5 520 résultats
19236009aContact Publishing 1923 This a very attractive bound photocopy of an original 1923 Paris first edition of Three Stories & Ten Poems. This was Ernest Hemingways first published book. This is a nice complete copy bound in a dark green hardbound covers with the title in gold on spine. "Copyright 1923 by the Author". Dedicated to his first wife Hadley. 58 pp. Unmarked. Very Good. Extremely Rare and valuable copy. One of only 300 original first editions. 1st Edition. Hardcover. Very Good. Contact Publishing hardcover
1929139430New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1929. First edition of this Hemingway classic which established him among the American masters. Octavo original black cloth. Near fine in a near fine first state dust jacket with the misspelling "Katharine Barclay" in the blurb on the front flap. Housed in a custom half morocco clamshell box. A very sharp example. Written when Ernest Hemingway was thirty years old and lauded as the best American novel to emerge from World War I A Farewell to Arms is the unforgettable story of an American ambulance driver on the Italian front and his passion for a beautiful English nurse. Set against the looming horrors of the battlefieldweary demoralized men marching in the rain during the German attack on Caporetto; the profound struggle between loyalty and desertionthis gripping semiautobiographical work captures the harsh realities of war and the pain of lovers caught in its inexorable sweep. Ernest Hemingway famously said that he rewrote the ending to A Farewell to Arms thirty-nine times to get the words right. It is the basis for the 1932 film bearing the same name directed by Frank Borzage and starring Gary Cooper Helen Hayes and Adolphe Menjou. Charles Scribner's Sons hardcover
1940010937Charles Scribner's Sons . Charles Scribner's Sons New York 1940. Hardcover. Condition: Near Fine. Dust Jacket Condition: Fair. 1st Edition. First Edition First Printing with the Scribner's "A" printed on the copyright page. A beautiful copy. This original dustjacket is rich in color with a decent amount of wear to the edges and price flap absent. The book itself is in great shape. The binding is tight and the boards are crisp with slight wear to the edges. The pages are clean with NO writing marks or bookplates in the book. . Near Fine. Hardcover. 1st Edition. 1st Printing. 1940. Charles Scribner's Sons hardcover
19276979New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1927. First Edition Seventh Printing. First edition seventh printing in its rare original dust jacket. Measuring approximately 7.75" x 5.25" with 259 numbered pages. <br /> <br /> This book is in very good condition. Gilt labels are still bright and well preserved. Minor surface wear and staining. Interior pages are clean. Dust jacket is in very good minus condition. Chipping at the top of the spine and front panel. Water stain on the lower spine. Original $2.00 price is present on the front flap. <br /> <br /> "The Sun Also Rises" by Ernest Hemingway follows a group of young American and British expatriates as they wander through Europe in the mid 1920s. This book has been called his greatest work and most important novel.<br /> <br /> Please view the many other rare titles available for purchase at our store. We are always interested in purchasing individual or collections of fine books.<br /> <br /> Inventory # P3-20. Charles Scribner's Sons unknown
19312004115Dodd Mead and Co 1931. first. hardcover. fine/good. INSCRIBED first edition 1931 stated on title and copyright page. Humorously inscribed by Hemingway on the title page. Fine book previous owner's name written on front free end paper. Dust jacket good some pieces missing. Housed in a custom-made fold-out case. Dodd, Mead and Co unknown books
19312004115Dodd Mead and Co 1931. first. hardcover. fine/good. INSCRIBED first edition 1931 stated on title and copyright page. Humorously inscribed by Hemingway on the title page. Fine book previous owner's name written on front free end paper. Dust jacket good some pieces missing. Housed in a custom-made fold-out case. Dodd, Mead and Co unknown
192604641THE TORRENTS OF SPRING Scribner's 1926 first edition spine a bit faded t.p.e.'s with some slight age toning else a tight vg/near fine copy in a vg first issue dust-wrapper with some light wear and tear and a bit of dust-soiling and/or rubbing as well as some inner tape reinforcement to the spine extremities and lower front and upper rear dust-wrapper margins. The authors first novel published in a quantity of only 1250 copies. Scribners / Scribner's unknown
19792606240056Easton Press 1979. Hardcover. Like New. 50 volume Great Books of the 20th century set Hardcover. Bound in full leather. Stamped with 22kt gold gilt design on cover front back and spine. All edges gold. Silk moire fabric end papers. Satin ribbon place holder. Fine binding and cover. Clean unmarked pages. Some volumes still in publisher's shrink wrap. For more than 30 years the Easton Press has been the standard for finely bound profusely gilt classic leather bindings. <br>Now out of print the Easton Press Library of 20th Century Classics featured the emblematic works of the 20th century in collector's edition gilt leather bindings.<br>This is an oversized or heavy book which WILL require additional postage for Priority Mail or International delivery outside the US.<br> Contains the following volumes: Baldwin James - Go Tell it on the Mountain; Borges Jorge Luis - Ficciones; Bradbury Ray - Fahrenheit 451; Burgess Anthony - A Clockwork Orange; Camus Albert - The Stranger; Capote Truman - In Cold Blood; Cather Willa - Death Comes for the Archbishop; Ellison Ralph - Invisible Man; Faulkner William - Light in August; Fitzgerald F. Scott - The Great Gatsby; Forster E.M. - A Passage to India; Greene Graham - The Power and the Glory; Heller Joseph - Catch-22; Hemingway Ernest - The Sun Also Rises; Huxley Aldous - Brave New World; James Henry - The Ambassadors; Joyce James - Ulysses Illustrated by Henri Matisse; Kafka Franz - The Trial; Kerouac Jack - On the Road; Kesey Ken - One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest; Koestler Arthur - Darkness at Noon; Lawrence D.H. - Women in Love; Lee Harper - To Kill a Mockingbird; Lewis Sinclair - Babbitt; London Jack - The Call of the Wild; Mann Thomas - The Magic Mountain; Márquez Gabriel García - One Hundred Years of Solitude; Maugham Somerset - Of Human Bondage; McCullers Carson - The Heart is a Lonely Hunter; Mitchell Margaret - Gone with the Wind; Morrison Toni - Beloved; Nabokov Vladmir - Lolita; Orwell George - Nineteen Eighty-Four; Pasternak Boris - Dr. Zhivago; Plath Sylvia - The Bell Jar; Proust Marcel - Swann's Way; Rand Ayn - The Fountainhead; Remarque Erich Maria - All Quiet on the Western Front; Roth Philip - Portnoy's Complaint; Solzhenitsyn Aleksandr - One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich; Steinbeck John - The Grapes of Wrath; Updike John - Rabbit Run; Vonnegut Kurt - Slaughterhouse-Five; Walker Alice - The Color Purple; Warren Robert Penn - All the King's Men; Waugh Evelyn - Brideshead Revisited; Wharton Edith - The Age of Innocence; Wiesel Elie - Night; Woolf Virginia - To the Lighthouse; Wright Richard - Native Son. Easton Press hardcover
1955414395Westport Conn and New York: A.E. Hotchner and Ernest Hemingway and Anne Meyerson Typing & Mimeographing 1955. Softcover. Near Fine. Quarto. P.3 22 1 19 1 4 2 34 1 27. Typed leaves on rectos only bradbound into black leatherette wrappers stamped in gilt with Meyerson's information. The gilt title on the front wrap is covered with a typed label that reads "Ernest Hemingway's 'Love and Death' "; a title label on title page also covers a previous typed title; Ink number "16" on title page near fine.<br /> <br /> A play that includes scenes from The Snows of Kilimanjaro For Whom the Bell Tolls A Farewell to Arms and The Good Lion a fable written in Venice in 1950 which was published in Holiday magazine. It would be difficult to determine the original title stamped on the front wrap and on the title page without damaging the labels although on the front wrap the title begins with "T" and ends with "y." We speculate that this is likely the earliest draft of "The Hemingway Hero" for which scripts exist bearing an earlier title and that the title "The Heroes of Hemingway" is a possibility here.<br /> <br /> Laid-in is a letter from Hotchner to producer and director Fletcher Markle: "Herewith the script of LOVE AND DEATH. I am very enthusiastic about your casting suggestion and I'm sure Hemingway would be. I agree that Welles would add considerably to the overall value." He goes on to state that "I shall do my best to shake loose THE FIFTH COLUMN for I am certain that that and THE UNDEFEATED will go splendidly at 90-minute length." He concludes "My regards to your wife Mercedes McCambridge whose talents as an actress I have always admired." Our thanks to Ira Steingroot for identifying Markle and McCambridge.<br /> <br /> We have no evidence that the play was ever produced theatrically. Hotchner was a close friend of Hemingway's and seems to have created a cottage industry adapting Hemingway's works and television plays of The Snows of Kilimanjaro 1960 The Fifth Column 1960 and For Whom the Bell Tolls 1959 all directed by John Frankenheimer as well as several others all appeared with scripts by Hotchner. Although the title here indicates that this script was prepared for the stage it seems likely that it was later adapted into several "teleplays."<br /> <br /> OCLC locates three copies of The Hemingway Hero all with different pagination. It locates no copies with this title or pagination. A.E. Hotchner and Ernest Hemingway [and] Anne Meyerson Typing & Mimeographing unknown
1929001590New York: Scribners 1929. 5th or later Printing. Hardcover. Near Fine/Very Good. 8vo - over 7¾ - 9¾" tall. New York: Scribners 1929. 8vo. 259 pp. Black cloth with gilt boxes to the spine and front panel. A nice copy of Hemingway's classic novel. This is a ninth printing of the book in a ninth issue jacket with the printing dates listed on the spine. Jacket priced at $2.00. "In Our Time" on jacket has been corrected "Times". The date of 1929 is on the title page and 1926 is on the copyright page. The first printing was published on October 22 1926. This copy is near fine with bright gilt on the spine and front board. The book is tight and square. No writing or other markings. THe jacket is very good with a little chipping to the spine extremities and a couple of small closed tears. Moderate toning to the jacket's spine. A very nice copy of a book and jacket not normally found in this condition. Ref: Hanneman. <br/> <br/> Scribners hardcover
19585119New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1958. Signed by the author Ernest Hemingway on CBS letterhead which has been affixed to the front endpaper. Measures approximately 8.5" x 5.75" with 471 numbered pages. <br /> <br /> This book is in very good plus condition. Minor bumping and sun-fading to the spine ends. Gilt lettering and label on spine still vibrant. Minor shelf wear to the edges of the textblock. Paper damage to the front pastedown - possibly from bookplate removal. Author's signature affixed to the front endpaper "Best Always Ernest Hemingway". Textblock is bright and well preserved. The original dust jacket is in very good condition. Minor edgewear to the extremities. Spine darkened. Original $4.95 price present on the front flap. <br /> <br /> "For Whom the Bell Tolls" is one of Hemingway's biggest literary triumphs. Written in 1939 and finished in 1940 the first edition was published in October of that year with a print run of 75000 copies. The novel was inspired by Hemingway's experiences as a journalist in Spain during its civil war. The plot centers on an American dynamiter who joins forces with an anti-fascist troupe to carry out the detonation of a bridge. What unfolds is a story of bravery deception love and agony. "For Whom the Bell Tolls" is certainly one of Ernest Hemingway's greatest novels. Were it not for the war and politics of the time this novel would have been the recipient of the Pulitzer Prize in 1941 - as the jurors voted unanimously in favor of the award.<br /> <br /> Please view the many other rare titles available for purchase at our store. We are always interested in purchasing individual or collections of fine books.<br /> <br /> Inventory # N10-15. Charles Scribner's Sons unknown
193279298Milwaukee:: The Casanova Press 1932. First edition; No. 87 of 525 copies; ordinary issue. original printed wrappers in publisher's slipcase. An absolutely beautiful copy. 8vo. This copy miraculously includes the publisher's slip stamped with the copy number as a partial wraparound band; and laid in is the publisher's announcement/order form printed in red and black. The Casanova Press, unknown
193298378Charles Scribner's Sons: New York 1932. First edition of Hemingway's early work on bullfighting. Octavo original cloth frontispiece by Juan Gris. Wallace Stegner's copy with his signature to the front free endpaper. Often referred to as "The Dean of Western Writers" Wallace Stegner taught at both Harvard and Stanford University where he founded the creative writing program; his students included Sandra Day O'Connor Robert Stone Ken Kesey and Larry McMurtry. Stegner's novel Angle of Repose won him the 1972 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and established him as major literary figure. The story of a wheelchair-using historian Angle of Repose relays the saga of the protagonist's frontier-era ancestors. Hemingway too won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction for his 1940 triumph For Whom the Bell Tolls also a historical drama; retelling the story of a young American in the International Brigades attached to a republican guerrilla unit during the Spanish Civil War. Near fine in a very good dust jacket. Jacket illustration by Roberto Domingo. From the library of Wallace Stegner. An excellent association linking these two great American novelists and Pulitzer Prize-winning writers. Published in 1932 Death in the Afternoon is Hemingway's masterwork on the magnificence of the art of bull-fighting. John Dos Passos praised the book as "an absolute model for how that sort of thing ought to be done" and a contemporary review in The New York Herald Tribune described it as "full of the vigor and forthrightness of the author's personality his humor his strong opinions--and language. In short it is the essence of Hemingway" Mellow 415. New York hardcover books
1952140938880London: Jonathan Cape 1952. First British Edition. Near Fine. 127 pp. Advance uncorrected proof of the first British edition. Bound in publisher's brown wraps printed in black. Two-inch corner lacking from the front cover not affecting text. Light lean to spine. Light foxing toning to pages. A rare format of one of Hemingway's most beloved works and winner of the Pulitzer Prize housed in a custom blue cloth and marbled chemise slipcase. Jonathan Cape unknown books
1938124238Cleveland: The J. B. Savage Company 1938. First edition first issue of Hemingway's commentary for the classic 1937 Joris Ivens film depicting the horrors of the Spanish Civil War; one of between 50 and 100 copies issued with the pictorial F.A.I. banner endpapers. Octavo original tan cloth printed in black and orange illustrated by Frederick K. Russell. One of 1000 numbered copies this is copy number 29. Introduction by Jasper Wood. In near fine condition. An exceptional example. While in Spain covering the Spanish Civil War for the North American Newspaper Alliance Hemingway agreed to take part in the funding of a to raise money for the Loyalist Republican cause in the war in collaboration with several other literary figures including John Dos Passos Lillian Hellman Archibald MacLeish and. Dorothy Parker. The resulting film The Spanish Earth was directed by Joris Ivens based upon commentary by Hemingway and Dos Passos and narrated by Orson Welles. Cleveland Heights High School student Jasper Wood acquired the rights to publish 1000 copies of Hemingway's commentary for the film in 1938. Upon seeing the first issue of the book from the press Hemingway wired Wood objecting to Wood's introduction because it gave him credit for the film which he felt belonged to Ivens and photographer John Ferno. He also objected to the large banner of the anarchist group F.A.I. Federacion Anarquista Iberica on the endpapers. A second issue was then bound with plain tan endpapers and a statement from Wood on the rear pastedown referring to Hemingway's objections and noting: "Hemingway insisted that his share of the profits for this text be paid directly to Almuth Heulbrun the widow of Dr. Werner Heilbrun who was killed in action in Spain." "In a letter to the bibliographer Jasper Wood estimated that there were between 50 and 100 copies of the first issue" Hanneman A15a. The J. B. Savage Company hardcover books
19291086678vo. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons 1929. 8vo x 355 pp. Original black cloth with inlaid gold paper labels to upper board and backstrip in original pictorial dust jacket uncut. Jacket lightly rubbed and toned some minimal wear at head and tail of the spine panel otherwise a very near fine copy. § First edition first printing with the “publisher’s seal†on the copyright page no disclaimer on page x Catherine Barkley misspelled “Katharine Barclay†on the front flap of the jacket. A Farewell to Arms was Hemingway's first best-seller and is still considered among the best of the novels to come out of World War One. Famously it was banned in Italy for its painfully accurate depiction of the war and was attacked in the United States for its depiction of sex. A handsome copy of a cornerstone work of twentieth century literature. Charles Scribner’s Sons hardcover books
1929140942834New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1929. First Edition. Very Good/Very Good. First edition first printing first issue lacking the disclaimer on page x. Bound in publisher's original black cloth with bronze title label printed in black to spine and upper board. Very Good with fading to spine cloth light rubbing to edges; former owner name date and bookseller ticket to front free endpaper; pages toned. In a Very Good first issue dust jacket with Katherine Barclay with edge wear toning fading and light staining to spine slightly intruding onto the rear panel crease to rear flap. A lovely copy. Charles Scribner's Sons unknown
1940150382New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1940. First edition first printing of Hemingway's third novel a tragic exploration of love duty and the futility of war. Octavo original publisher's tan cloth. With the first printing issue point of Scribner's "A" on the copyright page. Near fine in a near fine first issue dust jacket without the photographer name on the rear panel. Housed in a custom half morocco slipcase. A very sharp example. Ernest Hemingway’s For Whom the Bell Tolls 1940 represents one of the author’s most complex meditations on war love and moral responsibility. Set during the Spanish Civil War the novel follows Robert Jordan an American volunteer in the International Brigades as he undertakes a mission to destroy a fascist-held bridge. Drawing on Hemingway’s own experiences as a journalist in Spain the novel fuses political engagement with psychological depth exploring the tension between individual conviction and collective duty. Stylistically it embodies Hemingway’s characteristic economy of language—his “iceberg theoryâ€â€”while broadening his earlier focus on personal heroism to encompass a larger ethical inquiry into the nature of sacrifice and solidarity. The novel’s title drawn from John Donne’s Devotions upon Emergent Occasions underscores its universalist theme: the interconnectedness of human suffering and mortality. Through its spare prose shifting perspectives and symbolic use of death and time For Whom the Bell Tolls transforms the brutality of civil conflict into a profound reflection on the cost of idealism and the enduring value of human compassion amid catastrophe. Charles Scribner's Sons hardcover
1952376040New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1952. First edition first issue with capital "A" and publisher's device to copyright page. First issue jacket with text in brown. ii 140 pp. 1 vols. 8vo. Sea blue full cloth boards Hemingway's signature blind-stamped at front board. Some rubbing along head of spine light sunning in unclipped dust jacket with some light shelfwear and with some tape residue to flaps but very bright and blue. First edition first issue with capital "A" and publisher's device to copyright page. First issue jacket with text in brown. ii 140 pp. 1 vols. 8vo. First edition of Hemingway's most popular novel his last sustained work of fiction in his lifetime. On the bestseller list for half a year the book not only silenced those who had lambasted Across the River and into the Trees but earned its author the Pulitzer Price and the Nobel. Hemingway was sure that The Old Man and the Sea would "get rid of the school of criticism that I am through as a writer." John Dos Passos agreed later saying that the phenomenal success of The Old Man and the Sea "was like a magician's stunt" Hanneman A24a; Grissom A.24.1.a Charles Scribner's Sons unknown
195255148New York: Charles Scriber's Sons 1952. First printing. Near fine in a near fine jacket. First edition first state of the book that occasioned Hemingway's Nobel Prize and sealed his international celebrity. Hemingway's final novel published in his lifetime is a tale stoic and meditative of the beautiful tension between humankind and the rest of the natural world. A serious marlin fisher Hemingway used his own experiences to fill in the drama of his hero Santiago's battle with the sea. <br /> <br /> OLD MAN AND THE SEA was composed in Cuba with a Cuban protagonist; when he won the Nobel Hemingway donated the medal to the Cuban people. At the time of the award the Nobel Committee praised Hemingway "for his mastery of the art of narrative most recently demonstrated in THE OLD MAN AND THE SEA and for the influence that he has exerted on contemporary style." The book also garnered the Pulitzer Prize. <br /> <br /> A particularly nice copy of this quintessential Hemingway book. 8'' x 5.25''. Original full blue cloth spine lettered in white. Original unclipped $3.00 blue pictorial dust jacket of a town by the sea photo of the author by Lee Samuels on rear panel. First state with text on flaps printed in brown ink with brown/blue author photo. Scribner's "A" and seal on copyright page. 2 140 pages. Small bit of wear chip at spine head. Trace edgewear to jacket. Tiny closed tear to top edge rear panel. Neat contemporary penciled gift inscription to front pastedown. Touches of shelfwear to book extremities. Overall remarkably bright and sharp. Charles Scriber's Sons unknown
193780467New York:: Charles Scribners Sons 1937. First edition. publisher's cloth in dust jacket. Tiny bookseller's ticket to rear pastedown; slight bump at one cprner; else a fine copy in a very sharp jacket very minor use to top edge. 8vo. Charles Scribners Sons, hardcover
19295000651NY: Scribners 1929. Bound in black cloth with gold labels. The labels are bright virtually as new. The first edition of the book without the disclaimer and the true first state dust jacket with price of $2.50 on front flap with "Katherine" on the front flap of the jacket and two reviews on the back panel. . The jacket has had some minor restoration work to top of spine. A beautiful copy. One of 31050 copies in the first printing. Reference: Hanneman 8.A. First Edition. Hard Cover. Near Fine/Near Fine. Scribners Hardcover
195278070Sous étui bordé et sous chemise en demi-maroquin à petits recouvrements. Dos lisse avec auteur doré en long. Plats en box violet sur la partie supérieure et en maroquin bleu marine sur la partie inférieure. Couverture et dos conservés. Reliure signée A. DEVAUCHELLE.
14415American author. Signed book: To Have and Have Not. Later printing. NY: Schribner's 1953. Hardcover 8-3/8" x 6-3/4" inches 262 pages. Signed and inscribed on interior title page "To Ben Strauss best luck always Ernest Hemingway." To Have and Have Not is Hemingway's story of fishing boat captain Harry Morgan a good man who is forced into running contraband between Cuba and Florida by forces beyong his control. Both a romance and an adventure story To Have and Have Not was later adapted into a film starring Humphrey Bogart. No dustjacket. Owner's bookplate on front free end paper. Exterior cloth has faded especially on spine and has a few bumps. Interior is in very good condition with a nice bold inscription and signature. unknown books
19366119<p><strong>Rare first Russian book edition. Hemingway's third Russian book.</strong> All Russian editions of Hemingway's works printed before WWII are rare. One of 10 000 copies published.</p><p>The first excerpts from Hemingway's novel <em>'A Farewell to Arms'</em> 1929 appeared in Russian in 1934 published in the magazine <em>'Znamya'</em> No. 4 and translated by Petr Okhrimenko. Two years later this translation was published in its entirety in the same magazine. Around the same time another translation by <strong>Evgeniia Kalashnikova</strong> 1906–1976 emerged: first as a fragment in <em>'Internatsional'naya Literatura'</em> with the note <em>'authorized translation'</em> and later as a standalone book.<br />Kalashnikova was part of the <em>'workshop school'</em> of Ivan Kashkin a literary critic and translator who was <em>'responsible for Hemingway reputation in the USSR'</em>. She along with Nataliia Volzhina later prepared the first Russian translation of <em>'For Whom the Bell Tolls</em>'.<br />The preface to the book was written by literary critic <strong>Sergey Dinamov</strong> 1901–1939 who also headed the Anglo-American section of the State Publishing House and served as Director of the Institute of Red Professors. Dinamov was arrested during the Great Purge in September 1938 and executed.<br />It is important to highlight the significant impact this book had on the Soviet intelligentsia. The prominent literary critic and memoirist Lidiya Ginzburg recalled that Anna Akhmatova urged her to read <em>'A Farewell to Arms'</em> saying <em>'Read this by all means. It's very interesting'</em>. Ginzburg later noted that this novel epitomizes <em>'essentially everything that the writer Hemingway has to say'</em>. For Soviet readers one of the most striking aspects of the novel was how <em>'people talk with each other in bed'</em>. She observed <em>'It turns out that they talk about everything under the sun. <…> These conversations contain Hemingway's conception of the quintessential contemporary Western person</em>' Burak Alexander The "Americanization" of Russian Life and Literature through Translations of Hemingway's Works. 2013.<br />This copy comes from the library of photographers <strong>Vera Petrusova</strong> 1912–1998 and <strong>Georgii Petrusov</strong> 1903–1971. Georgii worked for the renowned magazine '<em>USSR in Construction</em>' where he collaborated with El Lissitzky Alexander Rodchenko Vera Stepanova and Solomon Telingater. Vera Petrusova is best known for her theater photography.</p><p>Libman # 6685.</p><p>OCLC locates one copy of this edition only: in the Yale University Library.</p> Gosudarstvennoe Izdatelʹstvo “Khudozhestvennaia Literatura†hardcover