published: in a note from Hemingway to Cohn which was later included as the frontispiece of the bibliography Hemingway wrote "I think it all balls to publish bibliographies of living writers". Later Cohn and his wife Marguerite opened House of Books a successful bookshop specializing in modern first editions. Under the House of Books imprint Cohn published an edition of Hemingway's short story "God Rest You Merry Gentlemen" 1933 limited to 300 numbered copies and a facsimile of Hemingway's "Bastard Note"-a legal disclaimer page included in the second printing of A Farewell to Arms with a humorous note to the printer in Hemingway's hand-limited to 93 numbered copies. Signed. First Edition. Hard Cover. Very Good. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons hardcover
1779Urbana: University of Illinois Press 1971. 8vo. pp. 243. Original russet boards lettered in gilt on spine. Corners very slightly bumped but a near fine copy in a near fine dustwrapper a little sunned at spine. 27 illustrations accompanying text. First edition. MALCOLM BRADBURY'S REVIEW COPY WITH HIS SIGNED BOOKPLATE TO FFEP. With the original review slip laid in dated 19.4.72. Bradbury's bookplate is dated '1971' which suggests he must have placed it in the book some time after his receipt of it. This US edition of the book the true first was sent to him on 19 April 1972 in time for his review to appear in time for the publication of the UK edition on 27 April that year. A very nice copy. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1971 hardcover
196925781<p>Hemingway Reference Hanneman Audre. Ernest Hemingway: A Comprehensive Bibliography. Princeton: Princeton University Press 1969. Second Printing of the First Edition. A Very Good Plus copy with a previous owner's name and address on the front flyleaf and faint spotting to the top edge of the text block in a Very Good dust jacket with a small chip to the heel of the spine and small moisture spots to the top edge of the front and read panels. This bibliography of Hemingway's writings and related materials includes for the first time all of his books pamphlets stories articles newspaper contributions juvenilia library holdings of his letters and manuscripts items written about Hemingway between 1918 and 1965 and short excerpts from reviews of each of Hemingway's novels. First editions of books and pamphlets both American and English with bibliographic descriptions are given. </p> Princeton University Press, hardcover
193081394San Marco: Venezia Calle Vallaresso 1930. Wraps. fine. 4 1/2" x 3 1/2". Cream decorated covers. With ties at spine. Small menu from Harry's Bar. Harry's Bar opened in 1931 by bardender Giuseppe Cipriani and it was a favorite bar and hangout of Ernest Hemingway. Venezia Calle Vallaresso unknown
192353298Paris: no date but circa 1923. clipped together up upper left corner with an old brass clasp. Preserved in a custom cloth chemise and clamshell box. Both sheets creased horizontally with two short closed tears at folds; slight creasing to extremities; second leaf has a triangular chip in the lower right corner about 1"; not affecting text; very good. 4to. The first leaf is titled in typewriting and signed; the second leaf consists of a 17-line poem beginning "Among and then young./ Not ninety-three./ No Lucretia Borgia.and concluding There and we know./ Hemingway./ How do you do and good-by. Good-by and how do you do./ Well and how do you do." hardcover
198428803<p>A Fine copy in a Very Good plus price-clipped dust jacket with light wear at the spine. Fuentes traces Hemingway's life in Cuba and the same settings in which Harry Morgan of Having and Not Having Santiago of The Old Man and the Sea and Thomas Hudson of Islands in the Gulf acted. Here is the unpublished correspondence the aggressive annotations on books and magazines the war objects and trophies that Hemingway accumulated for twenty-two years and the memories that remain in the memory of fishermen smugglers and veteran fighters of anti-submarine operations. Characters and settings that were previously known as fiction and that have now emerged into reality at the hands of Norberto Fuentes with his unmistakable narrative pulse and his meticulous almost obsessive investigation. In the words of another Nobel Prize winner the prologue Gabriel García Márquez: "The end result is this fierce and clarifying report that brings us back to the living and slightly childish Hemingway that many of us thought we could only glimpse between the lines of his master stories." </p> Lyle Stuart, hardcover
201128707New York:: Knopf 2011. First Printing of the First US Edition. A Fine unread copy in a Fine bright unclipped dust jacket. The author has written a compelling history of Hemingway's relationship with his beloved 38-foot Wheeler power boat Pilar that served as his sea mistress allowing him to relax fish escape the pressures of notoriety and even hunt German submarines during World War Two. The Pilar serves as the perfect motif by which Hendrickson examines Hemingway's life friends lovers and writing endeavors. Knopf, unknown
201129185<p>New York:: Knopf 2011. First Printing of the First US Edition. A Fine unread copy in a Very good plus bright unclipped dust jacket with an abrasion to the bar code on the rear panel. The author has written a compelling history of Hemingway's relationship with his beloved 38-foot Wheeler power boat Pilar that served as his sea mistress allowing him to relax fish escape the pressures of notoriety and even hunt German submarines during World War Two. The Pilar serves as the perfect motif by which Hendrickson examines Hemingway's life friends lovers and writing endeavors.</p> Knopf, hardcover