120 résultats
1147824819.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1341379027.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
0548604967.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1163922773.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
2007DADAX0548604967Kessinger Publishing 2007-10-02. paperback. New. 6.00x1.63x9.00. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. Kessinger Publishing paperback
69-1967Berkeley: Graduate School of Journalism University of California Berkeley 1993. 8vo. circa 50 pp. Soft Cover Very Good. B&W Plates. Berkeley: Graduate School of Journalism, University of California, Berkeley, 1993. paperback
a110226New York City . no date stated but 1945 from the text "Our classes oened only a few days after the end of WWII." "This is the story of our year at Columbia." Hardcover 4to. Pale blue-grey cloth. Fully bw photo illustrated; text describes a typical week - day by day. Lengthy descriptions and humorous details about each professor and all 61 students. Each teacher and each student is shown with a very professionally-drawn caricature portrait by unnamed artist. Throughout the book are very neatly rendered corrections to the text for the printer - all done in the same black ink by the same person. Good spine ends and cover tips worn; cover cloth faded. Text lightly evenly toned; binding quite secure; hinges not cracked. Rare. . hardcover
197410096<p>Random House 1974. Second edition. Near Fine in a Fine dustjacket. Black cloth over grey boards with silver lettering on spine. Many black and white photographs and pictorial endpapers. Binding is solid square with sharp corners. Light edge wear. Interior is clean and free of any markings. No previous owner names bookplates or remainder marks. The fine dustjacket is crisp clean and unclipped with original $10 price intact. Protected in mylar. Carefully packaged and shipped in a sturdy cardboard box.</p> Random House hardcover
0394462742.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
19722291<p>New York: The Viking Press 1972. Third Printing. <br /><br />Small Quarto 9 1/2 x 6 inches; 240 x 150 mm xxiv 232 pages in black cloth titles to spine red top stain in a printed dust jacket. <br /><br /><strong>A letter inscribed by Janet Flanner</strong> is taped to the front end paper: "For Adele with friendly recollections and gratitude for a long memory. Faithfully Janet Flanner November 13 - '72." The letter is on Ritz Hotel Paris stationery. <br /><br />A collection of Flanner's articles from The New Yorker for 1925-1939. Flanner 1892-1978 used the pseudonym Genêt and wrote on a wide variety of political and cultural topics. This collection edited by Irving Drutman has pieces on Josephine Baker Marlene Dietrich Mae West Sarah Bernhardt Picasso Gertrude Stein's art collection lurid murder affairs Paul Signac gambling the gathering clouds of war in the late 1930s and much more. <br /><br />An engrossing and entertaining look at Paris between the wars by a young journalist who wrote a fortnightly "Letter From Paris" for The New Yorker. <br /><br />CONDITION: Letter from Flanner taped to front end paper slight lean to spine minor rubbing to cloth internally a few small stains. The dust jacket's upper panel has some creases a short closed tear and a couple small nicks to the top edge as well as some foxing to the verso of the jacket. Overall Very Good.</p> The Viking Press hardcover
19678481Seattle: Helix 1967. First Printing. Tabloid Newspaper. Very Good. Walt Crowley Gary Eagle John Cunnick. Tabloid printed on newsprint measuring 11.5 x 17.5 inches. Pp. 12 including covers. Front and rear covers printed in color. Age toning to edges; lower fore-edge corner a tad crimped. An early issue of Seattle's underground hippie rag featuring a Walt Crowley color illustration with a mushroom cloud a screaming child on a TV set and a dystopian rubble; on the dos-a-dos cover by Gary Eagle is a bare-breasted hippie chick sitting in a blissful state. With an article on the recent Grateful Dead drug bust an upcoming Lightnin' Hopkins show at the Seattle Folklore Society and an article on Seattle's fresh crop of young junkies. Ads include one for Chrome Syrcus Magic Fern opening at Eagles Auditorium.<p>In late spring 1967 Helix joined a burgeoning underground press then including groundbreaking alternative papers the East Village Other the Los Angeles Free Press the Fifth Estate and the Berkeley Barb. Founded by Paul Sawyer Paul Dorpat and Lorenzo Milam it sprang from their intellectual fervor at the Free University an alternative thinktank they also founded. Eventually star-illustrator Walt Crowley assumed editorship.<p>A pebble in the shoe of the Seattle establishment Helix brought attention to civic injustice by rallying its youthful readership to activism. The apogee of that effort followed the 1970 killing of students at Kent State: over the course of May 5-8 Helix organized protests that blocked US Interstate 5 while marching between the city's University District and rallies at the Federal Courthouse in downtown Seattle. Early issues are increasingly scarce. This copy is housed in a removable clear sleeve with an acid-free backing.</p> . Helix unknown
19698820Seattle: Helix 1969. First Printing. Tabloid Newspaper. Very Good. Maryl Clemmens Walt Crowley Gary Finholt. Tabloid printed black on newsprint measuring 11.25 x 17.5 inches. Pp. 27 including covers. Horizontal fold now mellowed; light age-toning to edges. An issue of the Seattle underground bi-weekly with articles on the moon landing multiple the self-expression of army officers the Black Panther Party's first national United Front Against Fascism conference and a profile of "Karma" magazine. With an ad for the Seattle Pop Festival Gold Creek Park Woodinville. Rear cover advertises the first US tour of "Blind Faith' featuring Eric Clapton Steve Winwood Ginger Baker and Rick Grech. <p>Helix joined a burgeoning underground press then including groundbreaking alternative papers the East Village Other the Los Angeles Free Press the Fifth Estate and the Berkeley Barb. Founded by Paul Sawyer Paul Dorpat and Lorenzo Milam it sprang from their intellectual fervor at the Free University an alternative thinktank they also founded. Eventually star-illustrator Walt Crowley assumed editorship.<p>A pebble in the shoe of Seattle establishment the "hip rag" brought attention to civic injustice by rallying its youthful readership to activism. The apogee of that effort followed the 1970 killing of students at Kent State: over the course of May 5-8 Helix organized protests that blocked US Interstate 5 while marching between the University District and rallies at the Federal Courthouse in downtown Seattle. Early issues are increasingly scarce. This copy is housed in a removable clear sleeve with an acid-free backing.</p> . Helix unknown
19698828Seattle: Helix 1969. First Printing. Tabloid Newspaper. Very Good. Maryl Clemmens Walt Crowley Gary Finholt. Tabloid printed black on newsprint measuring 11.25 x 17.5 inches. Pp. 28 including covers. Edges lightly age-toned. A well preserved copy. An issue of the Seattle underground bi-weekly with articles on a Portland meeting of the Black Panther Party the Victorian architecture of Port Townsend efforts to save Pike Place Market from redevelopment and film reviews including John Wayne's "True Grit." Rear cover advertises a memorial for Wharton T Funk.<p>Helix joined a burgeoning underground press then including groundbreaking alternative papers the East Village Other the Los Angeles Free Press the Fifth Estate and the Berkeley Barb. Founded by Paul Sawyer Paul Dorpat and Lorenzo Milam it sprang from their intellectual fervor at the Free University an alternative thinktank they also founded. Eventually star-illustrator Walt Crowley assumed editorship.<p>A pebble in the shoe of Seattle establishment the "hip rag" brought attention to civic injustice by rallying its youthful readership to activism. The apogee of that effort followed the 1970 killing of students at Kent State: over the course of May 5-8 Helix organized protests that blocked US Interstate 5 while marching between the University District and rallies at the Federal Courthouse in downtown Seattle. Early issues are increasingly scarce. This copy is housed in a removable clear sleeve with an acid-free backing.</p> . Helix unknown
19698830Seattle: Helix 1969. First Printing. Tabloid Newspaper. Very Good. Maryl Clemmens Walt Crowley Gary Finholt W. Ward. Tabloid printed black on newsprint measuring 11.25 x 17.5 inches. Pp. 24 including covers. Cover wrap and center spread printed in color. Cover edges lightly age-toned a few interior edges with lower corners with small marginal chip. An issue of the Seattle underground bi-weekly with articles on changes to drug laws censorship in the press and Nelson Rockefeller's travels in Latin America additionally to a section of "silly songs" by J Cunnick with illustrations by W. Ward. Rear cover advertises the Third annual Bellevue Film Festival.<p>Helix joined a burgeoning underground press then including groundbreaking alternative papers the East Village Other the Los Angeles Free Press the Fifth Estate and the Berkeley Barb. Founded by Paul Sawyer Paul Dorpat and Lorenzo Milam it sprang from their intellectual fervor at the Free University an alternative thinktank they also founded. Eventually star-illustrator Walt Crowley assumed editorship.<p>A pebble in the shoe of Seattle establishment the "hip rag" brought attention to civic injustice by rallying its youthful readership to activism. The apogee of that effort followed the 1970 killing of students at Kent State: over the course of May 5-8 Helix organized protests that blocked US Interstate 5 while marching between the University District and rallies at the Federal Courthouse in downtown Seattle. Early issues are increasingly scarce. This copy is housed in a removable clear sleeve with an acid-free backing.</p> . Helix unknown
19686111Seattle: Helix 1968. First Printing. Tabloid Newspaper. Skip" cover montage. Tabloid printed on newsprint measuring 11.25 x 17.5 inches. Pp. 20. Front and rear covers printed in two-color. Light age-toning lower fore-edge corner a bit crimped rear cover fore-edge with a 1.5 inch closed tear. Withal a bright copy. An early issue of the Seattle underground bi-weekly that transitioned to a weekly beginning September 1969. With articles on drafting cops for the Vietnam War and featuring ads for the ACLU Pot-Test Case Benefit at Eagles Auditorium -- attendance of heads being mandatory.<p>In late spring 1967 Helix joined a burgeoning underground press then including groundbreaking alternative papers the East Village Other the Los Angeles Free Press the Fifth Estate and the Berkeley Barb. Founded by Paul Sawyer Paul Dorpat and Lorenzo Milam it sprang from their intellectual fervor at the Free University an alternative thinktank they also founded. Eventually star-illustrator Walt Crowley assumed editorship.</p> <p>A pebble in the shoe of Seattle establishment the "hip rag" brought attention to civic injustice by rallying its youthful readership to activism. The apogee of that effort followed the 1970 killing of students at Kent State: over the course of May 5-8 Helix organized protests that blocked US Interstate 5 while marching between the University District and rallies at the Federal Courthouse in downtown Seattle. FOR VOLS. I - III: Early issues are increasingly scarce. This issue is housed in a removable clear sleeve with an acid-free backing.</p> . Helix unknown
20034854Ely MN U.S.A.: Singing River Publications 2003. Slight wrinkle to title page. A clean copy. Signed by Author. Soft Cover. Very Good. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. Singing River Publications paperback
19394536London: Thornton Butterworth Limited 1939 . First edition. Hardcover. Fine. 8vo modern 3/4 tan morocco extra-gilt spine bound by Bennett Book Studio <br/><br/> Woods A45 . 82 current events columns written by Churchill as the world ran headlong into global war. Folding map. Thornton Butterworth Limited hardcover
1989x-0313261784Greenwood Pub Group 1989. Hardcover. New. 319 pages. 9.00x6.00x1.25 inches. Greenwood Pub Group hardcover
1538541688.GaudioCD. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. unknown
0792745582.Gmp3_cd. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. unknown
1938674<p>Philadelphia: Macrae-Smith-Company 1938. First Edition. <br /><br />Octavo 8 1/4 x 5 3/4 inches; 210 x 145 mm 268 pages in yellow cloth with a pictorial dust jacket. <br /><br />An unusual book aimed at guys who want to go from copy boy to ace reporter. Unusual in the sense that it combines both fiction and nonfiction. We follow Jerry a likable copy boy on a New Jersey daily who puts up with coarse and frankly awful editors and pressmen but then gets his big chance to be a reporter. <br /><br />Journalists will enjoy the depiction of Matt Hale the city editor who communicates primarily through growling screaming and banging his fist on his desk. Very entertaining; most journalists have known editors like Matt Hale. Illustrated with real newsroom and technical photographs of the day. SCARCE especially in dust jacket. <br /><br />CONDITION: Light toning to page edges heavier toning to paste downs but clean and unmarked. The pictorial dust jacket has several shallow chips and tears including a 1 1/2" tear with creasing to top edge of front panel affecting "O" in "COPY." Overall a Very Good copy.</p> Macrae-Smith-Company hardcover
2000mon0003743106Oxford University Press USA 8/1/2010 12:00:01 AM. paperback. Very Good. 1.3780 11.0236 8.2677. Oxford University Press, USA paperback
1498560342.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
ria9780748617692_inpHardback. New. New Book; Fast Shipping from UK; Not signed; Not First Edition; This book explores how the Internet presents radical ways of organising and producing media that offer political and cultural alternatives to ways of doing business and to how we understand the world and our place in it. hardcover
19962111902153200967Gendaishokan 1996. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of books: 1 Gendaishokan paperback