78 résultats
024018Santa Barbara: Black Sparrow Press 1982. First Edition. Octavo. Limited to 350 copies. The present copy is #98. 283 2 pp numbered. Bukowski's Chinaski in Ham on Rye slips into drunken self-destructive behavior that leads at the end of the book to the implication that he will eventually become homeless. As Bukowski's stories and poems slowly became sought after he was usually in need of financial help until the end of his life when he was paid to give readings to major universities. Bound in ¼ goldenrod cloth over pictorial paper covered boards lettered and ruled in blue red yellow and gray paper spine label in cream paper with lettering in red and blue blue endpapers in the original acetate dust jacket. A fine copy. Krumhansl #74d. Black Sparrow Press unknown
1987045655Munchen: Albrecht Knaus 1987. Hardcover. Near Fine Condition/Near Fine. Michael Montfort. First German edition signed by Bukowski with a small drawing on the title page. Slight creasing to jacket. Size: Folio. Illustrator: Michael Montfort. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: Under 1 kilo. Category: Philosophy; Signed by Author. Inventory No: 045655. Albrecht Knaus hardcover
023386Santa Barbara: Black Sparrow Press 1983. Limited Edition. Octavo. . Limited to 100 copies. The present copy is #48 signed and numbered along with original art by Bukowski bound in after title page with paper guard present. This is a collection of short stories of everyday life; people places and of course partying drinking women sex and more. A fine bright copy bound in 1/3 maroon cloth decorated in blue over cram paper covered boards lettered and decorated in black pink blue yellow purple and orange in the original clear acetate dust jacket very lightly rubbed a light sprinkling of foxing to front fore-edge of leaves. Black Sparrow Press unknown
031624New Orleans; October 1963: Loujon Press. First Edition. Small Quarto. 4 97 4 errata p.97. Gypsy Lou Series N. 1. After his early poems were published in the "Little Magazines" this was his first important collection to be published. It was printed by the Webbs in 1963 in their Loujon Press. They had already published "The Outsider" and had named Charles Bukowski: Outsider of the Year 1962. Here was their first publication and in the view of many who love fine printing their finest item which was dedicated to their friend Charles Bukowski who many critics called "the poet of Skid row or of the gutter." What is unique about this volume is that John Edgar Webb has written inside the rear flap that " Third last mint copy /in stock-and oh how we/hate to part with thee/ signed Jon Edgar Webb/3/24/67" . Jon Webb wanted Buk to have some signed copies so he sent him a sliver deco-write pen giving him instructions to sign pages to be bound into volumes here there are two pages see Soanes p. 62-63 and the pastedown photograph of Bukowski above their lament with a slit across it. There is a remarkable two page letter with stamped envelope from Bukowski typewritten not a facsimile on June 14 1964 to the Webbs in sixty-two lines with his colored sketches along the borders also included is the original mailing envelope also decorated by Bukowski. Note: Bukowski had written the Webbs on May 1 about his move to a new location giving the address but it is possible they had not received it because of their recent move from Santa Fe to New Orleans Screams from the Balcony p. 107. This letter also repeats his new address of 5124 De Longpre Ave Los Angeles see Soanes p. 85ff. and then notes: "the typewriter's first sounds in these walls and a place doesn't become real until you've got the typer going eaten bathed slept and made love there--until then you haven't moved in." He then notes that Francis FrancEyE his girlfriend; Sounes says her name was Francis Elizabeth Dean who became pregnant. He offered to marry her but she was content just to bear their child Marina Louise Bukowski whose own poems were published in Chat Nois Review "is at church while I drive the old ghosts of this place out of its walls." He mentions the old location where he got into trouble with landlord cf. Sounes p. 53-55 noting the kitchen table is looking out at Hollywood Blvd. the poor part. describes a situation he recently got in at Mahawk's there he went through a plate glass window then notes also he has no shotgun like Hemingway or Van Gogh and "maybe no guts". He notes in the move he came across a copy of the Northwest Review with an article by Corrington on CHARLES BUKOWKI AND THE POETRY OF FLAT SURFACES. "If you haven't seen this one let me know and I will ship". Editor lost his job on this issue he surmises because of an interview with Castro. "Some very good poems in there by Whalen.and some interesting crap by and on Artaud. It was such an unusual edition for a university sponsored mag that I remember thinking then well the editor doesn't have much longer to go.Frances just came back from church I believe they had a reading notes participants Ray Bradbury Bard Dahl implies they had his disdain. Apparently they don't like "little magazines."I need another beer am smoking a rotten cigar the only one in the place which sometimes I shread in my mouth but I feel the tobacco need." We live next door to a religious maniac--but I'd better save that for a poem.The bookcase is us big belly of little magazines bathtub drips this place is a thousand years old but down on the ground floor.my god this is the first time I've lived on the ground--except for park benches and jails--in twenty-five years I sit here looking out on the street wishing I had a good cigar. Francis inserts ideas in the paragraph he refers to her as S.S. pen name she used as author of poem referred to earlier her paragraph mentions Hank's sunlamp he resumes after that paragraph-- wish she hadn't told you I've got a god damned sunlamp. I also have a set of barbells. I'm trying to look like Hemingway in his better days trouble is I haven't used barbells or sunlamp in the past 2 or 3 years.Francis is getting ready to hang up the plaque the one issued by the Webbs the preceding years CHARLES BUKOWSKI OUTSIDER OF THE YEAR--1962. note: When the Webbs arrived in LA two months later August 1964 they noted the plaque on the wall Soanes pp. 68-69. By God these women are useful. notes words he is thinking of. Closes with plea: God save the front tires of my cars a little longer.Buk. Bound with preliminary leaves of various colors and differing widths. hand-bound in stiff pictorial wrappers with cork-lined front cover attached jacket with tissue sheet tipped-on as issued and pictorial flap over fore-edge around from rear and with a photograph of Bukowski mounted to rear. Nice. Debritto A10. Loujon Press unknown
66177Le Sagittaire In-8 208pp. bon etat unknown
193382London Magazine Editions 1974. 1st edn. 8vo. Original pictorial boards top edge stained and lightly bumped at head and tail of spine dustwrapper VG in protective cover not price clipped. Pp. 205 previous owner's neat inscription on front free endpaper. London Magazine Editions, 1974 unknown
031629Santa Barbara: Black Sparrow Press 1977. Limited Edition. Octavo. #36 of 75 copies signed by Bukowski and with an original watercolor painting of the dog from Hell with tissue guard. Alternating between tough and gentle sensitive and gritty Bukowski lays bare the myriad facets of love its selfishness its narcissism its randomness its mystery and its misery. Ultimately its true joyfulness endurance and redemptive power. It was later made into Crazy Love a documentary on Bukowsky which he Sean Penn Madonna Elliot Gould and his wife watched in its premier September 1987. He regarded it as the most accurate media portrayal of his poetry. Bound in 1/4 brown white green and red flecked patterned corduroy cloth over pictorial paper covered boards depicting a Gargoyle in brown lettering in red black brown and red within a turquoise frame. A fine copy. Krumhansl 6d. Black Sparrow Press unknown
19721286091972. First Edition. Signed. BUKOWSKI. Mockingbird Wish Me Luck. Los Angeles: Black Sparrow Press 1972. Octavo original half brown cloth. $1950.Signed limited first edition of this poetry collection number 68 of 250 copies signed by Bukowski.""Bukowskis writings presented a vision of America starkly different from other celebratory accounts of post-World War II prosperity. Barflies whores and vengeful managers populated his pages. But at the same time he made the down-and-out crapulous life seem romantic"" ANB. Also issued in a trade edition and another limited edition of 60 copies signed by Bukowski and with an original drawing by him. Krumhansl 41c. Fine condition. hardcover
197231561Los Angeles: Black Sparrow Press. 1972. First Edition; First Printing. Broadside. Single yellow leaf 10 x 15" on light weight stock issued as Broadside / Flyer No 2 Fine copy. Number 10 of 100 hand-numbered copies signed by the author. An unknown number of unsigned copies were printed. ; Folio 13" - 23" tall; 1 pp . Black Sparrow Press unknown
19791287041979. First Edition. Signed. BUKOWSKI Charles. Play the Piano Drunk Like a Percussion Instrument Until the Fingers Begin to Bleed a Bit. Santa Barbara: Black Sparrow Press 1979. Octavo original half red cloth original acetate dust jacket. $1750.First limited signed hardcover edition number 49 of 100 copies handbound in boards by Earle Gray illustrated with an original signed silkscreen of a Bukowski drawing and additionally signed by Bukowski on the limitation page.First edition: Collected poems from some of the peak writing years of cult hero and ""laureate of American lowlife"" Charles Bukowski Time. ""Bukowski's writings presented a vision of America starkly different from other celebratory accounts of post-World War II prosperity. Barflies whores and vengeful managers populated his pages. But at the same time he made the down-and-out crapulous life seem romantic"" ANB. This is number 49 of 100 handbound copies featuring an original silkscreen by Bukowski signed ""Buk"" tipped in as issued also signed in full by the poet on the limitation page. A paperback issue a trade hardcover issue 500 copies and an unillustrated numbered signed issue 300 copies appeared in the same year. Fogel 63b. Krumhansl 68e. Minor fading to endpapers. A very nearly fine copy in the original acetate jacket. paperback
196231004Crescent City: Epos A Quarterly of Poetry. 1962. First Edition; First Printing. Softcover. Wraps issued as Extra Issue of Epos in 1962 and sent free to subscribers c. 500 copies. This copy shows wear along the top edge for the wallet edges and 2 light shadowings on rear wrap near spine. There is also a "Community Center" stamp at the head of the front wrap and at the top of the Title/Contents page but very good to near fine otherwise. Dorbin cites this item as A2 in his Bibliograph of Charles Bukowski but Krumhansl cites it as No. 7. ; 8vo 8" - 9" tall; 26 pp . Epos, A Quarterly of Poetry paperback
196830887Berkeley / Glendale: Litmus and Poetry X/Change. 1968. First Edition; First Printing. Softcover. Wraps foxing to edges and corners of front and rear wrap and light toning to spine area thus very good only. One of 400 copies. ; 8vo 8" - 9" tall . Litmus and Poetry X/Change paperback
20003117173SANTA ROSA: Black Sparrow Press. Fine with no dust jacket. 2000. First Edition; First Printing. Hardcover. 8vo 8" - 9" tall . Black Sparrow Press hardcover
031538London 1974: London Magazines Edition. First London Edition. Octavo. 149 pages. The remarkable book that describes the nightmare of being employed in the U.S. Post Office. Beginning to work during the Christmas Rush where the eagerness to get bodies to sort mail allowed for his less than ideal appearance and his love of alcohol to function. This book became a classic not only in the U.S. but worldwide. Besides his life as a mailman in Los Angeles he deals with the jail-like structure inside but where he was able to mix drinking women poverty tough physical labor with a love for the racetrack. Bound in red cloth spine lettering black previous owner's gift inscription on front free endpaper a near fine bright copy in clipped decorative dust jacket with tiny nick near head Previous owner's inscription on front free endpaper. London Magazines Edition unknown
1994024020Santa Rosa: Black Sparrow Press 1994. First Edition. Octavo. Limited to 750 copies. The present copy is #326 and signed by Bukowski with his little dog as well on the page following the title page. 202 pp. This would be Bukowski's last work before his death. Unlike Bukowski's earlier autobiographical novels Pulp is deliberately over-the-top. It mixes absurd humor cheap-paperback tropes and existential melancholy reading like a spoof of detective stories and a self-aware meditation on mortality. Beneath the jokes and surreal twists is a sense that Bukowski is saying goodbye - to literature to his alter egos and to his readers. A fine bright copy bound in red pictorial paper covered boards backed in black cloth spine label red and lettered in black red endpapers in its original clear acetate dust jacket. Black Sparrow Press unknown
PJH49763Black Sparrow Press Santa Rosa 1999. Some slight spotting to front board else Fine in publishers decorated boards in acetate jacket. Number 13 of 376 Numbered copies with an Original Serigraph Print by Bukowski. 1st edition 1st issue. ISBN 1574230891 Black Sparrow Press (Santa Rosa) 1999 hardcover
19881287071988. First Edition. Signed. BUKOWSKI Charles. The Roominghouse Madrigals. Early Selected Poems 1946-1966. Santa Rosa: Black Sparrow 1988. Octavo original half yellow cloth with paper spine label original acetate dust jacket. $950.Signed limited first edition number 120 of 400 special hardcover copies signed by the author with his signature sketch of a smoking man holding a bottle along with a flower and a dog.Characterized by its dark tone surprising lyricism and complex use of metaphor this collection of Bukowski's early poems highlights his evolution as a poet and provides an interesting glimpse into ""that wondrous and crazy time those distant hours"" when ""the typewriter was there when the job wasn't and the food wasn't and the rent wasn't."" Published simultaneously with 500 hardcover trade copies and 176 hand-bound copies including signed prints. Krumhansl 108c. A very nearly fine copy with traces of shelfwear to lower edges. hardcover
PJH30349Black Sparrow Books 1999. Fine in publishers decorated boards in glassine dustjacket. 309pp. 1st edition. Number 13 of the 376 copies handbound in boards by Earle Gray with an original serigraph print by Bukowski. ISBN 0876859155 Black Sparrow Books 1999 hardcover
1969022661Los Angeles: Black Sparrow Press 1969. First Edition. Octavo. Limited to 250 copies signed and numbered by the author. The present copy is number 77. Bound in 1/4 lime green cloth over tan paper covered boards lettered in green and orange with yellow decorative rule yellow endpapers paper spine label lettered in dark blue. A fine copy in the publisher's acetate jacket and the publisher's announcement card laid in. Krumhansl 32b. Black Sparrow Press unknown
198831085Santa Rosa: Black Sparrow Press. 1988. First Edition; First Printing. Hardcover. No.15 of 226 copies handbound in boards and numbered and signed by the author. Fine. Issued as a New Year's Greeting for friends of the publisher.; 12mo 7" - 7½" tall . Black Sparrow Press hardcover
198730867Santa Rosa: Black Sparrow Press. 1987. First Edition; First Printing. Hardcover. No 46 of 140 copies handbound in boards by Earle Gray numbered and signed by the author director Barbet Schroeder and the two leads Faye Dunaway and Mikey Rourke. Pattered backstrip with paper label. Fine copy in near fine clear acetate dust jacket with light scuffing. ; 8vo 8" - 9" tall; 85 pp . Black Sparrow Press hardcover
1988023414Santa Rosa: Black Sparrow Press 1988. Limited Edition. Octavo. . Limited to 150 copies. The present copy is # 136. signed by Bukowski in the colophon and additionally signed on the original tipped in silkscreen print by Bukowski dated 2-13-88. Bound by Earle Gray in 1/4 gray cloth over paper covered boards in colors of blue yellow and black lettered in white and depicting an apartment building yellow paper spine label lettered in red and black miner shelf rubbing to bottom edge near fine in original acetate dust jacket. Black Sparrow Press unknown
198830863Santa Rosa: Black Sparrow Press. 1988. First Edition; First Printing. Hardcover. No. 75 of 150 copies handbound in boards by Earle Gray numbered and signed by the author. Bound in is an original signed print by the author. This print is a roominghouse room complete with tenant table jug dog curtains rug dresser and television. Taupe backstrip with paper label. Owner's embossed stamp on adverisement page and our price adjusted accordingly otherwise fine in near fine lightly scuffed clear acetate dust jacket. ; 8vo 8" - 9" tall; 225 pp . Black Sparrow Press hardcover
031539Andernach: Burn Again Press 1990. Limited Edition. Thin Octavo. Limited to 50 copies. The present copy is #29 signed by Charles Bukowski. Bound in original light green paper covered boards paper labels to upper board and spine green end sheets. A fine copy in original clear acetate dust jacket. Krumhansel #116. Burn Again Press unknown
ZIVALS0427NEW. NEW. Enviamos a todo el mundo por USPS. UPS o DHL. 100% garantia en su compra. We ship worldwide. unknown