5 521 résultats
1933142401New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1933. First edition of Hemingway's third collection of short stories. Octavo original black cloth. Fine in a very good dust jacket. Housed in a custom half morocco slipcase. A very nice presentation. Written when Hemingway was at the height of his creative powers the stories in Winner Take Nothing glow with the mark of his unique talent. Hunters wives old men of wisdom waiters fighters women loved women lost: they are all here living on the raw edge making love facing the inevitable reality of death. The characters the dialogue the settings the remarkable insight could have come only from Hemingway's imagination. As an introduction to his work or as an overview of the themes he developed at greater length in his novels it is a stunningly successful collection. Charles Scribner's Sons hardcover
1933023362New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1933 First printing/first issue of the first edition with the Scribner's "A" and the Scribner's Seal on the copyright page Hanneman A12a. The book is in fine condition with minimal wear; dust jacket with some chipping along edges light toning to spine/folds/upper edge a short tear to bottom back panel and light shelf wear else fine. Charles Scribner's Sons hardcover
19331370786New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1933. First Edition First Printing. Hardcover. Octavo 244 pages. In Good minus condition with Poor dust jacket. Black spine with brown text. Scribner's "A" and seal on copyright page first state dust jacket with "$2.00" price. Dust jacket is protected by mylar covering and has large open tear to head edge of spine and both covers interior flaps detached but present covers detached at joints chipping to tail edge of spine and moderate edgewear and shelfwear. Facsimile dust jacket in mylar underneath original. Boards have heavy rubbing to edges and boards exposed at corners. Text block has splitting to front interior hinge and light age toning. Shelved in Case 13. 1370786. Shelved Dupont Bookstore. Charles Scribner's Sons hardcover
1990135SB<p>Mint in original shrinkwrap. 1990. Easton Press. There seems to be a bit of a problem accessing the full description here. Please click on the book title or the "book box" for page 2 and the rest of the description.</p> Easton Press hardcover
1933227722New York.: Charles Scribner's Sons. 1933. First edition "A". Gilt decorated hard cover. . Fine copy book plate label on spine faded. Octavo. . Very scarce in this condition. Charles Scribner's Sons. hardcover
1990631941Easton Press 1990. First Thus. Leather Binding. As New. As New in Shrinkwrap! Bound in full brown leather spine and covers decorated gilt and black with embossed upper cover illustration and spine with partly raised bands light brown moire-patterned silk endpapers all edges gilt light brown silk bookmarker. Easton Press unknown
19332405106Charles Scribner's Sons 1933. first. hardcover. fine. First edition with 1933 on title and copyright page and Scribner's A. Book fine small blue ink line to bottom edge. Charles Scribner's Sons unknown
1933636119Charles Scribner's Sons 1933. First Edition. Hardcover. Near Fine/Fine. FIRST EDITION. An exceptionally nice copy in the original black cloth with gold foil labels - labels bright and untarniched; in an exact facsimile of the first edition jacket. 8 244 pages. Contains 14 short stories in all; dedicated to poet Archibald MacLeish. Hanneman A12a with 'A' and Scribner's seal on title page verso. Nice tight copy. Charles Scribner's Sons hardcover
193378229New York:: Charles Scribner's Sons 1933. First edition. publisher's black cloth with gold labels on spine and front cover in dust jacket. Tiny November 1933 ink ownership name on front free endpaper; very slight rubbing to the edges of the cloth; clean tight and sound in a dust jacket with shallow 1/8" chipping and rubbing to the extremities of the backstrip and slight use at extremities. 8vo. Charles Scribner's Sons, hardcover
193347959New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1933. First Edition. Hardcover. Very Good. First edition first issue but lacking the dust jacket. Black cloth with black lettered title label to the front board and spine spine label with a couple of little nicks cloth to spine ends and corners with very light rubbing and nicking boards clean book clean throughout and the binding tight and square. With all the first issue points. Charles Scribner's Sons hardcover
1990019760Norwalk Conn: Easton Press 1990. Brown leather with with gilt design and lettering no black to spine. One of his early collections of short stories. Beautiful book in genuine leather hubbed spines stamped with 22kt gold accents. Smyth sewn. All page edges are gilded to keep out dust moire fabric endsheets and satin-ribbon place marker. Fingernail scratch to top edge of outer page edges else fine. Unread crisp copy. . Collector's Edition. Full Leather. Near Fine to Fine/No Jacket. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. Easton Press
1933642721Charles Scribner's Sons 1933. First Edition. Hardcover. Good/Fine. FIRST EDITION. A good copy in the original black cloth with gold foil labels; in an exact facsimile of the first edition jacket some wear to binding; spine label tarnished; lacks front free endpaper; front pastedown has adhesion. 8 244 pages. Contains 14 short stories in all; dedicated to poet Archibald MacLeish. Hanneman A12a with 'A' and Scribner's seal on title page verso. Nice tight copy. Charles Scribner's Sons hardcover
1933207473New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1933. First Edition. A bit of wrinkling to the spine label; just about fine albeit without dust jacket; top edge and labels nice and bright. 8vo 24pp; black cloth with printed gold-paper labels. Hanneman A12a. Charles Scribner's Sons unknown
199094649Norwalk: Easton Press. Fine. 1990. Leather. 8vo . Bound in full leather with raised bands gilt tooling to spines and covers and silk end papers. . We specialize in fine books in collectible condition. Orders are professionally packaged and shipped promptly. H14 . Easton Press hardcover
1990mon0003806922Easton Press 1990T. leather_bound. Very Good. 1.2992 8.8189 6.3819. Near fine copy bound in full leather with raised bands and gilt decoration. All edges gilt pages clean. Bookplate of former owner affixed in prelims. Easton Press hardcover
1990mon0003846323Easton Press 1990T. leather_bound. Very Good. 1.2992 8.8189 6.3819. full leather cover with gilt all edges gilt. bookplate of former owner on the front pastedown. pages clean. Easton Press hardcover
1933w250933714Charles Scribner's Sons 1933. 244pp. Black cloth hardback corner tips slightly bumped rubbed area at top spine edge spine slightly faded few light brown foxing spots contains fourteen stories of varying length. Some of them have appeared in magazines but the majority have not been published before . Hard Cover. Good /No Jacket. Charles Scribner's Sons Hardcover
19337515New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1933. First edition. Fine/Near Fine. First printing with "A" on copyright page and Stallings review on the rear dust jacket panel. A Fine copy in Near Fine dust jacket. Jacket with a short one inch tear at the top of the rear panel and just slight wear at the crown and extremities. Spine a trifle faded but a handsome copy overall.<br /> <br /> A 1933 collection of short stories by Nobel Prize winner Ernest Hemingway including "A Clean Well Lighted Place" which James Joyce called "one of the best short stories ever written." Many of the stories here appear in print for the first time - and would appear again in later collections. In the year of the collection's publication Hemingway would go to Africa an experience which he would later use to write Green Hills of Africa and The Snows of Kilimanjaro. <br /> <br /> "There are two stories that show a sudden expansion of Hemingway's range yet both are beautifully simplified and pure. These are 'Wine of Wyoming' and 'The Gambler the Nun and the Radio'" contemporary New York Herald review. Fine in Near Fine dust jacket. Charles Scribner's Sons unknown
1990mon0003963366Easton Press 1990T. leather_bound. Very Good. 1.2992 8.8189 6.3819. full leather copy minimal wear Easton Press hardcover
73644New York NY: Charles Scribner's Sons 1933. Modern Literature FIRST EDITION first impression. Octavo 19 x 14cm pp.10; 244; 2. Publisher's black cloth with gilt title panels top edge tinted red and the illustrated dust-jacket priced at $2.00. Some overall toning contents clean no inscriptions in a repaired jacket with some colour touch-ups and gummed paper strips applied to reverse side. Shows well. An inexpensive copy of the fist edition. A collection of acclaimed short stories. Ernest Hemingway made his literary start as a short-story writer and he always excelled in that medium. This volume reveals him at his best - the characters and backgrounds are widely varied: "A Clean Well-Lighted Place" is about an old Spanish Beggar; "Homage to Switzerland" concerns various conversations at a Swiss railway-station restaurant; and "The Gambler the Nun and the Radio" is set in the accident ward of a hospital in Western United States. New York, NY: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1933 unknown
1933TB33918New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1933. First Edition. First Printing Very good in its original black cloth covered boards with printed gold paper labels on the spine and front board both of which have had loss. A 12mo of 7 1/4 by 5 inches with rubbing and light wear to the cloth at the head of the spine and very light wear to the heel of the spine. The backstrip is slightly faded while the paper label on the spine is slightly darkened. Without its scarce dust jacket. 244 pages of text. A collection of 14 short stories some of which appeared previously in various magazines. Six of the stories appeared for the first time in this printing. Hanneman12; Grissom A.12.1.a Charles Scribner's Sons hardcover
1933035733New York: Scribner's 1933. Book. Very Good. Hardcover. 1st Edition. octavo. 244 pp. Black boards with gold pasted title on front and spine. Corners rubbed spine somewhat faded but perfectly legible. End papers are toned in off-white and have ex-libris pasted in plus former bookseller's sticker. Interior pages are unmarked. Dedicated to poet A. MacLeish this collection of 14 stories tells the story of loners and misfits. It includes A Clean Well-lighted Place and The Gambler the Nun and the Radio. A nice giftable first edition from an iconic American master. Scribner's Hardcover
1025480600.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
06441New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1933. First Edition of Hemingway's Third Collection of Stories<br /> A Near Fine Copy in a Near Fine Dust Jacket<br /> <br /> HEMINGWAY Ernest. Winner Take Nothing. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1933.<br /> <br /> First edition first printing with the Scribner's "A" and the Scribner's Seal on the copyright page first print run of 20300 copies. <br /> <br /> Octavo 7 5/16 x 5 1/16 inches; 187 x 130 mm. 2 blank 8 244 2 blank pp.<br /> <br /> Original black cloth front cover and spine with gold paper labels printed in black. Top edge stained red. An exceptionally well-preserved copy the labels entirely intact and unworn. In the original color pictorial dust jacket printed in black white and red with the price $2.00 on the front flap. Jacket with only the barest trace of rubbing at extremities confined to approximately 1/16 inch at the foot of the spine and notably entirely unfaded on the spine a condition point of particular importance for this title. Altogether a near fine copy in a near fine jacket - rarely encountered in such fresh and unrestored state.<br /> <br /> A significant early collection comprising fourteen short stories written during one of the most introspective and experimental periods of Hemingway's career. Several of the pieces rank among his most powerful shorter works including "A Natural History of the Dead" a stark meditation on the realities of war; "Fathers and Sons" which revisits themes of memory and inheritance central to the Nick Adams cycle; and "A Day's Wait" one of his most anthologized stories.<br /> <br /> Published between Death in the Afternoon 1932 and Green Hills of Africa 1935 Winner Take Nothing reflects a darker more reflective phase in Hemingway's writing marked by psychological depth and a departure from the more overtly heroic tone of his earlier work. Though initially less celebrated than some of his major novels the collection has since come to be regarded as one of his most subtle and revealing books.<br /> <br /> Hanneman A12a. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1933 unknown
53220001like new. unknown