4 868 résultats
1971150756Burbank CA: Warner Brothers 1971. Collection of three vintage color studio still photographs from the US release of the 1971 British film.<br/><br/>Based on the 1960 play by John Whiting and on Aldous Huxley's 1952 book "The Devils of Loudun." A dramatization of the fall of Urbain Grandier a Catholic priest accused of witchcraft and demonic conspiracy by a group of hysterical nuns. Often regarded as one of the more controversial films of the twentieth century due in large part to its heavily violent and sexual content in a religious context widely censored before its release. <br/><br/>Set in 17th century Loudun France.<br/><br/>10 x 8 inches. Two Near Fine one Very Good plus with light wear to the bottom edge. Warner Brothers unknown books
1971150755Burbank CA: Warner Brothers 1971. Vintage studio still photograph from the US release of the 1971 British film showing actors Oliver Reed and Georgina Hale. <br/><br/>Based on the 1960 play by John Whiting and on Aldous Huxley's 1952 book "The Devils of Loudun." A dramatization of the fall of Urbain Grandier a Catholic priest accused of witchcraft and demonic conspiracy by a group of hysterical nuns. Often regarded as one of the more controversial films of the twentieth century due in large part to its heavily violent and sexual content in a religious context widely censored before its release. <br/><br/>Set in 17th century Loudun France.<br/><br/>10 x 8 inches. Very Good plus with a small closed tear to the right edge. Warner Brothers unknown books
1992Q-0706369904Ward Lock Ltd 1992-09-01. Hardcover. New. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Ward Lock Ltd hardcover
1937BB2431New York: The Museum of Modern Art 1937. First Printing. Card Covers. Fine-. One of 2750 copies printed by the Spiral Press with notes by Kauffer on technique and foreword by Aldous Huxley of this catalog for an exhibition at New York's Museum of Modern Art from February 10 to March 7 1937. Royal 8vo 254 x 191mm: 24pp including 12 highlights on 9 black-and-white plates from the exhibit of 85 posters designed by Kauffer for London Underground Great Western Railways Shell and other English clients. Stapled illustrated card covers screen-printed in French blue black and grey. About Fine with minute wear to lower front cover edge else virtually pristine. Scarce. Kauffer moved to London at the start of the First World War and is probably best remembered for the 140 posters he created for London Underground later London Transport in many styles showing influences of futurism cubism and vorticism as well as impressionism and Japanese woodcuts. Why Huxley was chosen to contribute the very brief rather incoherent forward Kauffer painted Huxley's garden in Aix-en-Provence the year before this exhibition would be interesting to know. N. B. With few exceptions always identified we only stock books in exceptional condition carefully preserved in archival removable mylar sleeves. All orders are packaged with care and posted promptly. Satisfaction guaranteed. Fine Editions Ltd is a member of the Independent Online Booksellers Association and we subscribe to its codes of ethics. The Museum of Modern Art unknown
193727129New York: Museum of Modern Art. As New. 1937. Hardcover. FREE UPGRADE to Courier/Priority Shipping Upon Request - IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - -- with a bonus offer-- . Museum of Modern Art hardcover
193755195NY: The Museum of Modern Art. Near Fine. 1937. First Trade Edition. Softcover. Publisher's stiff pictorial staplebound wrappers. Hint of foxing to inner covers. Very near fine. ; Large 8vo 9" - 10" tall; 28 pages . The Museum of Modern Art paperback
1938031233UK 1938. First Edition . Paper. Good. 48mo - over 3 - 4" tall. A Wonderful Original Handwritten and Signed Four-Sided Letter from Juliette Huxley to Ottoline Morrell. Undated but C1938. The Zoological Society Regent's Park N.W.8 Primrose 2832 29 March. Dearest Ottoline I am so terribly sorry to hear that Philip is ill and under treatment; I have just phoned Milly & she gave me the news poor Ottoline how I wish this had been better - But she tells me that Philip has already benefited a lot from the rest & I do hope with all my heart that he will soon be all right again. And you will also improve your health it was sad you got a chill abroad setting you back again for a spell - luckily we are out of winter & fogs however strange the weather & time should help - I hope Dr Cameron doesn't let you tire yourself & that you are not wearing yourself with anxiety - I can't tell you how sorry how I am - dearest Ottoline. You have I expect heard from Maria about Aldous - we had a long letter Friday. He seems out of the woods thank God but how long till he is fit again Julian is taking a treatment of Prontosil which may or may not clear up the bacteria in the sinuses If not he will have to be operated soon. He is now off work for a week not a depressed as I feared Prontosil is depressing drug & a little better today - he still looks unwell. I'll let you know if he has this operation which I still wish could be avoided you feel that he can't go on like this & must get the sinuses drained. Kos is sad having lost the Irish Sweep - just when he really needed it! He is a bit worried about his home & I am preaching a House Agent to him - I can't see how he'll find a tenant otherwise. Brett is off to her desert again tomorrow. Funny old thing - unchanged really - she looks much older is fat dresses v. badly but is still like a startled bird. I thought you were very wise not to see her. I am outside her Ken; I think she has chosen well to live her life out there. Did you hear Julian got his Royal Society Fellowship the other day He was pleased. With many many wishes for your health & Philip's recovery & so much love. Juliette. Juliette Lady Huxley née Marie Juliette Baillot; 1896 -1994 was a Swiss-French sculptor and writer. She provided lifelong support to her husband British naturalist Sir Julian Huxley. Around 1915 she began working as a tutor to the daughter of Lady Ottoline Morrell at Garsington. It was there in 1916 that she met Aldous Huxley and his brother Julian. She and Julian were married in 1919. Lady Ottoline Violet Anne Morrell 1873 - 1938 was an English aristocrat and society hostess. Her patronage was influential in artistic and intellectual circles where she befriended writers including Aldous Huxley Siegfried Sassoon T. S. Eliot and D. H. Lawrence and artists including Mark Gertler Dora Carrington and Gilbert Spencer. Size is 230mm x 176mm. Condition is good. Folding creases. Ref 19237 <br/> <br/> unknown
1923031234UK 1923. First Edition . Paper. Good. 48mo - over 3 - 4" tall. A Wonderful Original Handwritten Signed Eight-Sided Letter and Envelope from Juliette Huxley to Ottoline Morrell discussing her Relationship with her husband Sir Julian Huxley. Undated but circa 1923. The envelope is addressed to The Lady Ottoline Morrell Kurhaus HovenFreiberg in Brisgau Baden Germany. The letter reads 31 Hillway Highgate N.6. Mountview 5744. Dear Ottoline I should have answered your letter before but I was laid up - oh these eternal bacteriological tournaments & am still in bed slowly & so painfully recovering. I have no patience with my illnesses & resent their catching hold of my heels so cunningly. - This time the specialist came up & I hope will get at the root of the trouble & cure me somehow. Forgive this boring affair - You know too much about ill-health & I should not bore you with mine. J. has written to me that the "marriage" is off. He cabled the girl & jilted her. She is naturally v. upset - & has threatened to come over - meanwhile he has written me and wants to see me terribly - I took ill & had to put him off & shall now see him next week - He now says He never ceased loving me & wants to start over again. And of course cannot wait a day - All so unstable so unreliable - I want a man not a shuttlecock. He is obviously in a highly nervous state clutching at every straw & refusing still to look at himself calmly - He hasn't found his soul in her pocket as he hoped - & so turns to me. When will he understand that no-one but himself can give him peace - he must work & weep & hunger for it & know bitter suffering - I cannot help him until he accepts his defeat - & thereby wins his soul. I must not help him for it would destroy me again. I sound hard - I know but I have to be. The price of peace & life - Don't misunderstand me. By not helping I mean I cannot take him back now at once & listen to his self-justification. I can only stand there & leave the door ajar. And even so I tremble - It's all so minutely adjusted like acrobatic trapezes & every fault will mean more pain. And yet why should I grudge a little more pain Pain has been my enemy until she lived in me - & then she became so much a friend - But before what hell it was - could it begin again I am glad you are with Dr Martin - I think of you getting stronger & living in light - I dreamt I was choosing new curtains last night with you - in a high room; grey panelled. The walls were hung with little stripes of bright colours running up like flames - All day it has been a background to my mind lovely colours like yours. I lie in my huge bed & think of them & of lovely words linked together to make poetry like magic casements opening up on the foam of fairy lands forlorn - one's world becomes so small & almost like a nest as one lies in bed - The house has only one room the room one window - one suffices to oneself. Yes but life lies waiting on the doorstep & there will be the inescapable decisions - there will be Julian poor silly Julian! This is an absurdly long letter - & I haven't said half I wanted - I send you my love; I'd like to discover a lovely poem to send you - I find too many. Matthew Arnold has fallen fresh as a star into my room. I revel in it. You like him It is like Gower St. I'm on the doorstep since half an hour & cannot go away - Because your front door makes such a radiance about everything - & it is so warm. Dearest Ottoline good night. Juliette. Juliette Lady Huxley née Marie Juliette Baillot; 1896 -1994 was a Swiss-French sculptor and writer. She provided lifelong support to her husband British naturalist Sir Julian Huxley. Around 1915 she began working as a tutor to the daughter of Lady Ottoline Morrell at Garsington. It was there in 1916 that she met Aldous Huxley and his brother Julian. She and Julian were married in 1919. Lady Ottoline Violet Anne Morrell 1873 - 1938 was an English aristocrat and society hostess. Size is 165mm x 122mm. Condition good. R19237 <br/> <br/> unknown
6003Letter 27 January 1966; on letterhead 31 Pond Street Hampstead N.W.3. Reply 29 January 1966. Juliette Huxley's letter is 4to: 2 pp. Good though lightly creased and attached to the other items by a paperclip. The correspondence mainly concerns a book by Cowell's eventually published under the title 'The garden as a fine art: from antiquity to modern times' 1978. She begins by describing Mary Wellesley: 'quite a character . lives in a small house off St. James's Palace and entertains by candlelight. Her uncle is the Duke of Wellesley . She has acquired a forest and soon after went to various forestry meetings and school to learn all about it.' 'About your gardens: have you quoted Song Solomon I 14 I think it is'. Discusses henna and Engeddi 'a beautiful oasis with several springs flowing from high cliffs and nourishing what otherwise would be a salty hellish desert . Also 'Herod's palace at Massada' 'Of course your book will be accepted for publication; have you tried Weidenfeld and Nicholson the eventual publishers I am thinking of going to him with MY Israel book. And of course those flower photos would be available to you for illustration.' The Huxleys hope to return to Israel that March 'to see the spring flowers' and she would 'inquire further' if they did. The unsigned copy of Cowell's reply is 4to: 3 pp. On typing paper creased and worn at extremities. Begins 'You have always been at a high altitude in the hierarchy of angels but now if there is any further step to take you may be regarded as having made it by your splendid letter of the 27th.' 'Lilian' is grateful 'for Miss Wellesley's story' and he is urging her 'to lure her down one fine day when the daffodils are in full song with other floral excitements to match . She would be a splendid counsellor on such bits of timber and planting as we have on our modest five acres.' Discusses their neighbour 'Mrs. Frederick Balfour now rising 85 I believe' who 'helped her late husband in perilous journeys on horseback in the Rockies of Oregon to discover some of the splendid things that now flourish there'. Discusses the biblical passage quoted by Huxley and is sending 'a carbon of my stuff on the gardens of the Holy Land' present as the last page of the letter. Mentions a few scholars in the field. 'Walter Neurath founder of the publishers Thames and Hudson has gone rather sour on the book. He seems to have imported one of those rewrite men from America whose activities have been the subject of such splendid denunciation in the T.L.S. and this young man offered to rewrite some of my stuff. I should like to hear the explosion if any such trick were tried on Julian or Ric Mortimer Wheeler. I expect they were all trained in 'Creative Writing' in some Mid-West college.' Discusses Weidenfeld as an option. He wishes Julian Huxley to know that he has received 'a splendid letter from Roger Saydoux from New York two days ago picking up and returning my nostalgia for those grand early days'. Letter, 27 January 1966; on letterhead 31, Pond Street, Hampstead, N.W.3. Reply, 29 January 1966. unknown
Z1-A-006-02376Penguin Books Ltd. Used - Good. Ships from UK in 48 hours or less usually same day. Your purchase helps support Sri Lankan Children's Charity 'The Rainbow Centre'. Ex-library so some stamps and wear but in good overall condition. 100% money back guarantee. We are a world class secondhand bookstore based in Hertfordshire United Kingdom and specialize in high quality textbooks across an enormous variety of subjects. We aim to provide a vast range of textbooks rare and collectible books at a great price. Our donations to The Rainbow Centre have helped provide an education and a safe haven to hundreds of children who live in appalling conditions. We provide a 100% money back guarantee and are dedicated to providing our customers with the highest standards of service in the bookselling industry. Penguin Books Ltd unknown
Z1-A-006-02377Penguin Books Ltd. Used - Good. Ships from UK in 48 hours or less usually same day. Your purchase helps support Sri Lankan Children's Charity 'The Rainbow Centre'. Ex-library so some stamps and wear but in good overall condition. 100% money back guarantee. We are a world class secondhand bookstore based in Hertfordshire United Kingdom and specialize in high quality textbooks across an enormous variety of subjects. We aim to provide a vast range of textbooks rare and collectible books at a great price. Our donations to The Rainbow Centre have helped provide an education and a safe haven to hundreds of children who live in appalling conditions. We provide a 100% money back guarantee and are dedicated to providing our customers with the highest standards of service in the bookselling industry. Penguin Books Ltd unknown
1959mon0000013960Hodder & Stoughton 1959. Unknown Binding. Good. in x in x in. sunday times softback first edition - Fast Despatch by First Class Royal Mail Hodder & Stoughton unknown
A9780262513661Paperback / softback. New. The definitive edition of one of the most important scientific books of the twentieth century setting out the conceptual structure underlying evolutionary biology. paperback
0266796648.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
263224like new. unknown
19324838<p>First Edition/First Printing with no additional printings mentioned; A Near Fine book in a Good dust jacket. A handsome copy of this important work in evolutionary biology from Sir Julian Huxley the grandson of Thomas Henry Huxley a leading early proponent of Darwinism and important biologist. Julian Huxley became a leading evolutionary biologist during the early to mid 20th century; this text is an important work an account of the study of allometry or the relative growth of body parts to the growth of the whole; this work still a basis for the study of analytical morphology. This copy is in near fine condition with light rubbing to the board edges mild age-toning to the text block and a previous owner's signature to the front free paper the owner Grant D. Darker was a prominent biologist in his own right from Harvard and the University of Toronto. Housed in a good original dust jacket with chipping and tearing to all edges with a small loss of material and the front flap detached. A scarce title in the first printing particularly retaining the original dust jacket. Not remaindered not price-clipped not ex-library; in a protective Mylar cover and will ship securely wrapped in a sturdy box.</p> The Dial Press hardcover
A9780801846595Paperback / softback. New. This detailed study of the different rates of growth of parts of the body relative to the body as a whole represents Sir Julian Huxley's great contribution to analytical morphology and is still the basis for modern investigations in the field. paperback
1527852695.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
B9780801846595Paperback / softback. New. This detailed study of the different rates of growth of parts of the body relative to the body as a whole represents Sir Julian Huxley's great contribution to analytical morphology and is still the basis for modern investigations in the field. paperback
1993x-0801846595The Johns Hopkins University Press 1993. Paperback. New. reprint edition. 360 pages. 8.50x6.00x1.00 inches. The Johns Hopkins University Press paperback
2015x-110750242XCambridge University Press 2015. Paperback. New. reissue edition. 514 pages. 8.25x5.25x1.25 inches. Cambridge University Press paperback
1939mon0000132582Penguin Books 1939T. paperback. Good. in x in x in. 1936 4th pelican impression pelican editionrn Penguin Books paperback
19722835331972. Very Good binding. A small archive of correspondence between Sir Julian Huxley the scientist writer and brother of Aldous Huxley and a Mr. John T. Parks of Richardson Texas. ~There are four autograph letters signed and written by Sir Julian. In them Huxley comments on such things as the burning of the White House in the War of 1812 various species of fish and the vices of the Arabs. Of the Arabs he comments: "their greatest trouble was the power of the different sheiks - which led to a form of tribalism and hindered unity. Oil has helped some materially - but even the oil 'kingdoms' are very backward as regards education & health. Let us hope that this division will continue so as to prevent mass war against Israel." This written a mere year before the Yom Kippur War. ~Sir Julian's handwritten letters are at times difficult to transcribe and the archive helpfully includes typed transcripts of them. ~~Correspondent John Parks requested autographs for certain copies of Sir Julian's works one of which is included with the letters: an off-print copy of "World Population" from Scientific American signed by Sir Julian on the front cover. The archive also includes correspondence between Mr. Parks and publishers as well as the subscription department at The New Yorker: "For the trouble I caused him . I asked him and Lady Huxley what they would like short of a herd of longhorn steers . and he said he rather thought that a subscription to The New Yorker would do nicely". Finally includes an autographed letter signed by Judith Huxley daughter-in-law of Aldous thanking the Mr. Parks for the loan of a book. Very Good binding. unknown books
NB2036BROCHE EDITIONS 19487 TRE BONNE CONDITION GENERALE Photos sur demande.
194782111Paris, Les Editions de Minuit / Collection Philosophie Etrangère, 1947, in-12, broché, 324p. Bon état hormis une légère insolation sur la partie supérieure du premier plat. TABLE DES MATIÈRES — Introduction . II. — Histoire et développement récent de la science de l'homme III. Les principes de l'hérédité appliqués à l'homme IV. — Fondements de la classification ethnique V. — De quelques illusions et de quelques pièges de la classification ethnique VI. — Les principaux groupes ethniques de l'Europe VII. — Composition ethnique des nations européennes . VIII. — L'Europe outre-mer (par A. M. Carr-Saunders) IX.— Conclusion Appendice Index