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0873388453New. New. Satisfaction Guaranteed or your money back. unknown
2005Q-0873388453The Kent State University Press 2005-09-15. Hardcover. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! The Kent State University Press hardcover
0873388704.Gleather_bound. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
2005000490Kent Ohio: Kent State University Press 2005. True First Edition Second Printing . Hardcover. Fine/Fine. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. Edited by Robert W. Lewis and Robert E. Fleming. Book was finished by Hemingway in 1956 and left in a safe-deposit box in Cuba. It is here published in its entirety. 445 pp. plus: List of Characters Glossary Textual Notes. Book has copper gilt text and decorations on spine only decorative ep's have Hemingway's manuscript. Book has 1/2" remainder mark on bottom edge ow it is as new. Unclipped unpriced DJ has minuscule edge wear and features Hemingway's picture on rear panel. Book weighs nearly 2 lb. and may require extra shipping cost. Bookseller's Inventory # 110490. <br/> <br/> Kent State University Press hardcover
200504686UNDER KILIMANJARO Kent State University 2005 first edition as new in the publishers full red leather binding with black and gold gilt pictorial lettering and stamping. 1/1000 such copies. Still in the original shrink wrap. Kent State University hardcover
2005DADAX0873388453Kent State University Press 2005-09-15. hardcover. New. 6.54x1.34x9.86. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. Kent State University Press hardcover
Mm 130x210 Brossura editoriale con bandelle, X-178 pagine. Esemplare in ottime condizioni. SPEDIZIONE IN 24 ORE DALLA CONFERMA DELL'ORDINE.
WRCLIT47526Np: Reprinted from ETUDES ANGLAISES 39 nd. 401-412pp. Printed wrappers. An author's separate retaining original pagination. With Asselineau's signed first name only presentation inscription to Norman Holmes Pearson on the title. Wrappers dust smudged but very good. Text in French. Reprinted from ETUDES ANGLAISES 39 unknown books
8421725394.Gunknown_binding. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. unknown
1983RO20260243Editions du progrès. 1983. In-8. Broché. Etat d'usage, Coins frottés, Dos satisfaisant, Papier jauni. 342 pages - quelques planches en noir et blanc - livre en russe - plats légèrement frottés.. . . . Classification Dewey : 491.7-Langue russe
19527753Zurich: Steiner Verlag 1952. Book. Near Fine. Hardcover. First Swiss Edition. About fine with a minor bump to one corner and a prev. owner insc. dated 1956 on ffep. The jacket has a little wear to extremities and the slightest soiling to back panel. A very nice copy. Steiner Verlag Hardcover
194135111Finca Vigia San Francisco de Paula Cuba 1941. One page with 5-line postscript in blue ink on sheet of personal stationery. 1 vols. 8vo. Old folds overall very good with accompanying envelope addressed in Hemingway's hand. One page with 5-line postscript in blue ink on sheet of personal stationery. 1 vols. 8vo. The Hemingways on a Diet. George Brown owned a gym in New York City where Hemingway worked out when he was in the town and he and George Brown became fast friends Brown serving as his trainer and boxing coach as well as supplier of sporting goods ticket agent and general factotum to Hemingway Martha and later Mary while they were in Cuba.<br/>A relaxed and contented Hemingway writes to his friend Brown basking in the financial success of FOR WHOM THE BELL TOLLS newly married to Martha Gellhorn happy with his recently purchased home in Cuba: "Thank you ever so much for the things. They all came through the customs okay and Martha's shoes have made a big improvement in her tennis. She beat me 6-3 for a dollar and today I think I can get her on the court for two dollars. We'll see what happens. She is down to 127 and I'm stuck at around 215 and can't get under it probably because of no big fish to boil the fat off the inside. It's been very quiet since you left and no more shouts of 'Brown's deuce' and other rare methods of counting at tennis . I'll try and get in good shape before we come to New York so oil up your bicycle. Don't try to come off the ropes holding with that right hand because I've thought up something terrible to have happen . Martha sends her love."<br/>Beneath in ink Hemingway can't resist reporting his scores at shooting: "won a couple of matches at pigeons. 15 x 15. 17 x 17. And won $175 in combination singles and doubles shoot 19 x 20". unknown books
195578427San Francisco de Paula Cuba March 26 1955. Fine. 8vo. In five typed paragraphs Mary Hemingway describes her work on taxes converting four foreign currencies hoping that she and Ernest can vacation on the Pilar logistics on his possible trip to visit them in Cuba and replying to his mention of an edition of "Collected Poems" about which she queried Ernest who "said he never made any edition of poems." unknown
181978429Ketchum Idaho October 18 1962. Fine. 8vo. Mary gossips about Marcelline's visit "Ernest disliked her so much" and profiting from his death; packing up; travel plans etc. She wants to see Papa's letters to him and regretting that she cannot give him permission to publish them and hoping to see him in November. unknown
19491237151949. HEMINGWAY Ernest. Typed letter twice signed ""Papa"" to Peter Viertel. Finca Vigia Cuba 29 September 1949. Quarto two sheets of Hemingway's ""Finca Vigia San Francisco de Paula Cuba"" stationery each leaf measuring 8-1/2 inches by 11 inches typed in black ink single-spaced on one side of each leaf for two full pages of typed text heavily annotated in pen by Hemingway. $25000.Extraordinary typed and heavily annotated letter from Hemingway in Cuba to friend and fellow author and screenwriter Peter Viertel in Malibu California a long lively letter discussing his writing progress a proposed trip hunting and shooting pigeons drinking baseball and a new whore in town with over 150 words of additional notes written in the margins and on the verso of the second page in blue ink by Hemingway. Twice signed as 'Papa.'.The letter on Hemingway's Finca Vigia stationery addressed to Peter Viertel in Malibu CA reads in full with Hemingway's manuscript annotations in brackets and italics:Poor John the ex-light weight champion with his bag of feathers. I'll be god-damned. Papa.Dear Peter: Am awfully sorry to be answering your letter of 31 August now. I thought I had done it but have been working so very hard that it got mixed in with other stuff that I put away in the ""Must Be Answered at Once"". That is no damn excuse. Have been jamming like in a six day bike race.It would be wonderful if you and Jige could go across at the same time as we do. We will be leaving on the ILE DE FRANCE from New York on 1 November. Please don't tell this to anyone as I want to get in and out o town quiet. Will be pooped from working on book and I want to see the town anyway without all that crap. Have done over 15000 words snice I got your letter. Been going like I was possessed by the devil and figure with luck to finish this book now in three weeks. Then we don't have to worry about nothing. Please keep security on this too.Don't worry about the Finca being empty. It would have been wonderful to have you guys out here as I think it is a good place to live and to work. But a Hell of a nice girl who works in the Embassy will stay out here while we are gone and that we will not have to worry. I only hate to have it empty when you keep on the big staff of servants who you cannot let go without giving them three months' pay. We plan to be in Europe for some six weeks to two months. Will be in Paris for a little while and then go down to Venice. This is going to be the last year of the great shoot there as the duck marshes are going to be drained for some agrarian reform project. If you wanted to come down there for a little while we could get in a couple of damned good shoots. Fifty to sixty high flying ducks in a day is about what you'd get in a season in the states. They have mallards pintail widgeon teal redheads and lots of unknown ducks; all coming down from behind the Iron Curtain and plenty fat. I think they must fly over the Iron Curtain at night.Everything goes good down here. Mary is up in Chicago checking on her folks who are quite old and she should pay them a visit. Haven't heard from her yet about how they are because she figures that we are at sea. they are ok but her mother too bored with death coming on and too fragile to travel. But we had to put back in after six days out because there are about five tropical disturbances forming and kicking around. In the bad weather we stayed at Puerto Escondido you remember the place where I shot that iguana and I wrote 5000 some words while we were holed up. Have been having awfully good luck with it and it goes as fast as when I wrote THE SUN ALSO RISES in six weeks and the day I wrote THE KILLERS in Madrid one morning when it snowed and a story called TEN INDIANS in the afternoon and then couldn't cool out and wrote TODAY IS FRIDAY in the evening. After that got drunk. The only trouble writing alone here is like pitching with nobody in the stands or making a Hell of a fight to absolutely empty seats. I wonder why this girl capitalizes Hell. Must be early training. Have been pitching one hit and no hit ball and am pitching double headers like Ed Walsh. He was the only man they said who could ever strut while sitting down but he won 40 ball games in one year for a team that never gave him more than one or two runs. I'm going awfully good. Wish the Hell you and Jige were here to read it and tell me whether it's as good as it feels. When you're half a hundred years old you ought to be able to tell pretty well though unless you've gone into your second childhood. Hope this hasn't happened. Would like to live to be a smart and mean old man. Removed. And just lay back and let the bastards lead. Have scrapped about 100000 words. After all the test of whether a book is any good is how much good stuff you can remove from it. This also confidential.John's evening life with his hound sounds very interesting. What happens here is that I wake up around 3 or 4 in the morning and go to work and Blackie wakes up very reluctantly because he certainly loves his sleep and then lies down beside where I am working and keeps his eyes open all the time. He had a terrible nervous crisis when we made him retrieve a couple of pigeons at the club. He doesn't believe in hurting anything nor in anything hurting him. Have got him threw sic it and he retrieved 17 then 22 and yest 40. I killed 23 x 25 from 30 meters. All cats are fine and so are all the dogs. Please give my best to Eddie Rolfe and tell him I am writing him. Have been terribly remiss on letters on account of working so hard. When you finish working you try to get some exercise so as to be able to sleep a little so you can work the next day. I can always work but I know you have to feed the horse and let him rest sometimes.I am shooting good and have been practicing shooting pigeons from 30 meters so as to be able to go up to the big shoot in Kansas City next March if my form justifies it. So far it does but working tires your eyes and your eyes are what you shoot with along with a couple of other things. The entry fee on that shoot is $1000. I have beaten several of the guys who have won it but you have to be in really good form to shoot it as it's 100 birds and that more or less eliminates the luck and separates the characters pretty well. If you guys need any dough for trip or anything let me know because as soon as book is finished I will stink with it. or stench with it. But not for long.I read the bull book that you wrote about but it didn't mean anything to me. Know 30 or more better stories than that about bull fighting that will never write. That may sound conceited and it probably is but who the Hell isn't sometimes Will tell you three stories when we get together that I know as samples.Please give my best love to Jige and the two of you accept Mary's which I know she would send if she were here. There is a big wind today so we are going down and shoot some pigeons. They ought to fly very well. Wish you were here. It is very lonesome. We have a fine new whore in town who has just come in and who really loves the profession. She was cut out for it. But have turned her over to a friend of mine and am sticking it out that's probably not the phrase til Mary gets back. don't know when that will be yet. Had hoped to stay at sea so as to be a good boy. But this weather has bitched that. It is hard being a good boy alone in this town when you are a lonesome character.I had to give in and play the whore and we drank 7 bottles of Roederers Brut '42 and fucked all night until it was daylight both got battle fatigue I guess. Anyway I wrote only 708 words. I speak to whore very slow in English since she wants to learn English like all whores have some project and then translate soft and good in Spanish. There are going to be a lot of complications in Venice and we will have to cover it like Tinker and Johnny Evers. What we need is a third baseman and Hal Clease at 1st. Papa. Maybe we can recall Willie Walton from the American Association to play 3rd. He can't hit. But he can field womens. Fine condition. An extraordinary Hemingway letter. unknown
193969871Key West Aug 23 no year; but 1939. Lightly creased where folded; otherwise fine. 11 x 8-1/2 inches. News of Key West the weather the bantams and peacocks the lack of tobacco and plans for travel to the west to the Nordquist ranch. Hemingway mentions that he has 74000 words done on the book For Whom the Bell Tolls. unknown
194969870San Francisco de Paula Cuba 27 July 1949. Light horizontal creases where folded; otherwise fine. 11 x 8-1/2 inches. On Finca Vigia letterhead Hemingways mentions and gives news of many of their mutual friends. About 200 words. unknown
192749242NY: Scribner's 1927. Periodical. 8vo pp. 58 339-450 59-126. Illustrated. Lots of ads. Paper wraps. Cover worn o/w VG. Hannemann C175. Includes pieces on Grover Cleveland fiction; and articles "The George Washington Scandals" by John Fitzpatrick of the Library of Congress "The American Countryside" by Harvey Watts. Scribner's unknown books
1957548343Havana: Biblioteca de Fernando & Campoamor 1957. Unbound. Near Fine. Two gelatin silver double-weight photographs on thick card mounts. The first is borderless and measures 7" x 6" Hemingway folding a newspaper while he is seated at an outdoor table with two attractive young women with fancy tropical cocktails set before them. The second is borderless and measures 9" x 7" a bearded Hemingway standing next to three large draft horses before what appears to be a circus tent. Photographer's mark: "Biblioteca de Fernando & Campoamor" stamped on verso of each. Some slight wear at the margins of the smaller image very good or better; the larger image is near fine. These are the publisher's file copies of images that appeared in the rare 1957 pamphlet El Floridita de Hemingway a collection of cocktail recipes issued by the Havana Club Rum Company of Havana Cuba. Additionally the smaller image has a label affixed that reads: "El Floridita de Hemingway Fig. 12". Two interesting images connecting Hemingway to Cuban cocktails. Biblioteca de Fernando & Campoamor unknown
1959149370N.p.: N.p. 1959. Collection of two vintage borderless photographs of writer Ernest Hemingway and a friend at a bullfighting match circa 1959. With holograph annotations regarding layout to the verso along with the stamps of Tele-Magazine Radio Magazine and Dalmas press agency.<br/><br/>Hemingway made several visits to Spain throughout his life including one memorable trip in July 1925 which inspired his 1926 novel "The Sun Also Rises." He visited Spain again in 1959 to research a series of bullfighting articles commissioned by Life magazine which were later integrated into the full-length novel "The Dangerous Summer" published posthumously in 1985. <br/><br/>One photograph 9.5 x 7 inches one photograph 10.5 x 8.5 inches. Near Fine. N.p. unknown books
1952WRCLIT70535Beverly Hills: Twentieth Century Fox 1952. Two original 11 x 14" color lobby cards numbers 6 and 7 in the series. Number 6 has a small nick to lower margin and number 7 has the vestiges of tape on its verso; both cards have portions of the side margins trimmed away and tack holes from display but the printed areas remain very good. Representative color lobby cards depicting Gregory Peck and Ava Gardner's characters in Casey Robinson's screen adaptation of Hemingway's short story. Directed by Henry King and in addition to Peck and Gardner starred Susan Hayward Hildegarde Neff Leo G. Carroll and others in supporting roles. Twentieth Century Fox unknown books
1959149370N.p.: N.p. 1959. Two vintage borderless photographs of writer Ernest Hemingway and a friend at a bullfighting match circa 1959. With manuscript annotations regarding layout to the verso along with the stamps of Tele-Magazine Radio Magazine and Dalmas press agency.<br /> <br /> Hemingway made several visits to Spain throughout his life including one memorable trip in July 1925 which inspired his 1926 novel "The Sun Also Rises." He visited Spain again in 1959 to research a series of bullfighting articles commissioned by Life magazine which were later integrated into the full-length novel "The Dangerous Summer" published posthumously in 1985. <br /> <br /> One photograph 9.5 x 7 inches one photograph 10.5 x 8.5 inches. Near Fine. N.p. unknown
194456010NY: Avon Publishing Company 1944. Contains Hemingway's "The Short and Happy Life of Francis Macomber" and John Steinbeck's "Nothing So Monstrous.". 8vo. printed wraps; 162 pages. Very Good covers nice; contents clean & tight. <br/><br/> Avon Publishing Company paperback books
192853801Chicago:: Scott Foresman 1928. Revised Edition. publisher's blue cloth. Worn and soiled; spine heavily repaired with clear tape. 8vo. Ernest Hemingway's brother Leicester's copy with his signature a drawing and annotations for example: on p. 477 to "France: An Ode" has been added in ink "r of no mean strength;" small pencil drawing of someone thumbing their nose on title page; "Learn these Godamlines" in the Milton section etc. etc. Title on front panel altered to "Twelve Centies of English Poty and Pose." Scott, Foresman, hardcover
In-4 (cm. 30.80), tela editoriale, sovracoperta editoriale illustrata, pp. 189, (3), con illustrazioni a colori nel testo. Piccola abrasione al piatto anteriore ed al taglio concavo, sempre alla sovracoperta; peraltro, volume in buono stato di conservazione (good copy).