17 688 résultats
1901030407new york: Croscup & Sterling 1901. Book. Illus. by Walter McCall. Near Fine. Hardcover. 8vo - over 7¾ - 9¾" tall. Twenty 20 volumes in gilt lettered half blue morocco leather over marbled boards with matching endpapers.Top edge gilt. Edition limited to56 copies of the autograph edition of which this is copy #28. THe first volume is also signed by William Lyon Phelps who has written the introduction and a life of the author. Each Volume has a hand coloured frontis several of which are signed by the artist. All of the above on Holland hand made paper. The set consists of 3 long novels Pamela Sir Charles Grandison and Clarissa Harlowe. A beautiful set in wonderful condition with just a little edgewear. Croscup & Sterling Hardcover
1901249757New York: Croscup & Sterling 1901. Limited. hardcover. very good. Life of the Author and Introductions by by William Lyon Phelps. 20 volumes. Illustrated. Handsomely bound in full green morocco spines faded to brown elaborated stamped in gilt with red inlays & inlaid leather doublures by Stikeman. silk moire flyleaves t.e.g. New York: Croscup & Sterling 1901. Limited Edition.<br/> <br/> Edition de Bibliophile limited to 20 named copies on hand-made Japan paper exclusively for American subscribers and the type distributed. Thhis is the "Aaron Hill" copy<br/> <br/> Croscup & Sterling unknown
1901249757New York: Croscup & Sterling 1901. Limited. hardcover. very good. Life of the Author and Introductions by by William Lyon Phelps. 20 volumes. Illustrated. Handsomely bound in full green morocco spines faded to brown elaborated stamped in gilt with red inlays & inlaid leather doublures by Stikeman. silk moire flyleaves t.e.g. New York: Croscup & Sterling 1901. Limited Edition.<br/><br/> Edition de Bibliophile limited to 20 named copies on hand-made Japan paper exclusively for American subscribers and the type distributed. Thhis is the "Aaron Hill" copy<br/><br/> Croscup & Sterling unknown books
1995ABE-1593565789213Harpercollins 1995. 1st Edition. Hardcover. Very Good/Very Good. The inscription reads: "For Bob the love and light of my life Annie." The relationship between Annie Dillard and her husband Robert D. Richardson is a remarkable and well-known story. Both were married to different people when Dillard sent Richardson a fan letter out of the blue prompted by a book he wrote Henry Thoreau: A Life of the Mind. Dillard wrote her Master's thesis at Hollins College on Walden and Henry and the transcendentalists of course have majorly influenced her work starting with Pilgrim at Tinker Creek. Richardson is one of our foremost literary biographers having written also about Emerson and William James the latter book earned him the Bancroft Prize. As Dillard described it she and Richardson had "two lunches and three hand shakes" and then both got divorces so they could get married in 1988. The next book she wrote The Writing Life is fittingly dedicated "For Bob" and they remain one of America's foremost literary and transcendental couples. Richardson has even gone on to write the biography of Dillard a short one. As for condition: the book is very good because of some light foxing to upper and outer edges of the text block and some extremely minor sunning or soiling to the upper and lower edges of the boards; the jacket is very good because of some moderate sunning to the spine. Dillard left a second signature her public more-perfunctory style above her name on the title page. All in all the book presents extremely well and its association is the ultimate knot. A copy inscribed to a life partner is always de facto a dedication copy and when it comes to having "mornings like this" Richardson would know better than anyone. Please inquire for photos. Harpercollins hardcover
CBS 9780470659632USA Edition . New. Brand New! Fast Delivery US Edition and ship within 24-48 hours. Deliver by FedEx and Dhl & Aramex UPS & USPS and we do accept APO and PO BOX Addresses. Order can be delivered worldwide within 6-10 days and we do have flat rate for up to 2LB. Extra shipping charges will be requested if the Book weight is more than 5 LB. This Item May be shipped from India United states & United Kingdom. Depending on your location and availability. unknown
First edition, small folio (285 x 180 mm), [12], 99, [7], 239, [11], 55, [1], [6], 34pp., signature A incorrectly bound in after signature B, complete with the engraved title page, the printed title page, a double-page engraved map of Chester, a double-page engraved plan and inset prospect of Chester by Wenceslaus Hollar, a double-page engraved map of the Isle of Man with 8 inset prospects, 2 double-page engraved plates (one with repair to a closed tear), 15 other engraved plates, including armorial plates, and engravings in the text, small piece of blank lower corn of title page torn-away, finely bound in nineteenth-century green straight-grained morocco, gilt tooled dentelles, boards with a gilt roll tooled floral border, spine with five raised bands, two compartments lettered in gilt direct, others ornately tooled, all edges gilt, fine. Frances Mary Richarson Currer's copy in a fine morocco binding. A choice copy with a fine provenance and bound in a sumptuous full green morocco binding. "In 1656 King published in London The Vale-Royall of England, or, The County Palatine of Chester Illustrated, for which he wrote the preface. In it he printed for the first time two essays on Chester written by William Smith and William Webb more than forty years earlier, as well as an essay on the Isle of Man by James Chaloner. This book was illustrated with etchings mostly by Wenceslaus Hollar, which were unsigned and for this reason have often been attributed to King himself."?(Oxford DNB). Frances Mary Richardson Currer (1785-1861) was England's earliest female bibliophile and was described by Dibdin as the "head of all female book collectors in Europe.". Currer inherited both the library of her great grandfather, Richard Richardson (1663-1741) and her grandfather Mathew Wilson of Eshton Hall. With the additions added by Currer the library became of considerable importance, and in its day, it was surpassed only by those of Earl Spencer, the duke of Devonshire, and the duke of Buckingham. Most of the books in her library were auctioned at Sotheby's in 1862, realising ?6,000. A second sale took place in 1916 which raised more than ?3700, and the residue of her library was sold in 1979 and 1994. Provenance: Contemporary signature of Joseph Hopkinson to head of engraved title; The front pastedown has the armorial bookplates of Mathew Wilson and his grand-daughter Frances Mary Richardson Currer. Wing, K488; Upcott I, p.61; Cubbon I, p.461.
19205360171920. Hardcover. Near Fine. Oblong octavo 8 ½" x 5". Contemporary screw-bound black pebbled cloth covers. Contains 132 gelatin silver prints 3" x 4" including some gold toned neatly mounted on the rectos and versos of black paper leaves. Without captions or dates. Slight silvering at the edges of some prints else fine. A remarkable album of female nudes photographed by H.R. Cremer as goddesses and sprites. His images feature one two or three nude women in various subtle or striking poses taken outdoors in various gardens and wooded areas including lakes on open fields and hilltops and along an ocean coast. Among the models are several images of an Asian woman. Also included are six early studio portraits of individual female nudes.<br /> <br /> A third generation photographer based in Philadelphia and New York Cremer studied at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts and first exhibited his photographs in 1924. Inspired by the Art Deco aesthetic Cremer incorporated Native American motifs Aztec and Maya as well as Greek and Roman mythology in his photographs of women.<br /> <br /> A beautiful well-preserved album in fine condition featuring Cremer's best work from the 1920s-30s. hardcover
1964131051Beverly Hills CA: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer MGM 1964. Draft script for the 1965 film based on the 1948 novel by Evelyn Waugh legendarily co-written by Terry Southern and Christopher Isherwood. Deluxe working script belonging to uncredited crew member William Todd Mason with his name and phone number in manuscript ink on the title page and some brief penciled annotations on three pages. Laid in is a corner stapled three-page Staff and Crew list with two name additions in manuscript red ink on the second page. <br /> <br /> Included is a vintage studio still photograph from the film. <br /> <br /> An early draft issued nearly two years prior to the film's October 1965 release with substantial differences from the finished film. <br /> <br /> The sister film to "Dr. Strangelove" and in the eyes of many just as much a masterpiece of exquisitely wrought black humor. Made in the US but in a dense British-American style. Ostensibly a satire on the funeral business in which a young British poet winds up in a Hollywood cemetery as part of an inheritance arrangement-but in reality a satire of Hollywood itself as well as the Western malaise of the mid 1960s. <br /> <br /> Script: Self wrappers presumably as this draft was issued. Title page present rubber stamped copy No. 70 dated July 21 1964 with credits for screenwriters Southern and Isherwood. 158 leaves mimeograph duplication with blue revision pages throughout dated 7-22-64. Pages Fine wrapper Fine bound with two gold brads. <br /> <br /> Staff and Crew listing: two leaves slightly worn with annotations on the second page. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer [MGM] unknown
1964131051Beverly Hills CA: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer MGM 1964. Draft script for the 1965 film based on the 1948 novel by Evelyn Waugh legendarily co-written by Terry Southern and Christopher Isherwood. Deluxe working script belonging to uncredited crew member William Todd Mason with his name and phone number in holograph ink on the title page and some brief penciled annotations on three pages. Laid in is a corner stapled three page Staff and Crew list with two name additions in holograph red ink on the second page. <br/><br/>Included is a vintage studio still photograph from the film. <br/><br/>An early draft issued nearly two years prior to the film's October 1965 release with substantial differences from the finished film. <br/><br/>The sister film to "Dr. Strangelove" and in the eyes of many just as much a masterpiece of exquisitely wrought black humor. Made in the US but in a dense British-American style. Ostensibly a satire on the funeral business in which a young British poet winds up in a Hollywood cemetery as part of an inheritance arrangement-but in reality a satire of Hollywood itself as well as the Western malaise of the mid 1960s. <br/><br/>Script: Self wrappers presumably as this draft was issued. Title page present rubber stamped copy No. 70 dated July 21 1964 with credits for screenwriters Southern and Isherwood. 158 leaves mimeograph duplication with blue revision pages throughout dated 7-22-64. Pages Fine wrapper Fine bound with two gold brads. <br/><br/>Staff and Crew listing: two leaves slightly worn with annotations on the second page. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer [MGM] unknown books
1968147232Paris: Les Films Marceau 1968. Three Draft scripts for the 1969 film by three different screenwriters. <br/><br/>From the estate of film producer Elliott Kastner whose best known credits include "The Long Goodbye" Robert Altman 1973 "The Missouri Breaks" Arthur Penn 1976 and "Heat" Michael Mann 1996.<br/><br/>The first script is an undated draft script by screenwriter George Bluestone who previously adapted Winston Graham's 1967 novel "The Walking Stick" for the 1968 Eric Till film with copied annotations throughout striking adding and adjusting dialogue.<br/><br/>The second is a Second draft script dated 1st April 1968 by novelist playwright and screenwriter Derek Marlow with copied annotations striking scenes or pages on nearly every page. Marlow said in an interview that he was asked by director Tony Richardson which book he'd like to adapt for a screenplay and Marlow suggested Nabakov's "Laughter in the Dark." Two or three months afterward Marlow received a call from Richardson asking him to write the adaptation. <br/><br/>At the time Richard Burton was to star alongside Marianne Faithfull. Marlow then went to the U.S. to promote his 1968 novel "Memoirs of a Venus Lackey" and upon his return to the UK found out a new screenplay by Edward Bond had been written and Burton and Faithfull had been replaced.<br/><br/>The third is a draft script dated 24th June 1968 by Edward Bond. IMDB shows the filming date as starting June 1968 thus likely a draft used early in the production. The first half of the script to page 66 is on pink paper with the remainder on green paper with no revision date change.<br/><br/>Based on the 1932 novel by Vladimir Nabokov updating the original 1930s Berlin setting to 1960s swinging London about a wealthy art dealer who is seduced and swindled out of his fortune by a young woman and her lover.<br/><br/>Set in London and the Riviera shot on location in Spain France and the United Kingdom. <br/><br/>George Bluestone script:<br/><br/>Wrapper integral with title page with credits for screenwriter George Bluestone and author Vladimir Nabokov. 114 leaves with last page of text numbered 109. Xerographic duplication rectos only. Pages Near Fine bound with two gold brads.<br/><br/>Derek Marlowe script:<br/><br/>Black wrappers with die-cut title window in the British style. Title page present dated 1st April 1968 obscured but visible through Winkast sticker noted as Second Draft with credits for screenwriter Derek Marlowe and author Vladimir Nabokov. 137 leaves with last page of text numbered 136. Xerographic duplication rectos only. Pages Near Fine wrapper Near Fine bound internally with two flat metal brads<br/><br/>Edward Bond script:<br/><br/>Black wrappers with die-cut title window in the British style. Title page present dated 24th June 1968 with credits for screenwriter Edward Bond and author Vladimir Nabokov. 110 leaves with last page of text numbered 108. Mimeographed rectos only. Pages Near Fine wrapper Near Fine bound internally with two flat metal brads. Les Films Marceau unknown books
10245London. First edition first issue. Folding map with small tears not affecting printed map and 10 tinted lithograph plates mostly of indigineous people with illustrations in the text. Two volumes. Pp.vii 413 32 ads. dated March 31st 1851 ; vii 426. 8vo. original brown cloth spine repaired Cruising Association gilt cypher and stamp on the spines and boards.First edition of this account of a voyage to the Arctic regions in search Sir John Franklin's expedition by Sir John Richardson 1787-1865. Richardson studied in the medical department of the University of Edinburgh entered the navy as assistant surgeon in 1807 and was at the taking of Copenhagen. He was surgeon and naturalist to Sir John Franklin in his arctic expeditions in 1819-'22 and 1825-'7. He commanded one of the three expeditions to which this work is dedicated that went in search of Sir John Franklin in 1848 and returned in November 1849. Sir John Franklin b. 1786 had departed in 1845 with an expedition of 129 men on board of the 'Erebus' and the 'Terror' to find the northwest passage from the Atlantic to the Bering Straits. Nothing was heard from him again. No less then 40 expeditions were send out to find him. Many of these expeditions resulted in very useful geographical information: in 1850 for example the Northwest route was actually found by McClure. In 1859 the remains of the expedition were found at Cape Victoria proving that Franklin had died in 1847. In 1930 further remains were located in King Williamsland by a Canadian airman. The work includes a number of images of a sub-Arctic Athapaskan tribe the Kutchin whom Richardson visited in far northwest Canada in 1848. These published images and Murray's original drawings known to scholars only through photostats in the British Columbia Provincial Archives are the best early images of the tribe. Part two contains an appendix devoted to the physical geography climatology flora insects and vocabularies of the polar regions and concludes with an explanation of the two plates with leaves in the first part.<br><br><br><br>Sabin 71025. hardcover
1853144972London: Admiralty 1853. Notes: Folio 34cm one sheet folded 3 printed pages on pale blue stock paper a fine copy very rare. With regard to the Admiralty letters McGahern says "We found no standard references auction records or listings. They are not listed in WorldCat or Amicus. These letters are mentioned in George W. Corner's biography of Kane "Doctor Kane and the Arctic Seas" 1972 p116. 'From England he Kane received letters of advice and encouragement from the experienced Arctic travellers Sir William Parry Sir John Richardson Sir James Ross and Colonel later Sir Edward Sabine.' only reference located. </p><p>WorldCat shows one copy at the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign as part of a collection of 3 items Richardson Parry and Sir John Ross sic: this should be James Clark Ross. Described as "Three letterpress copies of letters addressed to Sir Francis Beaufort hydrographer of the British Admiralty… The letters were presumably printed for distribution by the Admiralty each on blue paper bifoliate leaves." OCLC #1114338177.</p><p>In early 1853 Kane was preparing for the Second Grinnell Expedition and apparently he or the US Navy Dept. solicited advice on suitable equipment and technique from the British Admiralty. In response the Admiralty sent letters to several of the better known Arctic explorers of the time their replies being forwarded to Kane in printed form. These letters are filled with detailed suggestions regarding clothing with particular attention to feet fuel sledges tents travelling etc. McGahern Plimer Catalogue #375. 1853 Admiralty hardcover
98046London Longman 1851. . First edition. 2 volumes 8vo viii 413; vii 1 426 pp. 32 pages ads end vol. I 2 coloured lithograph frontispieces 8 lithograph plates folding coloured map handsome modern dark blue half morocco gilt old crease page vi vol. I original cloth sides bound-in at end neat restoration to outer edge first three leaves circa 3 mm a very good set.<br /> Richardson the noted naturalist accompanied Franklin on his first and second expeditions. The present work includes the journals of Richardson and Rae on the MacKenzie Arctic and Coppermine rivers in 1849. The appendix contains a comparative table of dialects spoken by the Eskimo. The book also contains one of the earliest listings of Canadian and Arctic plants.<br /> Arctic Bibliography 14489; Sabin 71025; Wagner-Camp 203:1; Hill 1452. London, Longman, 1851. hardcover
1848WRCAM54899Baltimore: John W. Woods Printer 1848. 96pp. plus three wood-engraved plates including frontispiece one in-text illustration and a facsimile manuscript. Modern morocco in an antique style spine gilt raised bands edges tooled in gilt. Contemporary institutional gift inscription on front free endpaper. Occasional light foxing. A very good copy. Second edition after the very rare first edition of the previous year of this important Wagner-Camp and Mexican-American War title. This second edition remains quite rare and is seldom met with in commerce. Richardson enlisted as a mounted volunteer due to patriotism engendered on the 4th of July in Carrollton Missouri. He took part in Doniphan's expedition over the Santa Fe Trail in the fall of 1846 heading south to El Paso by the first of the New Year then on to Chihuahua and eventually to Matamoros where the command shipped by boat to New Orleans. By July 10 Richardson was back home in Anne Arundel County Maryland and the first edition of his fascinating journal was published before the end of 1847 in the nearest city Baltimore. <br> <br> An important and well-written account of overland travel along the Santa Fe Trail during the Mexican-American War. GARRETT p.153. GRAFF FIFTY TEXAS RARITIES 33 1st ed. WAGNER-CAMP 137:2. CLARK II:164. HOWES R262 "aa." TUTOROW 2630. GRAFF 3496 1st ed. RITTENHOUSE 480 note. SABIN 71093. John W. Woods, Printer hardcover books
24059London: John Murray. 1828. First edition. First edition. 4to. Publisher's original red cloth with printed paper title label to the spine. Expertly re-backed with the original spine laid down to matching cloth. Page edges untrimmed. Publisher's prospectus for 'North American Views during the land Arctic Expeditions in 1819-1826 under the command of Captain Franklin' bound in at the front. Illustrated with 31 plates engraved by Edward Finden after drawings by George Back & E. N. Kendall with tissue-guards and six folding engraved maps one partially hand-coloured. A near fine copy the binding square and firm with fading to the spine and to the edges of the boards and with a touch of wear to the corners. The contents with some light scattered foxing to the preliminary pages and occasionally to thepage edges are otherwise wonderfully clean and bright throughout. The engraved plates are clean and crisp and the folding maps are in excellent condition with just a little toning remaining free from tears or damage. The first edition of Franklin's account of his second Canadian overland expedition which formed his third expedition to the Arctic. The aim of the expedition was to reach the mouth of the Mackenzie River from which Franklin would follow the coast westward and attempt to meet Frederick William Beechey who would sail northeast from the Bering Strait. Franklin's companion John Richardson meanwhile would follow the coast east from the Mackenzie to the mouth of the Coppermine River. After reaching Great Slave Lake using the existing known route Franklin took a reconnaissance trip 1000 miles down the Mackenzie becoming on 16th August 1825 the second European to reach its mouth. Here he erected a flagpole and buried letters for Parry beneath. Following this success he returned to winter at Fort Franklin on Great Bear Lake heading back downriver the following summer where he found the ocean frozen. He then worked his way west for several hundred miles giving up on 16th August 1826 at Return Reef when he was about 150 miles east of Beechey's Point Barrow and headed back to Fort Franklin reaching safety on 21st September. The present work contains both Franklin's and Richardson's narratives of the expedition and includes descriptions of the lands traversed the weather endured and the numerous encounters with the Esquimaux and Dogrib Indians. The six large handsome folding maps provide extensive cartographical detail of the expedition and the finely engraved plates wonderfully illustrate the experiences of its members. "The beauty of the typography is rivalled by that of the engravings each of which is a splendid specimen of art. Nine of these illustrations represent some incident in the intercourse of the explorers with the Esquimaux" Field. A splendid copy scarce in the publisher's original cloth. Hill 636; Arctic Bibliography 5198; Sabin 25628; Field 561. Further details and images for any of the items listed are available on request. Lucius Books welcomes direct contact with our customers. London: John Murray. 1828 hardcover
1919135563Oxford: Wm. Hunt 1919. Mr. Richardson's main ideas appear to me true original and important" Russell First edition of Richardson's first and pioneering paper on the subject containing Russell's 20-line contribution "Problem: To Produce in Two Nations a Mutual Will to War" pp. 15-16. It was published at the author's own expense costing him £35 for 300 copies total. In this fifty-page essay the mathematician and pacifist Lewis Fry Richardson 1881-1953 developed a mathematical model for describing the change in animosity between two opposing sides during a war and "postulated that the rate of increase of the warlike activity of one nation depended on the current activity of the opposing nation" ODNB. "Russell had been impressed with the manuscript which Stanley Unwin had forwarded him although he thought that Richardson's subject required a more extended treatment and that he should 'eliminate dogmatic statements of his metaphysical opinions where they are irrelevant'. But otherwise 'Mr. Richardson's main ideas appear to me true original and important' 29 December 1918. Russell's 'Problem' was enclosed with this letter to Unwin with instructions that it be passed on to the author 'for his amusement'" Rempel & Haslam p. 405. Loosely inserted is a clipping from The Friend of April 7 1961 reviewing the posthumous publication of two volumes of Richardson's works; Arms and Insecurity and Statistics of deadly Quarrels. Quarto. Roneo typescript pp. 3 50. Original dark blue cloth-backed blue buckram boards printed paper label to front board. Ownership inscription dated 1919 to front pastedown with a typed letter signed loosely inserted returning the book to him. Spine ends worn and corners lightly rubbed Blackwell & Ruja B9. See Richard A. Rempel & Beryl Haslam's critical edition of Russell's Uncertain Paths to Freedom: Russia and China 1919-22 Routledge 2000 Appendix I. hardcover
183140977London: John Murray 1831. 4to. 27.5cm tall copy ix errata slip-xlxvi5231p. errata page with With 46 of 50 hand-coloured lithographed plates & 41 wood-engraved text illustrations rebound in later blue cloth black leather label the plates are clean and the colour is excellent. fine. ~ ~ Of the 4 volumes of Fauna Borealis Americana each covering a different subject Volume 3 THE BIRDS over the years was always considered the rarest of the single volumes. Complete sets in fine bindings are the rarest and most difficult to find in acceptable condition. <br /> <br /> Richardson was surgeon and naturalist with Franklin on his two overland expeditions to discover a Northwest Passage in 1819-22 and 1825-27 and these fine works are the chief scientific data collected. The Illustrations were drawn from specimens volume three being the artistic work of William Swainson the plates being hand-coloured. Richardson wrote most of the text and gives accounts of previous natural history investigations in the Arctic. Most of the species here recorded were then new to science. "To the publication of them the four volumes. the government made a grant of 1000 pounds. This may therefore boast of being the first zoological work published with the support of the British government". -Anker. Anker 493. Nissen 773. Zimmer II520. Casey A. Wood p537. Sabin 71026-7-8. T.P.L. 1454. Sitwell. Fine Bird Books 1700-1900. p135. John Murray unknown
176073880London:: Printed for J. Rivington R. Baldwin and 12 others 1760. Early edition. 19th c. dark blue straight-grain morocco. Lacking one engraved plate as noted. Tiny old ink name partially effaced from title; old signature practiced on the verso of one plate not visible on recto and ink calculations at the bottom margin of one page of text; neat repair to one torn leaf; some light spots and inoffensive soiling. Joints partially cracked; edges and corners quite rubbed; still sound. . 12mo. Engraved illustrated title page. Containing Two Hundred and Forty i.e. 230 Fables with a Cut Engrav'd on Copper to each Fable. The engravings were printed ten to a page and this copy is unfortunately lacking one of the 24 plates Plate XIII. . And the Life of Aesop prefixed by Mr. Richardson. Printed for J. Rivington, R. Baldwin [and 12 others], unknown
Biblio238PATRIOTIC & ECCENTRIC COLLECTOR OF AMERICANA RODE WASHINGTON'S CARRIAGE IN THE STATUE OF LIBERTY PARADE. 7 ½ x 9 ½ inches. Photograph by Oscar G. Mason. Very good condition with deep rich tones. Archivally framed. Born in England in 1812 Benjamin Richardson became an American citizen in 1839. In 1849 he came to San Francisco during the Gold Rush and he bought two waterfront lots at the first sale of real estate held in San Francisco. Richardson later sold these lots to the railroads for $400000 and moved to New York. One of the great eccentrics of his day Richardson was instantly recognizable by his waist-length flowing silvery beard and his 210-pound five feet six inch frame. The bearded eccentric tirelessly pursued and surrounded himself with relics of American history including Lincoln relics and Washington's carriage which he rode in the Statue of Liberty procession. This wonderful photograph shows Richardson and his great-grandson as they appeared in the Statue of Liberty Celebration parade. This photograph is accompanied by the sheet music of Richardson's song Uncle Ben's Liberty Celebration Song which used the photograph as an illustration. Benjamin Richardson
01915Londres Paris: Chez Jean Osborne Didot 1742. Virtue Rewarded - and Fully Told: The First Complete French Paméla"<br /> <br /> RICHARDSON Samuel. Paméla ou la vertu recompensée. Traduit de l'anglais. Londres Paris: Chez Jean Osborne Didot 1742. <br /> <br /> First complete edition first printing in French of Richardson's classic epistolary novel integrating his sequel Pamela's Conduct in High Life translated by F.-A. Aubert de la Chesnaye des Bois erroneously attributed to Abbé Prevost. Four twelvemo volumes 6 7/16 x 3 3/4 in; 165 x 94 mm. xxiii 1 271 1; 4 324; 4 298; 4 302 pp. Two leaves from the end of Volume III have been mis-bound into the last signature of Volume IV.<br /> <br /> Full contemporary French mottled calf with blind ruled border. The spine features five gilt-tooled raised bands separating six compartments with an unusual gilt floral tool of a lily with eight leaves and central annular dot within a double-fillet frame with foliate sprigs as corner pieces. Maroon spine labels lettered in gilt the Volume labels decorated with gilt roseates with lateral floral volutes above and below the lettering in gilt. Original French marbled endpapers. All edges stained red. Original green bookmark ribbons. Small oval stain 1 3/4 x 1 1/4 in. to upper board of volume four otherwise an absolutely stunning copy tight bright and clean inside and out.<br /> <br /> First complete edition in French of what is considered to be the first novel in English by the Father of the English novel Samuel Richardson the translation traditionally attributed to Abbé Prevost but later scholarship has shown it to be the work of François-Alexandre Aubert de la Chesnaye des Bois a defrocked Capuchin monk who was the compiler and author of many books including Lettres amusantes et critiques sur les romans en général 1743.<br /> <br /> Only nine complete copies are known to exist: the ESTC records only eight and NUC records one other. <br /> <br /> Richardson wrote Pamela 1740 at the suggestion of booksellers Rivington and Osborn. "The book was highly successful and fashionable and further editions were soon called for. Richardson felt obliged to continue his story not only because of the success of Pamela but because of the number of forged continuations that began to appear. Pamela Part II appeared in 1741" Oxford Companion to English Literature.<br /> <br /> "A translation of Pamela into French 4 vols. duodecimo with imprint 'A Londres chez Jean Osborne.M.DCC.XLII' was published shortly after the appearance of Vols. III and IV in English. The translator was the Abbé Prevost . It was offered for sale in France before Jan 12 1742 when fifty copies were seized from Guerin's. Apparently it was later sold with the tacit consent of the authorities. The price was six livres stitched" Sale Samuel Richardson: A Bibliographical Record p. 29.<br /> <br /> The correct place of publication Paris and publisher Didot was discovered in a leaf of ads from an incomplete copy at the British Library that lists various Didot publications for sale.<br /> <br /> An earlier translation of Parts I and II of Pamela appeared in 1741 in all likelihood by Chesnaye des Bois as well. "This French edition was published after the fifth English edition at the time when Richardson was begining to revise his text for the handsome octavo edition of the novel. According to the preface of the translator in Volume I Richardson furnished him with a small number of additions and corrections for the text" Ibid p. 16. And in the edition under notice the translation for the first two parts has been revised by Chesnaye de Bois per Richardson and the sequel has been translated for the first time.<br /> <br /> Sale 15n p. 29. Rochedieu pp. 279-80. Londres [Paris]: Chez Jean Osborne [Didot], 1742 unknown
334824New York: Holt Rinehart and Winston 1976. First Edition. 8vo. Brown cloth. Fine in fine yellow dust jacket. First Edition. 8vo. Incsribed on the half-Title: To Archie Cox with warmest regards and great Admiration Elliot."<br /> While serving as Nixon's Attorney General Richardson insisted on appointing Archibald Cox as Special Prosecutor for the Watergate break-in case. As Cox compiled damning evidence Nixon insisted that Richardson or his deputy William Ruckelshaus fire Cox. Rather than do so both Richardson and his deputy resigned leaving Solicitor General Robert Bork to fire Cox resulting in what came to be known as The Saturday Night Massacre. Richardson devotes an 11 page section of this book to the event. A terrific Watergate association. Holt Rinehart and Winston unknown
191993907Montgomery Alabama: National Publishing Company 1919. 1st and only edition. Hardcover. Near Fine. Full page frontis portrait of Booker T. Washington photos index 617 3p. Original black cloth. 31 cm. Minor spotting on back cover. One text leaf has a chip in right margin. No jacket did it have one. An appealing copy of this scarce and rather lavish production -- probably the fanciest of the African American Who's Who volumes. National Publishing Company hardcover
01915Londres Paris: Chez Jean Osborne Didot 1742. First Complete Edition in French<br/>Of the First English Novel<br/>Not Seen at Auction in Seventy Years<br/><br/>RICHARDSON Samuel. Paméla ou la vertu recompensée. Traduit de l'anglais. Londres Paris: Chez Jean Osborne Didot 1742. <br/><br/>First complete edition first printing in French of Richardson's classic epistolary novel integrating his sequel Pamela's Conduct in High Life translated by F.-A. Aubert de la Chesnaye des Bois erroneously attributed to Abbé Prevost. Four twelvemo volumes 6 7/16 x 3 3/4 in; 165 x 94 mm. xxiii 1 271 1; 4 324; 4 298; 4 302 pp. Two leaves from the end of Volume III have been mis-bound into the last signature of Volume IV.<br/><br/>Full contemporary French mottled calf with blind ruled border. The spine features five gilt-tooled raised bands separating six compartments with an unusual gilt floral tool of a lily with eight leaves and central annular dot within a double-fillet frame with foliate sprigs as corner pieces. Maroon spine labels lettered in gilt the Volume labels decorated with gilt roseates with lateral floral volutes above and below the lettering in gilt. Original French marbled endpapers. All edges stained red. Original green bookmark ribbons. Oval stain 1 3/4 x 1 1/4 in. to upper board of volume four otherwise an absolutely stunning copy tight bright and clean inside and out.<br/><br/>First complete edition in French of what is considered to be the first novel in English by the Father of the English novel Samuel Richardson the translation traditionally attributed to Abbé Prevost but later scholarship has shown it to be the work of François-Alexandre Aubert de la Chesnaye des Bois a defrocked Capuchin monk who was the compiler and author of many books including Lettres amusantes et critiques sur les romans en général 1743.<br/><br/>The last copy of this the first complete edition in French to come to auction was according to ABPC seventy years ago in 1941. Only nine complete copies are known to exist: the ESTC records only eight and NUC records one other. <br/><br/>Richardson wrote Pamela 1740 at the suggestion of booksellers Rivington and Osborn. "The book was highly successful and fashionable and further editions were soon called for. Richardson felt obliged to continue his story not only because of the success of Pamela but because of the number of forged continuations that began to appear. Pamela Part II appeared in 1741" Oxford Companion to English Literature.<br/><br/>"A translation of Pamela into French 4 vols. duodecimo with imprint 'A Londres chez Jean Osborne.M.DCC.XLII' was published shortly after the appearance of Vols. III and IV in English. The translator was the Abbé Prevost . It was offered for sale in France before Jan 12 1742 when fifty copies were seized from Guerin's. Apparently it was later sold with the tacit consent of the authorities. The price was six livres stitched" Sale Samuel Richardson: A Bibliographical Record p. 29.<br/><br/>The correct place of publication Paris and publisher Didot was discovered in a leaf of ads from an incomplete copy at the British Library that lists various Didot publications for sale.<br/><br/>An earlier translation of Parts I and II of Pamela appeared in 1741 in all likelihood by Chesnaye des Bois as well. "This French edition was published after the fifth English edition at the time when Richardson was begining to revise his text for the handsome octavo edition of the novel. According to the preface of the translator in Volume I Richardson furnished him with a small number of additions and corrections for the text" Ibid p. 16. And in the edition under notice the translation for the first two parts has been revised by Chesnaye de Bois per Richardson and the sequel has been translated for the first time.<br/><br/>Sale 15n p. 29. Rochedieu pp. 279-80. Londres [Paris]: Chez Jean Osborne [Didot], 1742 unknown books
1968147232Paris: Les Films Marceau 1968. Three Draft scripts for the 1969 film by three different screenwriters. <br /> <br /> From the estate of film producer Elliott Kastner whose best known credits include "The Long Goodbye" Robert Altman 1973 "The Missouri Breaks" Arthur Penn 1976 and "Heat" Michael Mann 1996.<br /> <br /> The first script is an undated draft script by screenwriter George Bluestone who previously adapted Winston Graham's 1967 novel "The Walking Stick" for the 1968 Eric Till film with copied annotations throughout striking adding and adjusting dialogue.<br /> <br /> The second is a Second draft script dated 1st April 1968 by novelist playwright and screenwriter Derek Marlow with copied annotations striking scenes or pages on nearly every page. Marlow said in an interview that he was asked by director Tony Richardson which book he'd like to adapt for a screenplay and Marlow suggested Nabakov's "Laughter in the Dark." Two or three months afterward Marlow received a call from Richardson asking him to write the adaptation. <br /> <br /> At the time Richard Burton was to star alongside Marianne Faithfull. Marlow then went to the US to promote his 1968 novel "Memoirs of a Venus Lackey" and upon his return to the UK found out a new screenplay by Edward Bond had been written and Burton and Faithfull had been replaced.<br /> <br /> The third is a draft script dated 24th June 1968 by Edward Bond. IMDB shows the filming date as starting June 1968 thus likely a draft used early in the production. The first half of the script to page 66 is on pink paper with the remainder on green paper with no revision date change.<br /> <br /> Based on the 1932 novel by Vladimir Nabokov updating the original 1930s Berlin setting to 1960s swinging London about a wealthy art dealer who is seduced and swindled out of his fortune by a young woman and her lover.<br /> <br /> Set in London and the Riviera shot on location in Spain France and the United Kingdom. <br /> <br /> George Bluestone script:<br /> <br /> Wrapper integral with title page with credits for screenwriter George Bluestone and author Vladimir Nabokov. 114 leaves with last page of text numbered 109. Xerographic duplication rectos only. Pages Near Fine bound with two gold brads.<br /> <br /> Derek Marlowe script:<br /> <br /> Black wrappers with die-cut title window in the British style. Title page present dated 1st April 1968 obscured but visible through Winkast sticker noted as Second Draft with credits for screenwriter Derek Marlowe and author Vladimir Nabokov. 137 leaves with last page of text numbered 136. Xerographic duplication rectos only. Pages Near Fine wrapper Near Fine bound internally with two flat metal brads<br /> <br /> Edward Bond script:<br /> <br /> Black wrappers with die-cut title window in the British style. Title page present dated 24th June 1968 with credits for screenwriter Edward Bond and author Vladimir Nabokov. 110 leaves with last page of text numbered 108. Mimeograph duplication rectos only. Pages Near Fine wrapper Near Fine bound internally with two flat metal brads. Les Films Marceau unknown
CBS 9780444527882USA Edition . New. Brand New! Fast Delivery US Edition and ship within 24-48 hours. Deliver by FedEx and Dhl & Aramex UPS & USPS and we do accept APO and PO BOX Addresses. Order can be delivered worldwide within 6-10 days and we do have flat rate for up to 2LB. Extra shipping charges will be requested if the Book weight is more than 5 LB. This Item May be shipped from India United states & United Kingdom. Depending on your location and availability. unknown