4 788 résultats
196442036Bari: Istituto di Letteratura Cristiana Antica 1964 - 1975. Year 1 till the first part of year 12 in 17 paperbacks. sl. worn sl. browned Although very good see picture. Istituto di Letteratura Cristiana Antica paperback
77-0726Detroit MI: 1968. 4to. Very Good. 1pp photocopy of newspaper clippings from Detroit newspapers February and March 1968. Detroit, MI: 1968 unknown
19922091502135303806Izumi shoin 1992. Soft Cover. Fine. Volume: 1 Izumi shoin paperback
M13598Rare. Van Siclen Books San Antonio TX 1986. First edition. In-8. Original half-leather title page with a bend otherwise a fine copy. From the library of Egyptologist Charles Cornell Van Siclen III VSX. Language: English. This book ships from the USA shipping costs will be updated accordingly TXR. Relevant subjects: Egypt: Journals Egypt. unknown
0243970153.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
2080202103700296Miraisha N.A. Soft Cover. Fine. Page size: 225p Image size: 20cm B6 Miraisha paperback
19662080202103800127Miraisha 1966. Soft Cover. Fine. The book is in fine condition. Miraisha paperback
19952111902158502677Urasoe City Small Town Magazine Editorial Committee 1995. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of pages: 327p. Size: 31cm Urasoe City Small Town Magazine Editorial Committee paperback
0963946005.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
2004003217New Castle Delaware: The News Journal 2004. Pictorial Hardcover. Fine. A full- color depiction of the Blue Hens 2003 national football championship season. 128 pages filled with full-color photos. Oblong 8vo 8 3/4" x 11 3/4". <br/> <br/> The News Journal hardcover
1852675821852. New York 1852. Four parts only. New York 1852. Four parts only. An Interesting View of the American Legal Community in 1852 Law Journal. Livingston John Editor. United States Monthly Law Magazine. New York: United States Monthly Magazine Office 1852. Volume 6 No. 1 July 1852 Volume 5 No. 1 January 1852 Volume 5 No. 2 February 1852 Volume 4 No. 4 1852. Title page and final two pages author notice and prospectus lacking from Volume 6 No. 1. Final two leaves prospectus and advertisements lacking from Volume 5 No. 2. Octavo 8-3/4" x 5-1/2". Together four issues from 1852. Periodicals bound into nineteenth-century three-quarter morocco over marbled boards. Light rubbing to boards moderate rubbing to extremities with wear to spine ends joints cracked a few cracks to text block. Light toning to text slightly heavier in places. $150. The United States Monthly Law Magazine was published from January 1850 to July 1852. It specialized in scholarly essays and jurist biographies but also offered book reviews review essays court reports of American and English cases and notices. Some of the more notable articles in our volume are an anonymous critique of the Field Codes of civil and criminal procedure Volume 5 No. 2 pp. 152-172 and a biographical sketch of Sam Houston Volume 4 No. 4 pp. 567-592. Hoeflich Legal Publishing in Antebellum America 153-157. Catalogue of the Library of the Harvard Law School 1909 I:824. unknown
1895D6188United States 1895-1897. Green cloth over flexible boards "Photographs" stamped in gilt on upper board; 4to; approx. pp. 50 with over 100 mounted postcard-format entries usually two per page on both the recto and the verso. Wonderful! Easily one of the nicest albums of this kind that we have had the pleasure of cataloguing. This unique album contains more than 100 dated "diary entries" out of chronological sequence each one a hand-made postcard featuring original artwork including watercolors pencil sketches ink drawings both naive and accomplished a photograph a cyanotype or an image cut from an unknown source such as a newspaper or magazine. The postcards are created by numerous contributors and their rich variety is difficult to capture except to say that they run the gamut of human capability the sketch artist offers an anthropomorphic chicken the watercolor painter a peaceful landscape and personality sentimental humorous sweet thoughtful. A short list gives you an idea: happy puppies photograph ladies in big dresses wading in the surf photograph a Rorsarch test ink of course kite ink drawing plant specimen baseball joke pencil cartoon a little bird feather collage 8 bars of music ink Jamaica Plain cyanotype bull fight photograph boats photograph a family portrait in the Adirondacks photograph. Our compiler must have enlisted far-flung friends for contributions as images and references hail from Perugia Brooklyn Boston Zermatt Valley Philadelphia Avignon and Arizona. <br/><br/> hardcover
19662091502135411647Not Available 1966. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of books: 1 Not Available paperback
0243304927.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1970221271970. FeminismSocialismLaborLGBTQ Underground newspaper Kaleidoscope Milwaukee WI archive of two issues. Vol. 1 No. 7 Oct. 29-Nov. 11 1970; Vol. 3 No. 23 Jan. 15-22 1971. Two original issues from Milwaukee's radical newspaper Kaleidoscope a cornerstone of New Left feminist and countercultural expression in the Midwest. These issues exemplify the intersectional editorial voice of the paper prominently featuring articles on feminist self-determination LGBTQ liberation reproductive autonomy and anti-racist solidarity.<br /> <br /> The October 29-November 11 1970 issue is especially notable for its explosive front-page headline "OFF SEXIST PIGS!" and its radical feminist manifesto demanding an end to male chauvinism and gender oppression. The text includes direct calls for solidarity among women critiques of workplace discrimination at Harley-Davidson and shout-outs to revolutionary women including Bernadine Dohrn and Angela Davis. Inside readers encounter a full-page satirical parody of the Madison-Milwaukee Bugle-American that mocks local liberal media's co-optation of radical aesthetics alongside critiques of law enforcement welfare policy and censorship.<br /> <br /> The January 15-22 1971 anniversary issue celebrates four years of Kaleidoscope's publication and centers on both introspection and community engagement. It includes prominent articles such as "OBSTETRICS IN THE WRONG HANDS" which critiques institutionalized misogyny in medical practice and "GAY GUIDE" a resource for Milwaukee's LGBTQ community. A striking article titled "THE EMPEROR'S NEW CLOTHES" explores queer identity and resistance through the lens of Warhol superstar Holly Woodlawn whose image dominates the spread. Elsewhere "faggot faggot faggot" provides a bold reclamation of slurs while analyzing anti-queer violence and legal discrimination. The layout's creative typography and photo-collage aesthetic reflect the underground press's rejection of mainstream journalistic forms.<br /> <br /> Mild toning to edges with expected brittleness to newsprint; light chipping to spine fold of the earlier issue; both issues remain legible with strong contrast to ink and graphics. Overall very good condition. A powerful primary source capturing the radical ferment of early 1970s Milwaukee this set documents the convergence of feminist queer and anti-authoritarian movements in the heartland-a scarce and potent artifact of Midwest underground publishing. unknown
19732091502135418173Not Available 1973. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of books: 1 Not Available paperback
19732091502135414327Not Available 1973. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of books: 1 Not Available paperback
200028798Washington DC:: Brassey's 2000. First Printing of the First US Edition. A Fine tight copy in a Fine unclipped dust jacket. George Armstrong Custer’s fabled Fifth Regiment fought with great distinction throughout the war and suffered the third highest total of men killed in the entire Union cavalry. A twenty-four-year-old farmer and new father from Hopkins Michigan named James Henry Avery was one of Custer’s feared “Wolverines.” Besides eloquently describing his personal experiences Sergeant Avery’s wartime journals and postwar reminiscences provide uniquely detailed descriptions of Civil War cavalry movements and the only known account that addresses the escape of elements of the Fifth Michigan Cavalry on the first day of the Battle of Trevilian Station. Brassey's, unknown
0365964123.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1895304588Belfast and London: McCaw Stevenson & Orr. Ld. 1895. First Edition. Softcover. Poor set in the original stiff-card wrappers; wear and tear as with age. Text remains in fine condition and without blemish. Some issues in three hardcover bindings two bound in full cloth and one bound in half leather over buckram boards. Physical description; 26 issues. Contents; Vol. I September 1894 No. I ; vol. I: January 1895 No. 2 ; vol. I: April 1895 No. 3 ; vol. I: July 1895 No. 4 ; vol. II January 1896 No. 2 ; vol. II part 3 April 1896 ; vol. II July 1896 no. 4 ; vol. II part I October 1895 ; vol. III: October 1896 No. I ; vol. III: January 1897 No. 2 ; vol. III: April 1897 No. 3 ; vol. III: July 1897 No. 4 ; Index to Ulster Journal of Archaeology: vol. III ; vol. IV: October 1897 No. I ; vol. IV: January 1898 No. 2 ; The Ancient Franciscan Friary of Nun-Na-Margie Ballcastle on the North Coast of Antrim by Francis Joseph Bigger ; vol. IV April 1898 No. 3 ; vol. IV July 1898 No. 4 ; vol. V part 3 May 1899 ; vol. VI January 1900 No. I ; vol. VI part 2 April 1900 ; vol. VI part 3 July 1900 ; vol. VII: January 1901 No. I ; vol. VII: January 1901 No. 3 ; vol. IV: October 1901 No. 4 ; vol. VIII Part I January 1902 ; vol. VIII part 2 April 1902 ; vol. VIII part 3 July 1902 ; vol. VIII part 4 October 1902 ; vol. IX part I January 1903 ; vol. IX April 1903 no. 2 ; vol. IX part 3 July 1903 2 copies ; vol. IX Oct. 1903 no. 4 ; vol. X part I January 1904 ; vol. X October 1904 no. 4 2 copies ; vol. XI part I January 1905 ; vol. XI part 2 April 1905 ; vol. XI part 4 October 1905 ; vol. XII part 2 April 1906 ; vol. XII part 3 July 1906 ; vol. XII part 4 October 1906. Subjects; Archeology. Ulster. Ulster Journal of Archeology. Irish Archeology. Northern Irish Archeology. Academic Periodicals. Belfast and London: McCaw, Stevenson & Orr. Ld. paperback
19782090502113710470Not Available 1978. Soft Cover. Fine. The book is in fine condition. Not Available paperback
2090202118202935Not Available N.A. Soft Cover. Fine. The book is in fine condition. Not Available paperback
13801Printed heading The Daily Mail London Northcliffe House. EC4 12 Sept.1945. One page 8vo fold marks good condition. He thanks him for his letter and looks forward ot reading Bilainkin's Diary "dictated in Berlin when it is ready". "I should be very pleased ot meet the Yugoslav Ambassador sometime but I am unable to suggest dates at the moment as I am going away within a week or two and have an extremely heavy list of engagements to fulfil before I go ." [Printed heading] The Daily Mail, London, Northcliffe House. EC4, 12 Sept.1945. unknown
71-6421Le Roy New York: J. W. Grumiaux’s Newspaper Subscription Agency Jan. 15 1903. Typed letter. 28 x 21.5 cm sheet. Very Good a few short tears along sheet edges. Le Roy, New York: J. W. Grumiaux’s Newspaper Subscription Agency, Jan. 15, 1903. unknown
196935678New York: May 19 1969. 1969. Very good. - 26 words typed on a sheet of 9-1/2 inch high by 6-inch wide cream-colored sheet of New York Post letterhead with the address and "Office of the President " printed at the top. Signed "Dorothy Schiff". The corners of the letter are lightly creased. Folded twice for mailing. Very good. <p>Schiff writes to Jean Dalrymple thanking her for sending a copy of her new book "Careers and Opportunities in the Theatre" and hoping it becomes a best seller.<p>Dorothy Schiff 1903-1989 was an owner and then the leftist publisher of the New York Post for nearly forty years. She was a granddaughter of financier Jacob Schiff. She was interested in social services and reform and was involved in several welfare groups. Schiff sold the Post to Rupert Murdoch in 1976. It was believed she was pessimistic about the future of New York afternoon papers and she was also concerned about the effect of owning the paper on the value of her estate. New York: May 19, 1969. unknown