3 591 résultats
194010432ELondon: Macmillan 1940. Photoplay edition issued to coincide with the British release of the film based on Kipling’s classic tale starring Ronald Colman Walter Huston and Ida Lupino. With a small spot of orange paint on the front free endpaper and pages tanned as usual else very good in a very good lightly dust soiled dust jacket with some interior tape reinforcement tearing at the spine and a couple of small chips and tears. The front panel of the jacket is a graphic drawing of a swashbuckling Ronald Colman involved in an intense sword fight with Arabs. Macmillan unknown
19104843New York: The Jefferson Press 1910. Scarce dust jacket. Measuring approximately 7.5" x 5" with 355 numbered pages. <br /> <br /> This book is in good plus condition. Moderate bumping to both ends of spine. Minor staining to both boards. Minor staining to all edges of textblock. Rear hinge is cracked exposing mesh and leaving a few rear pages loose from binding. Dust jacket is in good minus condition. Moderate chipping to both ends of spine. Heavy sunning to spine. Heavy staining to both panels. <br /> <br /> Kipling wrote the novel when he was 26 years old and it is semi-autobiographical being based upon his own unrequited love for Florence Garrard.<br /> <br /> Please view the many other rare titles available for purchase at our store. We are always interested in purchasing individual or collections of fine books.<br /> <br /> Inventory #N8-18. The Jefferson Press unknown
1925934T28London: Macmillan and Co. Limited 1925-1928. Cloth. Very Good. 8" by 5.5". None. A smart collection of three of the novels of English writer Rudyard Kipling. Three volumes. Later editions. Written by Joseph Rudyard Kipling an English journalist novelist poet and short-story writer who was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1907. This set contains: The Light That Failed 1925. The first novel from the author set mostly in London with many important events occurring in Sudan and Port Said. The story follows the life of Dick Heldar an artist and painter who goes blind and his unrequited love for his childhood playmate Maisie. Captain Courageous 1927. Illustrated with twenty-one plates. Collated complete. Following the adventures of fifteen-year-old Harvey Cheyne Jr. the spoiled son of a railroad tycoon after he is saved from drowning by a Portuguese fisherman in the North Atlantic. The Naulahka: A Story of West and East 1928. Originally serialized in The Century Magazine from November 1891 to July 1892 the book is set in the fictional state of "Rahore" believed to be based on Rajputana. In the original red cloth binding. Externally smart with minor rubbing and bumping to the extremities. Light fading to the spine with the odd small mark to the boards. Internally firmly bound. Pages are very bright with the odd small spot or handling mark. Minor age toning to the endpapers with a contemporary ink inscription to the front endpaper. Very Good Macmillan and Co., Limited hardcover
1916942Q5London: Macmillan and Co. 1916 . Leather. Very Good/Good Only. 7" by 4.5". None. A Macmillan Pocket edition of Rudyard Kipling's debut novel set in London Sudan and Port Said with the very scarce original dust wrapper. Bound in the publisher's limp calf with the very scarce original unclipped dust wrapper. Published as part of Macmillan's Pocket Kipling series. Written by celebrated prize-winning English novelist and short story writer Rudyard Kipling known for much of his work being inspired by his upbringing in India. Kipling is considered as an innovator of the art of the short story writing with luminosity and versatility. 'The Light that Failed' was Kipling's first novel first published in 1891. The story is largely set in London following the life of an artist who loses his sight. Pencil inscription of 'To Ide from Alfie' dated 1917. Bound in the publisher's limp calf with the very scarce original unclipped dust wrapper. Externally very good with light rubbing to the extremities heavier to the backstrip head and tail with the odd mark. Pencil inscription to front free endpaper. Dust wrapper is sound with chipping causing some loss to the backstrip and extremities. Small chips to the backstrip. Sunning to the wrap heavier to the spine with a few light marks. Internally firmly bound with bright clean pages. Very Good Macmillan and Co. hardcover
1932326404New York: Book League of America 1932. First Edition Thus; First Printing. Hardcover. Very Good in a Good clipped dust jacket. All four corners of front and rear flaps clipped. "XXIV" inked on spine. Small open tears on spine crown and heel panel corners top front panel and front panel side edge. Book League of America hardcover
19251103K569996Macmillan and Co. Limited 1925. Hardcover. Good. 3.8071 in x 18.5279 in x 12.4365 in. Macmillan pocket edition 1920 reprint on blue cloth gilt lettering on spine and embossed elephantine logo with reverse swastika on cover Macmillan and Co., Limited hardcover
19141151London: Macmillan and co. 1914. Later printing. Hardcover. Near Fine. Reprinted 1914 First pocket edition published 1907 Full red leather boards with gilt decoration of elephant head and Hindu emblem to front and gilt title Hindu emblem and graphics to spine. 289 pages . All page edges gilded. MacMillan's Pocket Kipling. Excellent condition with no foxing except endpapers are slightly browned. <br/><br/> Macmillan and co. hardcover
1939156674Los Angeles: Paramount Pictures 1939. Vintage studio still photograph of director William Wellman and a camera crew filming on location in New Mexico for the 1939 film. Mimeo snipe on the verso. <br /> <br /> Based on the 1891 novel by Rudyard Kipling. An artist whose sight is failing struggles to complete his final painting while also grieving his broken relationship with his childhood sweetheart. <br /> <br /> Shot on location in Abiquiu Santa Fe and Espanola New Mexico. <br /> <br /> 8 x 10 inches. Near Fine. Paramount Pictures unknown
1990GG01689Iowa City IA:: University of Iowa Press 1990. 1990. Series: Vol. 1 of 6. 8vo. xxxviii 386. Frontis. port. plates index. Black gilt-stamped cloth dust jackets. Near fine. ISBN: 0877453055 University of Iowa Press, 1990. hardcover books
1990125897Iowa City: University of Iowa Press 1990-96. First editions of the letter of Rudyard Kipling. Octavo 3 volumes. Fine in a fine dust jackets. Edited by Thomas Pinney. University of Iowa Press unknown books
1990x-0333360877Palgrave Macmillan 1990. Hardcover. New. annotated edition. 424 pages. 9.45x6.42x1.11 inches. Palgrave Macmillan hardcover
199076140Iowa City: University of Iowa Press 1990. First Edition. Hardcover. Very good/Very good. Each volume is inscribed by editor Thomas Pinney to Gordon Van De Water past president of the Zamorano Club of Los Angeles on the title page. The first two of six volumes in this "annotated edition based on the more than six thousand letters preserved in public and private collections all over the world." Octavo two volumes: xxxviii 386 p. with 8 illustrations vi 390 p. with 8 illustrations. Original black cloth bindings with gilt titles. Remainder mark to the bottom edges. Light bumping to the corners and tips with a bit of mild wear to the dust jackets; otherwise very good. University of Iowa Press hardcover
1990DADAX0333360869MACMILLAN 1990-11-01. 1990. hardcover. New. 5.50x1.06x8.50. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. MACMILLAN hardcover
1991Q-0877453055Univ of Iowa Pr 1991-01-01. Hardcover. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Univ of Iowa Pr hardcover
1927WRCLIT41741San Francisco: The Windsor Press 1927. Small quarto. Printed boards. Woodcut title by Howard Simon. First edition in book form limited to five hundred numbered copies. Crown of spine bruised boards a bit sunned bookplate but internally very good. STEWART 568. The Windsor Press hardcover books
192720540San Francisco: The Windsor Press 1927. First edition number 288 of 500 copies 8vo pp. 2 18 1; full-page color woodcut illustration by Howard Simon half-title and headlines printed in purple; original blue paper covered boards cover printed in green and pink; a few tiny spots to upper cover foot of spine with a bit of wear hinge loose at first gathering else very good. Ransom Private Press p. 448. <br/><br/> The Windsor Press hardcover books
1927BIBLIO-51302Printed as the "first published" edition by the Brothers Johnson at the Windsor Press San Francisco 1927. Limited edition of 500 numbered copies. Blue boards 8vo. 19 pp ills on hand-made paper. The first and unauthorized book edition of this comic piece : Kipling was not to collect it until the following year The One Volume Kipling 1928. The story had been published in the San Francisco Examiner for 4 June 1893 and in London in The Idler for June 1893. An attractive production handset by the Australian brothers James and Cecil Johnson at their Windsor Press in San Francisco. The title-page illustration is an original woodcut by Howard Simon. Copy No. 112. Armorial bookplate of Sherman Flint on front pastedown endpaper Near Fine. Printed as the "first published" edition by the Brothers Johnson at the Windsor Press, San Francisco, 1927 hardcover
192720540San Francisco: The Windsor Press 1927. First edition number 288 of 500 copies 8vo pp. 2 18 1; full-page color woodcut illustration by Howard Simon half-title and headlines printed in purple; original blue paper covered boards cover printed in green and pink; a few tiny spots to upper cover foot of spine with a bit of wear hinge loose at first gathering else very good. Ransom Private Press p. 448. The Windsor Press unknown
1929220838San Francisco Windsor Press 1929. 1929. First edition so stated on colophon page. 8vo. Original 1/2 blue cloth spine stamped in gilt over patterned boards. Enclosed in publishers board slipcase. Very good-fine fresh copy. No signatures or bookplates. #60/100 numbered copies. Stewart 569. F. Hardcover. San Francisco, Windsor Press, 1929. hardcover books
1929220838San Francisco Windsor Press 1929. 1929. First edition so stated on colophon page. 8vo. Original 1/2 blue cloth spine stamped in gilt over patterned boards. Enclosed in publishers board slipcase. Very good-fine fresh copy. No signatures or bookplates. #60/100 numbered copies. Stewart 569. F. Hardcover. San Francisco, Windsor Press, 1929. hardcover
1902006517Philadelphia: The Curtis Publishing Company 1902. Volume XIX No. 11. Very Good Plus small mailing label front cover light soiling. A beautifully preserved copy. Cove art illustration by George Gibbs showing a couple playing the newly-introduced December 1901game of ping-pong. Contains "The Butterfly That Stamped" by Rudyard Kipling "How Charles Dana Gibson Started" by William Howard Russell and the first of the series "Inside of a Hundres Suburban Homes" with black and white photographs showing room arrangements of the day among many other articles. . First Edition. Magazine. Very Good Plus/No Jacket As Issued. Elephant Folio - over 15" - 23" tall. The Curtis Publishing Company Paperback books
1943125198Chicago: Consolidated Book Publishers Inc. 1943. First edition second issue of this classic World War II-era short story collection containing J.D. Salinger's third published short story and first appearance in book form. 12mo original illustrated boards illustrated. Complied by R.M. Barrows edited by E. X. Pastor and with contributions from J.D. Salinger Richard Armour Hurd Barrett Pat Frank O. Henry Rudyard Kipling Jack Leonard and Damon Runyan among others. In very good condition. Best-known for his novel The Catcher in the Rye American author J.D. Salinger published several short stories and five books throughout his lifetime. In a contributor's note Salinger gave to Harper's Magazine in 1946 he wrote: "I almost always write about very young people" a statement that has been referred to as his credo. Adolescents are featured or appear in all of Salinger's work from his first published short story "The Young Folks" 1940 to The Catcher in the Rye and his Glass family stories. In 1961 the critic Alfred Kazin explained that Salinger's choice of teenagers as a subject matter was one reason for his appeal to young readers but another was "a consciousness among youths that he speaks for them and virtually to them in a language that is peculiarly honest and their own with a vision of things that capture their most secret judgments of the world." For this reason Norman Mailer once remarked that Salinger was "the greatest mind ever to stay in prep school." Consolidated Book Publishers, Inc. hardcover books
1943123104Chicago: Consolidated Book Publishers Inc. 1943. First edition second issue of this classic World War II-era short story collection containing J.D. Salinger's third published short story and first appearance in book form. 12mo original illustrated boards illustrated. Complied by R.M. Barrows edited by E. X. Pastor and with contributions from J.D. Salinger Richard Armour Hurd Barrett Pat Frank O. Henry Rudyard Kipling Jack Leonard and Damon Runyan among others. Signed by J.D. Salinger on the first page of his contribution The Hang of It on page 332. A commercial tale of a soldier who just can't seem to get "the hang of it" the story was first published in the July 12 1941 issue of Collier's magazine and subsequently in the 1942 and 1943 editions of The Kit Book For Soldiers marking Salinger's first appearance in book form. Salinger was drafted into the army in the spring of 1942 several months after the United States entered World War II where he saw combat with the 12th Infantry Regiment 4th Infantry Division. He was present at Utah Beach on D-Day in the Battle of the Bulge and the Battle of Hurtgen Forest. During the campaign from Normandy into Germany Salinger arranged to meet with Ernest Hemingway who was then working as a war correspondent in Paris. The meeting had a profound effect on Salinger and the development of his writing style; Hemingway was impressed by what Salinger shared with him of his early writing and the two corresponded frequently throughout the war. Salinger was later assigned to the 4th Counter Intelligence Corps in which he used his proficiency in French and German to interrogate prisoners of war and later witnessed the liberation of one of the Dachau Concentration Camps. In very good condition. Housed in the original box which is in near fine condition. Housed in a custom half morocco clamshell box. From the collection of a WWII soldier who had this signed by Salinger while the two were stationed overseas at the time of publication. An exceptional example signed by Salinger at a pivotal time in his life and before his almost complete withdrawal from society. Best-known for his novel The Catcher in the Rye American author J.D. Salinger published several short stories and five books throughout his lifetime. In a contributor's note Salinger gave to Harper's Magazine in 1946 he wrote: "I almost always write about very young people" a statement that has been referred to as his credo. Adolescents are featured or appear in all of Salinger's work from his first published short story "The Young Folks" 1940 to The Catcher in the Rye and his Glass family stories. In 1961 the critic Alfred Kazin explained that Salinger's choice of teenagers as a subject matter was one reason for his appeal to young readers but another was "a consciousness among youths that he speaks for them and virtually to them in a language that is peculiarly honest and their own with a vision of things that capture their most secret judgments of the world." For this reason Norman Mailer once remarked that Salinger was "the greatest mind ever to stay in prep school." Consolidated Book Publishers, Inc. hardcover books
1912WRCLIT83017New York: D. Appleton and Company 1912. Decorated green cloth. Frontis. Spine extremities rubbed school stamps on pastedown a bit of white flecking to extremities good and sound. First edition first printing. According to the publisher's contract the selection was to be made by the author. "An Unqualified Plot" appears here for the first time in book form. RICHARDS A260. STEWART 366. LIVINGSTON 366. D. Appleton and Company hardcover books
196214123London: The Kipling Society 1962. Issued quarterly a very good set 38 issues in all. Bound in printed self wraps most issues are 18 pages. Includes numbers: 87 2 copies 91 92 2 copies95 103 104 105 2 copies 107 115 121"140 143 3 copies 144 3 copies. This is scholarly journal with articles about Kipling's life and work. The Kipling Society unknown books