4 308 résultats
19811339121n.d. 1981. Other. Group photograph of the Presidents of the United States. 8 by 10 inch photo of Presidents Reagan Ford Carter and Nixon at the White House in frame 13.5 by 15.5 inches. Signed by Presidents Ronald Reagan 1911-2004 Gerald R. Ford 1913-2006 Jimmy Carter b. 1924 and Richard Nixon 1913-1994. A view of the four living US Presidents gathered at the White House in 1981 prior to departing for Egypt to attend the funeral of Anwar Sadat. SG consignment;. 1339121. Shelved Dupont Bookstore. unknown books
366707Washington D.C.: The White House 1972. 12 color prints with a 1p. TNS from Ken W. Clawson Deputy Director of Communications with 2 pp. typescript description. 11 x 14 inches. Very good in original mailing envelope photo C9253-07 is damaged with paper stuck to the upper corner. 12 color prints with a 1p. TNS from Ken W. Clawson Deputy Director of Communications with 2 pp. typescript description. 11 x 14 inches. A collection o photos taken from Nixon's Russia visit during which he and Brezhneve signed the SALT treaty and laid the groundwork for a joint space flight set to take place in 1975 both important conciliatory steps during the Cold War. The photos were sent to the Atlanta Journal newspaper during the first weeks of the Watergate scandal. The White House] unknown
1930132091930. Watercolor and pencil heightened with white signed "K. Nixon". Matted and framed. 1 vols. Image 10-1/2 x 12-3/4 inches. Matted and framed. Watercolor and pencil heightened with white signed "K. Nixon". Matted and framed. 1 vols. Image 10-1/2 x 12-3/4 inches. Nixon was a talented British animal illustrator noted for an orientalist approach and sharp clarity to the subject reminiscent of Japanese woodblock prints. She lived in India for 25 years where she illustrated for The Time of India Press designed 30 nature posters for the Indian State Railways painted horse portraits and a mural of wild ducks for the Bombay Natural History Museum. After returning to England she wrote and illustrated numerous children's animal stories and painted animal portraits. She was the recipient of many awards and medals and made an 'academic of Italy with Gold Medal' in 1980. unknown books
1930132091930. Watercolor and pencil heightened with white signed "K. Nixon". Matted and framed. 1 vols. Image 10-1/2 x 12-3/4 inches. Matted and framed. Watercolor and pencil heightened with white signed "K. Nixon". Matted and framed. 1 vols. Image 10-1/2 x 12-3/4 inches. Nixon was a talented British animal illustrator noted for an orientalist approach and sharp clarity to the subject reminiscent of Japanese woodblock prints. She lived in India for 25 years where she illustrated for The Time of India Press designed 30 nature posters for the Indian State Railways painted horse portraits and a mural of wild ducks for the Bombay Natural History Museum. After returning to England she wrote and illustrated numerous children's animal stories and painted animal portraits. She was the recipient of many awards and medals and made an 'academic of Italy with Gold Medal' in 1980. unknown
196930511969. Very Good. Contents Summary: A call to end the Vietnam war based on a resolution Roy A. Taylor and his colleagues introduced to the House following President Richard Nixon’s November 3rd message to the Nation.<br /> <br /> Typed Letter Signed ‘Richard Nixon’ in black ink. One Page 6 ¾†x 8 7/8†Blind stamped of official seal ‘THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON’. Dated: November 10 1969. Slightly toned. 1†crease top left. Back stained from glue application visible from front. Very Good<br /> <br /> Letter in full:<br /> <br /> "Dear Congressman Taylor:<br /> <br /> The resolution which you and so many of your colleagues introduced in the House following my November 3 message to the Nation should serve as ample evidence to the leaders of North Vietnam that the time has come to move forward at the conference table to end this tragic war. Your expression of confidence that our course will lead to peace is a source of deep encouragement.<br /> <br /> With warm regard<br /> <br /> Sincerely<br /> Richard Nixon<br /> <br /> Honorable Roy A. Taylor<br /> House of Representatives<br /> Washington D.C."<br /> <br /> no envelope. unknown
30521971. Very Good. Contents Summary: By a vote of 254 to 158 the House rejected the Nedzi-Whalen Amendment that would have prohibited the use of funds to be used in Southeast Asia particularly Vietnam after the end of 1971. It was created by opponents of the Vietnam War who supported the reduction of the military budget and a timetable of American forces in Vietnam. Nixon states that these proposals jeopardize the progress of American withdrawal. <br /> <br /> <br /> Typed Typed Letter Signed ‘RN’ in black ink. One Page 6 ¾†x 8 7/8â€. Blind stamped of official seal ‘THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON’. Dated: June 24 1971. Slightly toned. Back stained from glue application. Very Good. Dated: June 24 <br /> <br /> Letter in full: <br /> <br /> "June 24 1971<br /> <br /> Dear Roy:<br /> <br /> During consideration of the military procurement bill for the coming fiscal year a number of amendments were proposed seeking to legislate a deadline for American involvement in Indochina. The debate centered on the Nedzi-Whalen amendment which the House rejected June 17th by a vote of 254 to 158.<br /> <br /> This action by the House of Representatives helped materially to strengthen the efforts of this Administration to achieve a cease-fire the release of American prisoners and the negotiation of a just peace. I appreciate very much your vote and those cast by 253 of your colleagues.<br /> <br /> While we continue to reduce American forces in Indochina various proposals may be advanced in Congress similar to Nedzi-Whalen. Their adoption would seriously jeopardize the progress we are making in ending American involvement in Vietnam and in achieving a just peace.<br /> <br /> I look forward to working with you in the months ahead so that together we might increase the chances not only of ending this war but also of ensuring that other Americans will not have to fight other wars in the future.<br /> <br /> Sincerely <br /> RN<br /> <br /> Honorable Roy A. Taylor<br /> House of Representatives<br /> Washington D.C. unknown
528414Louisville Kentucky: White Fields Press 1994. Unbound. Fine. Broadside. Illustrated with a portrait of Thompson by Christopher Felver. Measuring 15" x 35". Fine. Copy number 1 of 45 numbered copies Signed "HST" by Thompson. Thompson's jeremiad against Nixon first appearing in Rolling Stone upon the occasion of the latter's death here issued as #19 in the Published in Heaven Poster Series. OCLC locates only two copies. White Fields Press unknown
74715London Maggs Brothers 1956 Auflage: 1. Halbpergament gebunden; blaues Überzugspapier Kopfgoldschnitt blaues goldgeprägtes Rückenschild / Anz. Seiten: 250 / 295 x 345 cm / mit 3 montierten Farbtafeln und zahlreichen Schwarzweisstafeln / Zustand: gut leichte Gebrauchsspuren; Einband etwas berieben und leicht fleckig Goldprägung am Rückenschild im oberen Bereich etwas abgerieben Vorsatz minim fleckig London, Maggs Brothers, 1956, Auflage: 1. unknown
198313413JNew York: Privately Printed 1983. First Edition. Limited to 1000 copies. Signed in full by Nixon in blue ink. Actor Randolph Scott's copy with an original Typed Letter Signed from Nixon signed in blue ink “Dick†on Nixon’s personal stationery in which he presents the book to Scott. “October 10 1983. Mr. Randolph Scott. Dear Randy This is one of 1000 copies of the private limited edition of Real Peace: A Strategy for the West. Copies are being sent to a select group of government officials and opinion leaders in the United States and abroad. Little Brown and Company will publish and distribute the book in the United States and Canada in January 1984. I trust it may contribute to a better understanding of where we have been where we are and where we should go in our relations with the Soviet Union China Japan Europe and the Third World. With warm regards. Sincerely Dick.†Fine in a near fine dust jacket with slight fading to spine and one short tear. Randolph Scott was a noted Hollywood actor of the Golden Age best remembered for a series of sophisticated westerns. Randolph Scott has recently received a great deal of attention with the release and restoration of Seven Men from Now 1956 directed by Budd Boetticher and produced by John Wayne which has been unavailable for decades and the restoration and release on DVD of Ride the High Country 1962 directed by Sam Peckinpah both of which are considered among the great classics of western film. Nixon was an admirer of Scott’s films and he and Scott were long time friends. Nixon invited Scott to the White House to visit. When the Apollo Eleven astronauts first landed on the moon Scott was Nixon’s guest at the dinner Nixon held in Los Angeles to honor the astronauts return. An excellent association copy. Privately Printed unknown books
198313413JNew York: Privately Printed 1983. First Edition. Limited to 1000 copies. Signed in full by Nixon in blue ink. Actor Randolph Scott's copy with an original Typed Letter Signed from Nixon signed in blue ink “Dick†on Nixon’s personal stationery in which he presents the book to Scott. “October 10 1983. Mr. Randolph Scott. Dear Randy This is one of 1000 copies of the private limited edition of Real Peace: A Strategy for the West. Copies are being sent to a select group of government officials and opinion leaders in the United States and abroad. Little Brown and Company will publish and distribute the book in the United States and Canada in January 1984. I trust it may contribute to a better understanding of where we have been where we are and where we should go in our relations with the Soviet Union China Japan Europe and the Third World. With warm regards. Sincerely Dick.†Fine in a near fine dust jacket with slight fading to spine and one short tear. Randolph Scott was a noted Hollywood actor of the Golden Age best remembered for a series of sophisticated westerns. Randolph Scott has recently received a great deal of attention with the release and restoration of Seven Men from Now 1956 directed by Budd Boetticher and produced by John Wayne which has been unavailable for decades and the restoration and release on DVD of Ride the High Country 1962 directed by Sam Peckinpah both of which are considered among the great classics of western film. Nixon was an admirer of Scott’s films and he and Scott were long time friends. Nixon invited Scott to the White House to visit. When the Apollo Eleven astronauts first landed on the moon Scott was Nixon’s guest at the dinner Nixon held in Los Angeles to honor the astronauts return. An excellent association copy. Privately Printed unknown
197883913New York: Grosset & Dunlap 1978. First Printing Stated. Hardcover in Slipcase. Very good. xii 1120 4 pages. Illus. index Slipcase. Signed on fep. Some spine and slipcase fading. With Letter of Authenticity. Richard Milhous Nixon January 9 1913 - April 22 1994 was the 37th president of the United States serving from 1969 until 1974. Nixon previously served as the 36th vice president from 1953 to 1961 having risen to prominence as a representative and senator. After five years in the White House that saw the conclusion to the U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War détente with the Soviet Union and China and the establishment of the Environmental Protection Agency he became the only president to resign from the office following the Watergate scandal. He graduated from Duke University School of Law in 1937 and returned to California to practice law. He and his wife Pat moved to Washington in 1942 to work for the federal government. He served on active duty in the Navy Reserve during World War II. He was elected to the House of Representatives in 1946. His pursuit of the Hiss Case established his reputation as a leading anti-Communist which elevated him to national prominence. In 1950 he was elected to the Senate. He was the running mate of Dwight D. Eisenhower subsequently serving for eight years as the vice president. In 1968 he ran for the presidency and was elected defeating Hubert Humphrey and George Wallace in a close election. Nixon ended American involvement in Vietnam in 1973 ending the military draft that same year. Nixon's visit to China in 1972 eventually led to diplomatic relations and he gained the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty with the Soviet Union. Four years after the Watergate scandal forced him to resign the presidency President Nixon began another comeback through the publication of this book RN: The Memoirs of Richard Nixon in 1978. The book Nixon writes is based on not only on his public papers but also on some 20000 pages of his "extensive handwritten notes" about his "ideas conversations activities and speeches" diaries that he dictated as Vice President and later as President and significantly the infamous Watergate tapes. In the book Nixon recounts his life his political successes and failures and the foreign and domestic events of his time including those leading up to his resignation as President on August 9 1974. This is a stated first printing and thus the first edition of the book published by Grosset & Dunlap. It is the publisher's deluxe cloth signed edition not the common trade edition. It is covered in dark blue buckram and embossed in gold printing on the cover and the spine. The accompanying slipcase is covered in matching dark blue buckram. In the 20 years between his presidency and his death Nixon wrote nine books and reestablished himself as a respected statesman. Nixon has signed this book in black on a page that the publisher bound between the blue front free endpaper and the half title page. Derived from a Kirkus review: "I intended to play the role of the President right to the hilt and right to the end." Thus RN whose words read less like memos here than they did in the newspaper excerpts and more like the last will and testament of a fighter who never willingly gave ground. Had he been urged to resign he avers he would have rebelled; and his review of the two occasions - the "secret fund" crisis the second v.p. nomination - when he felt himself crowded and didn't cave in back up his claim. "And tell them I know something about politics too!" he quotes himself as shouting over the phone in the first instance to a wheedling dissembling Tom Dewey. He was a mere freshman senator then built up by the Hiss case but always had ideas of his own. Not public affairs: He had nothing against communism he says until Churchill's Iron Curtain speech. So it's when he's talking politics that his celebrated caginess becomes an asset and his acumen is in evidence; and only then too is he interesting about people. Poor Rose Mary Woods for instance turns up unheralded whereas Bob Haldeman scores for spotting the potential of campaigning-by-TV not whistle-stop train. By the same token while the extensive travels are dull the final days are distinctly not: Intent on being a leader from the time when four years out of law school he was president of every organization in sight he is fully aware of what's slipping away. He records the silence - instead of the usual applause - that greeted his entrance to the last Cabinet meeting the "sober noncommittal" faces as he thanks his aides for their support; and like a prospective suicide he imagines the effect his farewell cables will have on Chou and Chairman Mao "in Cairo and Tel Aviv in Damascus and Amman" - where "eight weeks ago I had been accorded unprecedented acclaim." How the mightiest fell: the pages carry weight. Grosset & Dunlap hardcover
261218/3/88. <blockquote><p>We obtained this letter from the Kirkpatrick family and it has never before been offered for sale</p></blockquote><p>The Washington Summit of 1987 was meeting between President Ronald Reagan and Soviet General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev that took place on December 8–10. Reagan and Gorbachev discussed regional conflicts in Afghanistan Central America and Southern Africa arms control issues for chemical weapons as well as conventional weapons the status of START limitation on strategy weapons negotiations and human rights. Some progress was made in these areas. The notable accomplishment of the Washington Summit was the signing of the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty which banned all of the two nations' land-based ballistic missiles cruise missiles and missile launchers. By 1991 almost 2700 missiles had been eliminated. Needless to say the collegial atmosphere of the talks and the feeling that Gorbachev was a man you could work with caused great excitement in the United States after half a century of Cold War.</p><p>In 1988 former President Nixon wrote a book 1999: Victory Without War which offered his comprehensive strategy for the West—a vital plan of action that would help ensure peace prosperity and freedom in the next century. In it he provided commentary and suggestions in the area of his great expertise foreign policy. He began by arguing that the United States should continue to play a central international role. He contended that world peace is inseparable from world power and that real peace is not absence of conflict but living with unending conflict the natural state of world affairs. He sought to tamp down the popularity of Gorbachev whom he saw as seeking change that would permit the Soviet Union to find hegemony. Still he cogently argued for a realistic policy toward the Soviets involving a mix of deterrence competition and negotiation. His hard-line views are on display in other areas. On nuclear armaments he endorsed Reagan's plan for laser-based weapons in space ""Star Wars"" and urged ""no first-strike vulnerability."" He advocated continued support of Nicaragua's contras covert CIA actions overseas build-up of nuclear power more U.S. cruise missiles in Europe the establishment of U.S. air bases in Saudi Arabia. He blamed Africa's poverty on the terrible governments there. He strongly opposed the adoption of protectionist trade measures against Japan.</p><p>Jeane Kirkpatrick was a lifelong Democrat working in both state and national campaigns including Hubert Humphrey's 1972 presidential campaign. She grew increasingly dissatisfied however with the Democratic Party's liberal faction and in 1972 cofounded the Coalition for a Democratic Majority. Her conservative writings regarding U.S. foreign policy impressed Ronald Reagan and during his 1980 presidential campaign she was selected as his foreign policy advisor. Under President Reagan she became the first woman to serve as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations serving from 1981 to 1985. She was also given cabinet rank and was also a member of Reagan’s national security team. She remained active in politics but as a Republican.</p><p>Nixon sent Kirkpatrick an advance copy of his book. <strong>Typed letter signed</strong> on his letterhead New York March 8 1988 to Kirkpatrick in which he makes it clear that he does not share the excitement about Gorbachev and still distrusts the Soviets. <em>“The enclosed proofs of 1999: Victory Without War represent my reflections after forty years of observing and participating in U.S. foreign policy. Some of our mutual friends will consider it to be too tough on the Soviets but I thought it was essential to provide an antidote for the wave of euphoria that seems to have engulfed the West since the Washington summit. I think you may find the last chapter in which I try to look into the future past the 1988 election of particular interest.â€</em></p><p>Nixon’s distrust of Gorbachev though hardly unexpected proved baseless. Under Gorbachev’s leadership the next year the Berlin Wall came down in 1990 six republics left the Soviet Union and in 1991 the Soviet Union dissolved altogether.</p><p><img class=""alignnone wp-image-25018 size-post-window"" src=""https://cdn.raabcollection.com/wp-content/uploads/20231204144051/Folder-site-11-1600x1327.jpg"" alt="""" width=""1600"" height=""1327"" /></p> unknown
1843008069London: Colnaghi and Puckle. Printed by Cook & Co. Lithography by Day & Haghe 1843. First Edition. Half Morocco. Pebbled cloth on boards. Very Good. A magnificent souvenir of a Romantic era joust basically a re-enactment of the Medieval combat sport in keeping with the resurgent interest in the Middle Ages at the time. This tournament was sponsored by Lord Eglinton at his Scottish castle in 1839. That this massive book took four years to put together attests to its grandeur as well as the ardor of Medievalism among the aristocratic elite. Elephantine Folio 61 by 43 cm. Blank title leaf dedication leaf six paginated pages then 21 hand-colored plates each with a tissue guard and a one or two page Description of the particular plate on a single leaf until the last or 21st numbered plate which has a four page or two leaf Description after which there are two unpaginated pages of "Concluding Remarks". The lettering of text on these pages is done mostly with blue type with occasional red. The title and the plate leaves are of a card stock. The other leaves are of a more standard but not light paper weight and the tissue guards are of a similar minimally less paper weight but a glossier stock. The plates capture and probably improve upon the spirit of the event as they idealize the whole proceeding with nary a misstep all the costuming just right not a speck of dust or dirt to mar the beauty of the sport. However true these "reenactors' -- for that was what they were -- are faithful to the Medieval sport our image of jousting tournaments is probably more influenced by the prettified imitation than the original since books like this directly influenced Hollywood and the historic fiction genre more than the more esoteric surviving documents from the Middle Ages. The tournament reportedly drew an estimated 100000 spectators but it also was mocked and satirized in its day especially by members of the Whig Party. Notwithstanding that this pageant inspired others in its wake. In addition to the 21 numbered plates the title page has a large hand-colored illustrated oval centerpiece 26 cm tall surrounded by monotone decoration comprised of figures of men in armor and seraphs. All the descriptions begin with a decorated letter that is in itself an esquisite vignette. And not to be slighted each of the color plates has surrounding its primary richly colored illustration a highly decorative frame that is populated with seraphs human figures foliate ornaments escutcheons weaponry etc. etc. These frames in contrast to the central illustration are mostly black line drawings with a tinted background but there are occasional bits of fuller color -- the coat-of-arms are generally rendered so -- and in a few of the frames these full color pieces are quite numerous. Regarding the Dedication leaf the dedication is to Archibald William Montgomerie who was the Earl of Eglinton as well as the holder of other titles and was made by Edward Puckle. The gallery he headed at the time goes back to 1760 and remains to this day now known simply as Colnaghi with headquarters in Mayfair but branches in New York and other cities. Nixon 1802 - 1857 illustrated the novels of Sir Walter Scott and not coincidentally "Ivanhoe" apparently was the inspiration to stage this particular pageant. He is best known though as a designer of stained glass and his work in this medium done through a partnership of Ward and Nixon can be seen most famously in Lincoln Cathedral. As to Eglinton himself the tournament cost him dearly as he depleted his coffers of almost everything to cover the massive losses incurred by the event. All edges gilt. Gilt lettering and decoration on cover bright. Two decorative bookplates mounted onto FEP. The book besides being extra-large is also extra-heavy -- 13 lbs. 8 ou. -- and thus expect a substantial amount of extra postage will be required to ship especially internationally. Condition: Binding shows some wear with bumped edge a moderate level of spotting and other soiling most pronounced on the pebbled cloth of front board and small areas with rubbing. Hinge crack by title page. Other than occasional light stains the book is clean tight and we would say a highly attractive copy of the work. Colnaghi and Puckle. Printed by Cook & Co. Lithography by Day & Haghe unknown
528415Louisville Kentucky: White Fields Press 1994. Unbound. Fine. Broadside. Illustrated with a portrait of Thompson by Christopher Felver. Measuring 15" x 35". Fine. Copy number 2 of 45 numbered copies Signed "HST" by Thompson. Thompson's jeremiad against Nixon first appearing in Rolling Stone upon the occasion of the latter's death here issued as #19 in the Published in Heaven Poster Series. OCLC locates only two copies. White Fields Press unknown
2015115168Fairchild Books. New. 2015. Paperback. 1628924705 . FREE UPGRADE to Courier/Priority Shipping Upon Request - IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - Flawless copy brand new pristine never opened - -- with a bonus offer-- . Fairchild Books paperback
190510New York: Warner Books 1982. First edition first printing presentation copy inscribed by the 37th President on the half-title "To Charlton Heston - from one of his fans - Richard Nixon 1982". This is a fine association copy - aside from Heston's role as perhaps the greatest American actor of the early post-war decades whom Nixon clearly admired Heston was a prominent supporter of Nixon's presidential bid in 1972. In the 1950s Heston had endorsed liberal Democratic candidates in the 1960s more centrist Democrats and finally in the 1970s switched to the Republicans. In the 1972 election he starred in a lengthy campaign video explaining how Nixon had secured his political switch. During Nixon's presidency Heston served on the National Council on the Arts and as a cultural diplomat for the State Department. Into the 1980s Heston was a leading conservative figure active in the National Rifle Association famously challenging gun control advocates to take his rifle "from my cold dead hands" and campaigning against affirmative action and other culture war issues. Leaders offers a detailed examination of the relationship between Nixon and various foreign leaders whom he met throughout his lifetime. The book met with critical praise aiding the rehabilitation of his political image following his resignation of the presidency in 1974. Octavo. Original black quarter cloth spine lettered in gilt. With dust jacket. Hinges a little tender rear free endpaper creased; unclipped jacket with light creasing and tiny nicks at extremities: a very good copy in very good jacket. hardcover
299691/1/50. <p><em>“To Jack Beall with grateful appreciation for his devoted and effective work as a member of my staff and with best wishes from his friend Dick Nixon.â€</em></p><p>Uncommon as authentically signed photographs of Nixon have become scarce.</p><p><img class=""alignnone size-post-window wp-image-25018"" src=""https://cdn.raabcollection.com/wp-content/uploads/20231204144051/Folder-site-11-1600x1327.jpg"" alt="""" width=""1600"" height=""1327"" /></p> unknown
2018130686Stanford University Press. New. 2018. Hardcover. 1503605485 . - IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - Flawless copy brand new pristine never opened -- with a bonus offer--; 11.25 X 1.25 X 11.75 inches; 352 pages . Stanford University Press hardcover
200672581Hudson Hills Press. New. 2006. Hardcover. 1883124255 . FREE UPGRADE to Courier/Priority Shipping Upon Request - IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - FLAWLESS COPY BRAND NEW PRISTINE NEVER OPENED -- Corresponds to ISBN: 1883124255. Text in English. 216 pp. With 240 ills. 237 col. . 32 x 26 cm. -- with a bonus offer-- . Hudson Hills Press hardcover
200571889Hudson Hills Press. New. 2005. Hardcover. 1555952593 . FREE UPGRADE to Courier/Priority Shipping Upon Request - IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - Flawless copy brand new pristine never opened -- 208 pp. With 261 col. Ills. 31 x 26 cm. -- with a bonus offer-- . Hudson Hills Press hardcover
199152958Harcourts / Wittenborn Distrib. . New. 1991. Paperback. 0815000170 . FREE UPGRADE to Courier/Priority Shipping Upon Request IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - FLAWLESS COPY BRAND NEW PRISTINE NEVER OPENED - 48 pp. 8.5 x 11 inches -- with a bonus offer-- . Harcourts / Wittenborn (Distrib. ) paperback
2016121206The MIT Press. New. 2016. Hardcover. 0262034786 . FREE UPGRADE to Courier/Priority Shipping Upon Request - IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - Flawless copy brand new pristine never opened -- with a bonus offer-- . The MIT Press hardcover
2014113610Museum. New. 2014. Hardcover. 0870709534 . FREE UPGRADE to Courier/Priority Shipping Upon Request - IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - Flawless copy brand new pristine never opened - -- with a bonus offer-- . Museum hardcover
2015115058Gallery. New. 2015. Hardcover. 1881337421 . FREE UPGRADE to Courier/Priority Shipping Upon Request - IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - Flawless copy brand new pristine never opened - -- with a bonus offer-- . Gallery hardcover
200776838Museum; D. A. P. /Distributed Art Publishers Distribution. New. 2007. Hardcover. 0870707191 . FREE UPGRADE to Courier/Priority Shipping Upon Request - IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - Flawless copy brand new pristine never opened -- - Corresponds to ISBN: 9780870707193. Text in English. 80 pp. With 34 ills. 24 x 30 cm. -- with a bonus offer-- . Museum; D. A. P. /Distributed Art Publishers (Distribution) hardcover