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193040809Couverture rempliée illustrée avec titre en bleu. Intérieur d'une belle fraicheur, avec quelques rousseurs éparses.Avec30eaux-fortesdeJean BRULLER.
1905960Z24Leeds: J. W. Bean & Son 1905. First edition. Paperback. Very Good. 7" by 4.5". None. A very scarce anthology of verse for children collected from the works of the most eminent poets and inscribed by Holbrook Jackson's brother. The first edition the paperback variant.A very scarce work.Inscribed by Holbrook Jackson's brother: 'To G.H. from J.C.J 9.5.05'. With an owner's stamp to the title page belonging to 'M. G. Jackson' a member of Jackson's family. The third published work of Holbrook Jackson an anthology of verse for children. A charming anthology compiled "with the idea of appealing to the capacity for wonder and delight in the things of daily life and the more real things of the imagination". Including selections of the poetical works of William Blake Rudyard Kipling William Morris Shakespeare Christina Rossetti Alfred Lord Tennyson and more as well as Holbrook himself.Compiled by the journalist writer and publisher George Holbrook Jackson. A noted journalist who worked for numerous magazines during his career Jackson is known as being one of the leading bibliophiles of his time. He founded in the Flying Fame Press alongside Ralph Hodgson and Claud Lovat Fraser and had a long association with English small presses.One page of adverts to the rear.Undated dated from Jisc from a copy held at the British Library. In the publisher's original paper covers. Externally generally smart with slight sunning to the spine and extremities with loss to the head and tail of the spine with covers separating from the text block to the tail of the spine. Internally firmly bound with bright and clean pages. Owner's stamp to the title page. Very Good J. W. Bean & Son paperback
190297907Macmillan and Co. London. 1902. Macmillan and Co. 1902. First edition. Large 8vo hardback illustrated in black and white on a maroon background. Spine faded but still very clear boards lightly spotted. Endpapers and margins of some pages foxed especially in areas near spine. Generally a clean and sound copy. Scarce in this condition. hardcover
1902QQ0441Macmillan and Co 1902. Original full red pictorial cloth stamped in black and white after Kipling's illustrations. White lettering and decor to spine. First impression first issue in the second issue binding with the more stable white ink used for lettering the first issue binding tended to be badly affected by flaking to the white ink. Mild sunning to spine. Moderate wear to base and top spine. Slight wear to board corners. White hardly rubbed. Top edges darkened. Very minor marking to rear board. Small 4to 18.3 x 24.1cm. Endpapers uncracked at gutters. Minor foxing and age-browning to endpapers. Minor pencil annots to rear endpaper. Printer's emblem to p. 251. Tiny owner's address label to inside front board old owner's signature to front free endpaper. With loose clipping of a collection of memorial tributes to Kipling from the Sunday Times 19 January 1936 Kipling had died on 18 January including a recollection from Pestonji Bomanji 1851-1938 a Mumbai-based Parsi artist who had studied at the Sir Jamsetjee Jeejeebhoy School of Art under Kipling's father and knew Kipling himself as as a child. Bomanji here recalls Kipling coming into the modelling studio at the J.J. School of Art and inventing 'childish romances around the models of nymphs gnomes and gargoyles'. He was the inspiration for the Just So Story 'How the Rhinoceros got his Wrinkly Skin' in which a rhinoceros steals a cake from a Parsi 'from whose hat the rays of the sun were reflected in more-than-oriental splendour' and lives to regret it hence the mention in his recollection here: 'I never remember giving Rudyard a cake .'. Also included are 3 further loose inserts: 1 entry from a bookseller's catalogue entry for this edition not this copy; 2 slip of paper with child's drawing on one side and what seems to be an adult's record of a child's response to reading The Elephant's Child dated 1979 all in pencil; 3 newspaper cutting with pictures of a baby armadillo accompanying 'Beginning of the Armadillos'. With 22 full-page b/w illustrations and numerous vignettes all by Kipling himself who although he did not follow his father into painting clearly 'had a distinct gift' ODNB. The Just So Stories begun as bed-time stories for Kipling's daughter Josephine who died in 1899 were published serially from 1897 and in this book edition in 1902. They remain best-beloved classics of children's literature. Robust packaging. Tracking can be added to overseas orders on request. Used books are exempt from USA tariffs. 1st edition 1st impression. Binding sound text unmarked. Binding sound text unmarked. Very Good. 249pp. Macmillan and Co Hardcover
192339989London: Macmillan and Co. Limited 1923. First edition. Two volumes. 8vo. xvi 344; vi 310 2 pp. Publisher's red cloth gilt lettered to the spines and with the regimental crest to the upper board top edges gilt dust jackets. 4 double page and 7 single page maps. Jacket spines browned and with a degree of wear and small losses to the extremities occasional wear and discolouration to the cloth more so to volume I else a decent set with the uncommon jackets. London: Macmillan and Co., Limited unknown
1998KIPLINGR008213The Arion Press San Francisco. 1998. First edition thus. Introduction by Thomas Pinney. Octavo. 119 pages. Illustrations by Vincent Perez. Full canvas. Printed title-label label on upper cover and spine. Printed under the direction of Andrew Hoyem. "Zounds! Science fiction from 1905. Predicting aeronautics in the year 2000 to be primarily dirigible. Airplanes outmoded. Airships the main means of conveyance for passengers and freight. The mail airmail of course transported across the Atlantic overnight." - from the 8-page Prospectus which is present.One of 250 numbered copies signed by the artist.Fine in the original printed reinforced envelope which is creased. The Arion Press, San Francisco. unknown
1926241113Garden City New York: Doubleday Page and Company 1926. 1st. Hardback. Good. Donald Maxwell. Signed. Signed limited first edition hardback 58/150 1926 with no jacket or slipcase. In overall good used condition with some signs of age handling and storage - grey paper-covered boards with cream vellum spine rubbed to edges with slight stain to front upper right-hand corner the spine tanned brittle and chipped. Binding tight and appears little read. Internally clean no annotation or inscriptions; page-ends slightly toned and cockled but text and tipped-in illustrations bright and clear throughout. Photographs available. Not an old library book. Doubleday, Page and Company hardcover
1935R320140962Delagrave. 1935. In-4. Relié demi-cuir. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos à nerfs, Intérieur frais. 176 pages + 197 pages - plats et contre plats jaspés - dos à 4 nerfs - auteur, titre et filets dorés sur pièce de titre verte - ornements dorés sur le dos - tranche en tête dorée - nombreuses illustrations en noir et blanc dans et hors texte - 4 photos disponibles.. . . . Classification Dewey : 820-Littératures anglaise et anglo-saxonne
196747588DISNEYLAND 1967. 1. LP. Dschungelbücher Die Nur Sondisko! DISNEYLAND unknown
190326208Paris: Mercure de France 1903. First French edition small 8vo pp. 378 4; bound in full diamondback rattlesnake we think not being herpetologists red morocco label on spine t.e.g.; some browning of the pages else very good. The prefatory "Etude" is 115-pages long. Not found in Livingston. <br/><br/> Mercure de France unknown books
1901989F29London: Macmillan and Co 1901 . First edition. Cloth. Good. 8.5" by 6". Not Stated. Holbrook Jackson's first edition copy of this classic spy novel by Rudyard Kipling with a loosely inserted very scarce copy of Parish's account of Kipling's sister's visit to his home 'Mrs. Fleming's Visit'. The first edition first impression. This first UK edition was actually published one day after its release in the US.This spy novel was written by short story pioneer and classic author of children's fiction Rudyard Kipling who is known as a pioneer for the short story form and a classic author of children's fiction. 'Kim' was originally published as a serial in McClure's Magazine between 1900 and 1901; the story takes place against the backdrop of the political conflict between Russia and Britain in Central Asia.Illustrated with a frontispiece - retaining the original tissue guard - and nine plates. Collated complete.With a publisher's advertisement leaf to the rear.Loosely inserted is the very scarce first edition of C. W. Parish's 1945 short work 'Mrs Fleming's Visit' which details Kipling's sister Ann's 1945 visit to his home Bateman's in Burwash. With two postcards of the home also present.With the inscription 'Holbrook Jackson Liverpool 1944' to the head of the front free endpaper. Journalist writer and publisher George Holbrook Jackson. A noted journalist who worked for numerous magazines during his career Jackson is known as being one of the leading bibliophiles of his time. He founded in the Flying Fame Press alongside Ralph Hodgson and Claud Lovat Fraser and had a long association with English small presses. In the publisher's original cloth binding. Joints starting with boards a touch tender. A touch of fraying to back strip head and tail. Inscription to front free endpaper head. Internally firmly bound. Pages bright and generally clean with the odd spot. 'Fleming's Visit' in fine condition. Good Macmillan and Co hardcover
19101013W19London: Macmillan and Co. Limited 1910. First edition. Cloth. Very Good. 8" by 5.5". Frank Craig. A first edition of Kipling's remarkable collection of stories and poems including 'If-'. A first edition bound in original red cloth with smart gilt motif to the front board and gilt top edge. Featuring four monochrome plates. Collated complete. A fantasy work compiling numerous short stories by English journalist novelist poet and short story writer Rudyard Kipling most known for his Jungle Book duology. Each story within is bracketed by a poem including the first publication appearance of Kipling's well-known work 'If-'. Also featuring Cold Iron and The Way Through the Woods. Illustrated by British painter and art teacher Frank Craig. Bound in original red cloth. Externally very smart. Mild rubbing to extremities. Moderate rubbing and bumping to head and tail. Moderate fading and marks to spine. Rear hinge starting but firm. Significant age toning to free endpapers. Internally firmly bound. Moderate strain between pp.112-113. Pages generally bright and clean. Very Good Macmillan and Co., Limited hardcover
1921895Z20New York : Doubleday Page & Company 1921. First edition. Hardback. Very Good Indeed/Good. 7" by 4.5". None. The first edition of this very scarce transcribed speech by Rudyard Kipling in the original binding and the original glassine dust wrapper. The first edition. Very scarce. In the original quarter paper vellum hardback with the original vanishingly scarce glassine dust wrapper. This work features a transcribed speech by the popular author and poet Rudyard Kipling. This speech was delivered at the Royal Society of St. George on St. George's Day in 1920 and discusses what makes a true Englishman. Kipling mentions the popular author Daniel Defoe the author of 'Robinson Crusoe' and his pamphlet 'The True Born Englishman'.From the library of A. P. Watt & A. S. Watt of A. P. Watt and Son literary agent of Rudyard Kipling. In the publisher's original quarter paper vellum hardback with the original glassine dust wrapper. Externally very smart with fading to the spine slight marks and shelf wear. Offsetting to the endpapers. Glassine wrap is generally smart with marks fading to the spine closed tears and loss to the head and tail of the spine. Internally firmly bound with lightly age toned and clean pages. Very Good Indeed Doubleday, Page & Company hardcover
1916BIBLIO-58769Doubleday Page & Company Garden City first editions 1916. Editions of 70 copies. 4 vols printed wrappers. A complete set of the true first editions of these four articles these American copyright issues preceding the newspaper publication in The Daily Telegraph and The New York Times in October 1916. Here the articles are simply titled Destroyers at Jutland I -IV; in the newspapers they were given titles as follows: Stories of the Battle"; The Night Hunt The Meaning of 'Joss' and The Minds of Men. Kipling's accounts are chiefly concerned with "destroyer actions on the 31st May and 1st June: mostly but not entirely of the confused night-fighting after the engagements between the two main battle-fleets" Alastair Wilson on the Kipling Society website. He opens: "THERE was much destroyer-work in the Battle of Jutland. The actual battle field may not have been more than twenty thousand square miles but the incidental patrols from first to last must have covered many times that area. Doubtless the next generation will comb out every detail of it. All we need remember is there were many squadrons of battleships and cruisers engaged over the face of the North Sea and that they were accompanied in their dread comings and goings by multitudes of destroyers who attacked the enemy both by day and by night from the afternoon of May 31 to the morning of June 1 1916." Three of the pamphlets contain one of Kipling's poems the first being the very poignant "Have you news of my boy Jack". Near Fine set in a chemise and somewhat worn leather-backed slipcase. Doubleday, Page & Company, Garden City, first editions, 1916 hardcover
190924013New York: B.W. Dodge 1909. First American Edition. Octavo 20cm. Pictorial deep blue textured cloth stamped in gilt on spine and front cover; dustjacket; 360pp. Publisher's presentation copy inscribed on front endpaper: "Best wishes of the publisher see title page and his wife / Xmas 1909." First issue with gilt stamping to cloth later issues stamped in red. A fine bright copy in the original dustwrapper lightly worn a trifle darkened on spine Very Good. B.W. Dodge unknown books
1922122738Garden City NY: Doubleday Page & Company 1922. First edition with the chapter-heading rhymes for only chapters VII and VIII as called of what many consider Kipling's masterpiece. Octavo original cloth embossed black and gilt to the front panel gilt titles to the spine illustrated. In near fine condition with light rubbing to the extremities. An exceptional example. Kim unfolds against the backdrop of The Great Game the political conflict between Russia and Britain in Central Asia. The novel made the term "Great Game" popular and introduced the theme of great power rivalry and intrigue. It is set after the Second Afghan War which ended in 1881 but before the Third probably in the period 1893 to 1898. The novel is notable for its detailed portrait of the people culture and varied religions of India. "The book presents a vivid picture of India its teeming populations religions and superstitions and the life of the bazaars and the road." Considered by many to be Kipling's masterpiece opinion appears varied about its consideration as children's literature or not. Roger Sale in his history of children's literature concludes "Kim is the apotheosis of the Victorian cult of childhood but it shines now as bright as ever long after the Empire's collapse." Named by Modern Library as one of the 100 best English-language novels of the 20th century. In 2003 the book was listed on the BBC's The Big Read poll of the UK's "best-loved novel." Doubleday, Page & Company hardcover books
1933159816New York: Doubleday 1933. hardcover. fine. Handsomely rebound in full lime green morocco; gilt-decorated spine with raised bands top edge gilt. New York: Doubleday 1933. Fine.<br/><br/> Doubleday unknown books
1926002998New York: Doubleday Page & Company 1926. First Edition Thus Signed LImited Edition. Quarter Vellum. Near Fine. No. 141 of 150 copies signed by Kipling. 4to. 29 by 23 cm. 94 pp. 24 mounted color plates. A few soil marks on spine. Edges of paper on board sllightly faded in color. Otherwise tight and clean within. <br/><br/> Doubleday, Page & Company hardcover books
1919006650LONDON: HODDER AND STOUGHTON 1919. FIRST THUS. . LEATHER. Near Fine/NoNE. N/A. A BEAUTIFUL 3 VOLUME SET BOUND BY SANGORSKI AND SUTCLIFFE BOUND IN 3/4 LEATHER WITH PEACOCK PATTERN BOARDS 5 RING SPINE WITH 1919 AT THE BOTTOM GREAT PEACOCK ENDPAPERS CLEAN BRIGHT VELLUM PAGES UNMARKED TOP OF TEXTBLOCK IS GILT AS IS THE PERFECT LETTERING SOME LIGHT RUBBING ON EITHER SIDE OF THE SPINE OTHERWISE NICE IN ALL WAYS A ONE OF A KIND 3 VOLUME SET IPHONE PHOTOS AVAILABLE <br/> <br/> HODDER AND STOUGHTON hardcover
1901122738New York: Doubleday Page & Company 1901. First edition with the chapter-heading rhymes for only chapters VII and VIII as called of what many consider Kipling's masterpiece. Octavo original cloth embossed black and gilt to the front panel gilt titles to the spine illustrated. In near fine condition with light rubbing to the extremities. An exceptional example. Kim unfolds against the backdrop of The Great Game the political conflict between Russia and Britain in Central Asia. The novel made the term "Great Game" popular and introduced the theme of great power rivalry and intrigue. It is set after the Second Afghan War which ended in 1881 but before the Third probably in the period 1893 to 1898. The novel is notable for its detailed portrait of the people culture and varied religions of India. "The book presents a vivid picture of India its teeming populations religions and superstitions and the life of the bazaars and the road." Considered by many to be Kipling's masterpiece opinion appears varied about its consideration as children's literature or not. Roger Sale in his history of children's literature concludes "Kim is the apotheosis of the Victorian cult of childhood but it shines now as bright as ever long after the Empire's collapse." Named by Modern Library as one of the 100 best English-language novels of the 20th century. In 2003 the book was listed on the BBC's The Big Read poll of the UK's "best-loved novel. Doubleday, Page & Company hardcover
1941012634Sydney: Australasian Medical Publishing Company 1941. Book. Very Good. Soft cover. First Fijian edition. 12mo - over 6¾ - 7¾" tall. 128 pages. The title page has the date 1941 the front cover has the date 1942. This is the First Jungle Book ai matai. We have only located one copy of this ediiton. It is in the State Library of New South Wales. Australasian Medical Publishing Company Paperback
1914151124London: Macmillan and Co. Limited 1914. The Bombay Edition of Kipling's collection of historical fantasy tales. Octavo bound in three quarters morocco over cloth covered boards by Morrell with gilt titles and ruling to the spine in six compartments within raised gilt bands gilt ruling to the front and rear panels top edge gilt marbled endpapers. In near fine condition. Set in multiple periods of English history Kipling's Puck stories are each narrated to two children living near Burwash in the High Weald of Sussex in the area of Kipling's own house Bateman's by people magically plucked out of history by the elf Puck or told by Puck himself. Puck who refers to himself as "the oldest Old Thing in England" is better known as a character in William Shakespeare's play A Midsummer Night's Dream. The genres of the stories range from authentic historical novella A Centurion of the Thirtieth On the Great Wall to children's fantasy Dymchurch Flit. Each story is bracketed by a poem which relates in some manner to the theme or subject of the story. Macmillan and Co., Limited hardcover
1926002998New York: Doubleday Page & Company 1926. First Edition Thus Signed LImited Edition. Quarter Vellum. Near Fine. No. 141 of 150 copies signed by Kipling. 4to. 29 by 23 cm. 94 pp. 24 mounted color plates. A few soil marks on spine. Edges of paper on board sllightly faded in color. Otherwise tight and clean within. Doubleday, Page & Company unknown
192712829London: Macmillan & Co 1927. Limited Edition. Hardcover with slipcase. Near Fine/Very Good. Donald Maxwell. 4to. Pp. xii 99. Illustrated with black & white and color drawings and paintings by Donald Maxwell the latter tipped in. Bound in cream leather over pale blue cloth; spine lettered in gilt with gilt border. Lower front right corner bumped. In the slipcase black lettering on front panel title label. Slipcase shows some general wear. One of an edition limited to 500 large-paper copies signed by Kipling. Uncommon in the slipcase. Macmillan & Co hardcover
1920374461Garden City NY: Doubleday Page & Comapny 1920. Limited Edition. No. 117 of 377 copies numbered and signed by Kipling. Photographically Illustrated by Lewis R. Freeman. pp. xxiv 44 unnumberred leaves. 8vo. Vellum spine ansd boards. Very good. Limited Edition. No. 117 of 377 copies numbered and signed by Kipling. Photographically Illustrated by Lewis R. Freeman. pp. xxiv 44 unnumberred leaves. 8vo. Livingston 449; Richards A331 Doubleday, Page & Comapny unknown