6 631 résultats
1931WF113New York: Jonathan Cape & Harrison Smith 1931 First edition first printing. Original publisher's gray cloth-backed red paper-covered boards spine lettered in red and red and white patterned endpapers; original dust jacket with modern geometric designs to the front panel and spine in black blue and white lettered in black and white. Near fine book with light toning to spine a very gentle lean to spine and bookseller's label rear pastedown; very good unclipped dust jacket with light toning to spine and extremities shallow chipping to spine ends a couple of small chips to top edge of front panel lettering unaffected a few small closed tears to edges and some light chipping to corners. Overall a pleasing copy. Sanctuary is a Southern Gothic novel set in Jefferson the seat of the fictional Yoknapatawpha County in Mississippi based on Faulkner's childhood experiences in Oxford. His most sensational novel it tells the story of Temple Drake a young Mississippi woman who becomes the victim of the criminal assistant of a notorious Tennessee moonshiner. After being raped and kidnapped Drake is smuggled to a Memphis brothel where she becomes hardened by her harsh new environment. Several townspeople seek justice for Temple by attempting to have her assailant arrested and vindicating the moonshiner who has been falsely accused. Although readers and critics were alarmed by its dark plotline Sanctuary's eloquent prose and compelling story made the novel Faulkner's first commercial breakthrough. As the dust jacket lauds "the novel is hideously and terrifically- and therefore beautifully- great." Faulkner would later return to Temple Drake's story in his 1951 text Requiem for a Nun. . First Edition. Hard Cover. Near Fine/Dust Jacket Included. New York: Jonathan Cape & Harrison Smith hardcover
1939142141New York: Random House 1939. Signed limited edition number 14 of only 250 examples. In near fine condition without the usual fading accustomed to this title. Housed in a custom half morocco slipcase. Uncommon in this condition. In this feverishly beautiful novel William Faulkner interweaves two narratives each wholly absorbing in its own right each subtly illuminating the other. In New Orleans in 1937 a man and a woman embark on a headlong flight into the wilderness of illicit passion fleeing her husband and the temptations of respectability. In Mississippi ten years earlier a convict sets forth across a flooded river risking his own chance at freedom to rescue a pregnant woman. From these separate stories Faulkner composes a symphony of deliverance and damnation survival and self-sacrifice a novel in which elemental danger is juxtaposed with fatal injuries of the spirit. The Wild Palms is grandly inventive heart-stopping in its prose and suffused on every page with the physical presence of the country that Faulkner made his own. Random House unknown
193973781New York:: Random House 1939. First edition. . publisher's tan cloth in dust jacket. Cloth ever so slightly browned; else a fine copy in a beautiful dust jacket with two tiny closed tears to the top of the rear panel and a few minuscule rubbed areas. As nice a copy as we have had. . 8vo. Random House, hardcover
1936000882New York: Random House 1936. Book. Very Good. Hardcover. 1st Edition. True First Printing with all the correct points. See pictures. Very Good book with two slight stains on front of text block. It is clean with a tight spine rigid boards and pointed tips.It is clear of any markings and of course has the map. The jacket is NOT price clipped with a small loss at top and bottom of spine and around most edges and small smudges here and there. This book looks as spectacular in its shiny mylar dust protector. Shipping box is suitable for wrapping with a non-price listed purchase order inside along with biodegradable packing. Random House Hardcover
194031796New York: Random House. Very Good with no dust jacket. 1940. First Edition; First Printing. Hardcover. Very Good signed limited edition in the run of 250 copies. No names or marks. Minor shelf wear to cover. ; 8vo 8" - 9" tall; 421 pages; Signed by Author . Random House hardcover
1932345512New York: Harrison Smith & Robert Haas 1932. First edition first state. 480 pp. 1 vols. 8vo. Original coarse tan buckram lettered in orange on the cover and blue on the spine with an orange star top edge orange with two closed tears to head of spine offsetting to endpapers; dust jacket with Japanese tissue reinforcements to folds and top and bottom and in-painting. With custom clamshell case. First edition first state. 480 pp. 1 vols. 8vo. First state with orange lettering on front cover blue lettering with orange star on spine and "Jefferson" for "Mottstown" on line 1 of page 340. Jacket has first issue points of $2.50 price and list of titles on back panel starting with Boyle Kay. One of only 8500 copies published in October 1932. Peterson A13a; Massey 103 Harrison Smith & Robert Haas unknown
19351862Harrison Smith & Robert Haas 1935. Petersen A17.1c. First printing. Fading to cloth spine. Very good in like DJ with small holes at rear edge. Otherwise a nice bright copy. Harrison Smith & Robert Haas unknown
1920New York: Random House 1951. Signed Limited Edition. Original glassine. Number 545 of 750. Random House unknown
1957034948n.p.: Twentieth Century Fox. 1957. The "Final Script" of the screenplay adaptation of Faulkner's novel. The movie starred Yul Brynner and Joanne Woodward. 150 pages. Wear to the yapped covers and fragile along the spine. Stamped as copy "32." A very good copy now protected by a custom clamshell case. Twentieth Century Fox unknown
339695Ten photographs; 3 5.5" x 7" portraits 9" x 5.75" Kentucky Derby photo 9.5" x 7" Nobel Prize photo 6" x 5" 1950 article portrait 3" x 2" 1931 portrait and 3 8" x 10" Rowan Oak photographs. All photos are dated have publication details on verso; overall very good. Ten photographs; 3 5.5" x 7" portraits 9" x 5.75" Kentucky Derby photo 9.5" x 7" Nobel Prize photo 6" x 5" 1950 article portrait 3" x 2" 1931 portrait and 3 8" x 10" Rowan Oak photographs. This is a collection of ten press photographs pertaining to William Faulkner used by the Philadelphia Inquirer and from their archives. The photos range from the author's early fame in the early 1930's following The Sound and the Fury 1929 and As I Lay Dying 1930 through his receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1950 and into the mid-1950s with three images taken at his home in Oxford Mississippi. All of the images have an A.P. stamp with information and are date stamped on verso. It includes: <br /> <br /> 3" x 2" author portrait of Faulkner with his name on recto date stamped with manuscript mark on verso. 4/1/1931<br /> <br /> 5.5" x 7" author portrait cropped with paint and embellished for print date stamped with typescript article pasted down on verso. 3/30/1935<br /> <br /> 5.5" x 7" photograph at Faulkner standing next to a plane at the Memphis airport date stamped with manuscript details on verso. 4/3/1935<br /> <br /> 6" x 5" portrait cropped with article text beneath date stamped with manuscript on verso. 11/13/1950<br /> <br /> 5.5" x 7" photograph of Faulkner deboarding a flight at LaGuardia airport in New York where he stopped over for a few days on his journey to receive the Nobel Prize in Stockholm. Date stamped and info pated down on verso. 12/6/1950<br /> <br /> 9.5" x 7" photograph of Faulkner receiving the Nobel Prize with article to the side date stamped with manuscript text on verso. 12/8/1950<br /> <br /> 9" x 5.75" photograph of Faulkner meeting famed jockey Eddie Arcaro at the Churchill Downs in Louisville. Date stamped with article pasted down on verso. 5/4/1955<br /> <br /> 2x 8" x 10" photographs taken at Faulkner's Rowan Oaks. One being from the walkway leading to the front of the home the other being of Estelle Faulkner at the base of the stairs. Date stamped with pasted down articles to verso. 5/22/1955 <br /> <br /> 8" x 10" photo from the interior of Rowan Oak date stamped on article pasted down to verso. 6/1/1955. unknown
1950304005Oxford Miss: Oxford Eagle 1950. First edition. 1 p. 8-1/2 x 11 inches. Some slight fading old folds laid into quarter brown morocco and marbled boards folding case. First edition. 1 p. 8-1/2 x 11 inches. Single leaf broadside regarding the Oxford attempt to ban beer with a letter from the original collector of the sheet who was a graduate student at the time that Faulkner left it in his car; his wife saved it. He also states that Faulkner had the printing done at the local paper the Oxford Eagle. Petersen A29 Oxford Eagle unknown books
1934WRCLIT64624New York: Smith & Haas 1934. Gilt cloth. First edition trade printing of Faulkner's second collection of short fiction. Top edge a bit dust darkened otherwise a fine unfaded copy in very good modestly spine-darkened dust jacket. PETERSEN A15a. MASSEY 438. Smith & Haas hardcover books
1934WRCLIT53481New York: Smith & Haas 1934. Gilt cloth. First edition trade printing of Faulkner's second collection of short fiction. Some tiny pencil tics in the table of contents erased otherwise a fine unfaded copy in very good modestly spine-darkened dust jacket with a couple of tiny closed tears at crown of spine and small nick at one tip. PETERSEN A15a. MASSEY 438. Smith & Haas hardcover books
19322007021New York: Harrison Smith and Robert Haas 1932. First. hardcover. Near fine/Near fine. A near fine first printing in a near fine dust jacket First Printing stated on the copyright page. Harrison Smith and Robert Haas unknown books
1932D17566New York: Harrison Smith & Robert Haas 1932. First Edition. Hardcover. Near Fine/Very Good. First issue binding. Jacket with some light fading to spine as usual; edgeworn with some short tears nicks and a few shallow chips. In all a presentable copy of what is widely considered the most accessible of Faulkner's great books. Housed in a full custom leather box bound by Zaehnsdorf for Asprey. <br/><br/> Harrison Smith & Robert Haas hardcover books
193322729ECulver City CA: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer 1933. Original Typed Document Signed by William Faulkner – the Agreement of Sale Contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios to purchase the rights to an untitled Faulkner short story set in a mythical Latin American Kingdom. Single sheet signed on the verso by William Faulkner and dated by him “30 August 1933â€. With the blindstamp and signature of the Notary Public in Lafayette Mississippi. Near fine with slightly torn punch holes at top and very faint paper clip mark. In the early 1930s MGM Studios offered Faulkner work as a screenwriter in Hollywood. As literary critic and noted authority on Faulkner’s work Andre Bleikasten put it he “was in dire need of money and had no idea how to get it…So he went to Hollywood.†He arrived in Culver City California in May 1932 experiencing a fair share of ambivalence for both the movie culture and the studio system. He did enjoy a personal and professional relationship with director Howard Hawks whose brother William Hawks became Faulkner's Hollywood agent. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer unknown books
1926116798New York: Boni & Liveright 1926. First edition of Faulkner's first book. Octavo original cloth. In near fine condition with a touch of shelfwear. Housed in a custom half morocco clamshell chemise and box. Faulkner's first novel Soldiers' Pay 1926 is among the most memorable works to emerge from the First World War. Through the story of a wounded veteran's homecoming it examines the impact of soldiers' return from war on the people-particularly the women-who were left behind Boni & Liveright hardcover books
1940140938674New York: Random House 1940. First Edition. Very Good. First edition copy #203 of 250 in the limited edition signed by Faulkner on colophon. x 421 pp. Publisher's three quarter blue cloth decorative paper boards gilt topstain backstrip ruled and lettered in gilt. Very Good with some toning and rubbing to decorative paper light soiling to fore edge lacking original acetate wraps. Gilt sharp. A specially-bound signed first of the first novel in the Snopes trilogy. Random House unknown books
1940WB14615New York: Random House 1940. First Edition First Printing Stated. Hardcover. Very Good. Limited issue one of only 250 copies printed this being number 235. SIGNED by Faulkner. Original 3/4 navy cloth and decorative paper over boards. Short nick to top of spine minor toning and rubbing along the edges. <br/><br/> Random House hardcover books
193854053New York: Random House 1938. First edition. 1 vols. 8vo. Grey cloth. Fine in fine dust jacket. First edition. 1 vols. 8vo. Random House unknown books
19392200New York: Random House 1939. First Edition. About Fine. Octavo with burgundy quarter cloth over wood-grain papered boards. Copy 148 of two hundred fifty copies signed by Faulkner on the limitation page. Slightest bit of chipping to edges otherwise Fine. A clean square and bright copy of this literary classic.<br/><br/>Consisting of two interwoven short stories with opposing perspectives on love grief and sacrifice The Wild Palms is one of Faulkner's most experimental works. "When I reached the end of what is now the first section of The Wild Palms I realized suddenly that something was missing it needed emphasis something to lift it like counterpoint in music. So I .raised it to pitch again with another section of its antithesis which is the story of a man who got his love and spent the rest of the book fleeing from it" Faulkner. About Fine. Random House unknown books
1950304005Oxford Miss: Oxford Eagle 1950. First edition. 1 p. 8-1/2 x 11 inches. Some slight fading old folds laid into quarter brown morocco and marbled boards folding case. First edition. 1 p. 8-1/2 x 11 inches. Single leaf broadside regarding the Oxford attempt to ban beer with a letter from the original collector of the sheet who was a graduate student at the time that Faulkner left it in his car; his wife saved it. He also states that Faulkner had the printing done at the local paper the Oxford Eagle. Petersen A29 Oxford Eagle unknown
194289168New York: Random House 1942. Hardcover. Near Fine/Very Good. First edition. Very uncommon variant issue with green lettering on the spine of the very dark blue cloth and with no topstain. One of nine reported variants all of them scarcer than the primary binding of black cloth with gold spine-lettering and red topstain. Near fine with small ownership signature of a reviewer on the front fly and the topedge a little soiled in very good dust jacket with some wear at the edges a very small chip on the rear panel and a bit of rubbing. A collection of interconnected stories published as a novel including the comic masterpiece "Was" and the first book appearance of his classic novella "The Bear. Random House hardcover
19322007021New York: Harrison Smith and Robert Haas 1932. First. hardcover. Near fine/Near fine. A near fine first printing in a near fine dust jacket First Printing stated on the copyright page. Harrison Smith and Robert Haas unknown
19322598New York: Harrison Smith & Robert Haas 1932. Book. Fine. Hardcover. 1st Edition. First Printing. First Issue book has orange & blue lettering top edge stained orange and "Jefferson" instead of "Mottstown" on page 340 line 1. The dustjacket is designed by Arthur Hawkins with the $2.50 price present on the front flap. The dustjacket has minor expert repair and is slightly faded on the spine. Book is protected in a custom cut clear mylar cover. All books are carefully wrapped and shipped in a box. Harrison Smith & Robert Haas Hardcover