5 520 résultats
0606001727.Glibrary. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. unknown
1975240422044Franklin Library 1975. leather_bound. Like New. 6x1x9. New Inside! Crisp pages w/no markings! Email for pictures! Franklin Library hardcover
1929155515New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1929. Handsomely bound copy First edition first printing distinguished by the lack of the legal disclaimer which appeared on page x in the second and third printings. Based on Hemingway's experiences as an ambulance driver at the Italian Front during the First World War it was written at the peak of his success and met with wide acclaim. The critic James Aswell offered particularly lavish praise: "I have finished A Farewell to Arms and am still a little breathless as people often are after a major event in their lives. If before I die I have three more literary experiences as sharp and exciting and terrible as the one I have just been through I shall know it has been a good world" cited in Bloom p. 5. Octavo 178 x 123 mm. Finely bound by the Chelsea Bindery in black morocco spine lettered and decorated in gilt raised bands single rule to boards gilt inner dentelles gilt marbled endpapers gilt edges. Couple of minor spots an excellent copy in a fine binding. Grissom A.8.1.a; Hanneman 8a. Harold Bloom ed. Ernest Hemingway's A Farewell to Arms 2009. hardcover
1929131129697New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1929. First Edition. Hardcover. Good. FIRST EDITION first issue lacking the disclaimer. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1929. viii 355 pp. Publisher's black cloth with gilt labels. Good with stain to back board back board also edge-gnawed slight wrinkling to text bookplate on paste down. Presents OK despite flaws. Charles Scribner's Sons hardcover
131130106New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1929-01-01. Hardcover. Very Good. 9x6x0. FIRST EDITION SECOND PRINTING. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1929. Publisher's black cloth with gilt title labels. 2nd printing with disclaimer on verso of Dedication page seal on copyright page. Very Good with crease to spine title label light wear hinges a bit free. Lacking dust jacket. Nice shape overall. Charles Scribner's Sons hardcover
1929585592London: Jonathan Cape 1929. Hardcover. Very Good. First English edition second issue with the error corrected on page 66. Magenta cloth gilt spine. Tiny bookseller ticket on front pastedown B.H. Blackwell binding slightly cocked spine toned with small nicks and tears at the ends very good lacking the dust jacket. Connolly 100. Jonathan Cape hardcover
19292405121Scribner's Magazine 1929. first. softcover. fine. First appearance of story in 6 volumes of Scribner's Magazine. All 6 magazines in fine to very good condition. Housed in custom-made fold-out case. Scribner's Magazine unknown
158831London: Folio Society 2008 2nd printing. Hardcover 312pp. Very good plus no dust jacket. Illustrations. A tiny bruise to the bottom corner of 20 or so pages. Illustrations by David Frankland. Fiction. Folio Society Hardcover
1929065895New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1929. Book. Good. Hardcover. 1st Edition. 12mo - over 6¾" - 7¾" tall. Black cloth lettered in black on gold labels on upper front cover and upper spine panel. 355 pp. 1st ptg. 2nd state w/ matching dates Scribner's seal on copyright page legal disclaimer on p. x. Minor binding lean cover cloth mildly flecked in a few areas faded to brown on front cover toward fore-edge spine panel typically somewhat dulled. Silverfishing loss to top corner of front fixed endpaper and top corners of rear fixed endpaper small hole in upper rear flyleaf near hinge; front flyleaf clipped with approx. 10% loss. Both flyleaves tanned. Firm binding intact hinges unmarked interior. Charles Scribner's Sons Hardcover
198660688AB1986. London / Glasgow / a.o. Collins Publishing Group 1986. 11 cm x 17.5 cm. 236 pages. Original Softcover. Very good condition with only minor signs of external wear. The now classic story of a young American voluntering for the Italian Ambulance in World War One who falls in love with a British Nurse and their efforts to escape to Switzerland to get away from the war. paperback
2003104241Norwalk:: Easton Press. Near Fine. 2003. Hardcover. Introduction by Ford Madox Ford. Collector's edition "The 100 Greatest Books Ever Written". Octavo fully bound in brown leather with gilt lettering and design raised bands along the spine all edges gilt silk moire endpapers sewn-in ribbon bookmark. About fine.; 312 pages . Easton Press, hardcover
1957369715US: Charles Scribner's Sons 1957. Charles Scribner's Sons 1957 Reprint Fine/ Unread. NO DUST JACKET. Black leather like spine with gold and silver lettering and blue line. Grey-blue leather like boards with gold and silver lettering and blue line and feather on front. Exceptionally tight structure. Tight bright pages. Inside page edges deckled. 83142 pages. 14.2 ounces. Size: 8 1/2 x 5 3/4 x 1 inches. Reprint. Hardcover. Fine. Charles Scribner's Sons, Hardcover
1929017175London United Kingdom: Jonathan Cape 1929. Book. Very Good . Hardcover. 1st Edition. First UK Edition First Printing. Pp. 350. 2nd State with "serious" spelled correctly on p.66. "First Published 1929" to the copyright page and "Men Without Women" the final publication listed under "by the author" heading. Original purple cloth boards gilt title to spine. Light off setting to end pages and book seller neat stamp to end page small spot to fore edge of text block. A tightly bound copy with clean pages In the extremely rare variant "half-crown fiction" dust jacket a touch of rubbing to extremities. Jonathan Cape Hardcover
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
1929021932New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1929. First Edition. Hardcover. Near Fine in a complete Very Good dustwrapper which is a bit darkened most notably on the rear panel. First state of text without disclaimer and earliest state of dustwrapper with "Katherine Barclay" reading. Hemingway's third novel based on his experience as an ambulance driver in the war. Made into a film several times the first being in 1932 starring Gary Cooper and Helen Hayes. <br/><br/> Charles Scribner's Sons hardcover
192988269New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1929. First Edition FIrst State. Hardcover. Good / Fair only. Octavo 7.5 in.x 5.5 in. pp. 355. First State: Publication date to title page and copyright page; Scribner's seal to copyright page. Catharine misspelled "Katharine" on the front flap of dustjacket; "$2.50" pricing. No legal disclaimer. <br /> <br /> Black cloth boards with black title on gilt paper paste-on to front and to spine. Untrimmed fore-edge. Rubbing to edges and boards with three corners just showing. Light sunning to spine. Front hinge just showing. Unmarked interior. Darker stains and several longer closed tears to dustjacket front; scuffing and soiling to rear of dustjacket. Rubbing to edges and chips to dustjacket spine ends and corners. Front dustjacket flap attached with tape. Protected in mylar. Charles Scribner's Sons hardcover
19291390315New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1929. First Edition First Issue. Hardcover. Octavo 355 pages. In Good minus condition. Wrapped black cloth with gold publisher's paper on the spine and front board with black lettering. Boards have moderate shelving wear chipping along the front board publisher's paper stains throughout and fraying along the fore corners and spine head and tail edges. Textblock is lightly separating along the head edge is cocked splitting to gutter from pages 15-54 101-142 and 215-311 has stains on page 214 stains on the end-pages and pastedowns pencil marks on the front end-page moderate wear along the edges moderate age-toning along the edges and stains along the edges. Shelved Room C. 1390315. Special Collections. Charles Scribner's Sons hardcover
1929293299New York.: Scribners. 1929. Early reprint. Black cloth with gold labels. Good copy slightly cocked with light wear to covers and labels. Darkened and scuffed spine label is missing a small section in the upper right corner. Front label is darkened and scuffed. Light tanning to endpapers and small sticker from a previous bookseller on the back paste down. Contents clean and unmarked. 19.2x13.5x2.8 cm. Early reprint with disclaimer on verso of dedication page 1929 date on title page and Scribner’s seal but no “A†on copyright page. weight: 1.2 lb. Scribners. hardcover
47620203like new. unknown
1929008986New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1929. 1st Edition 1st Printing. Hardcover. Near Fine. A beautiful near-fine copy bright crisp and clean. Black cloth boards with gold-foil printed labels are immaculate with tiny bump to lower corner of front board. Some offsetting to endpapers--primarily the front ones--with very faint impression of what was likely a paper clip at top of flyleaf; tiny abrasion at bottom of rear pastedown. Text is completely free of any markings. Now housed in a custom slipcase. A superior copy suitable to give as a gift. <br/> <br/> Charles Scribner's Sons hardcover
19291396234New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1929. First edition. Hardcover. Octavo 355 pages. In Fair condition lacking dust jacket. Spine is black with paper title label. Boards in black cloth with paper title label. Wear to spine caps and corners light blemishes wear to paper labels cocked spine. Text block has cracked hinges penciled doodle on rear pastedown spine break at page 199 with page corner torn away some missing text. First edition first issue lacking the disclaimer on page facing half-title page. <br /> <br /> NOTE: Shelved in Locked Annex Area ND-HV Section. 1396234. FP New Rockville Stock. Charles Scribner's Sons hardcover
19327958New York: The Modern Library 1932. Hardcover 12mo 355 pages. Very good. First modern library edition no dust jacket. Light wear to boards corners slightly bumped. Spine slightly sun faded. Text block top edge dyed red. Previous seller stamp to title page pages otherwise clean. The Modern Library hardcover
1929207474New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1929. First Edition. Bookplate; very good copy in a price-clipped dust jacket that shows some soil and edge wear and has a folded tear to the rear panel. 8vo 355pp; black cloth with printed gold-paper labels. First issue with "Katherine" on front flap and without disclaimer. Hanneman A8a. Charles Scribner's Sons unknown
1929148052New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1929. First edition first issue of this early Hemingway classic which established him among the American masters. Octavo original black cloth with gilt labels to the spine and front panel. First issue with Scribner's seal to title verso and without legal disclaimer. Near fine in a very good first state dust jacket. Jacket priced at $2.50 and with the misspelling "Katharine Barclay" in the blurb on the front flap. A very sharp and attractive example of this highspot of American literature among the best fiction to come out of the First World War. A 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 desertion this 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
8366New York: Grosset & Dunlap. Clothbound octavo 355 pages. Very good/Good. Early printing circa 1940s no exact date provided on copyright page. Minor wear and soiling to dust jacket a little loss to corners. Abrasions to middle of front panel and spine panel. In mylar protector. Light wear and soiling to black cloth boards corners slightly rubbed. Light soiling to text block bottom edge. Minor foxing to endpapers text block slightly age toned. Pages clean and securely bound. Grosset & Dunlap unknown