8 résultats
199585169Milan: Babilonia Edizione 1995. Paperback. 144p. text in Italian very good first edition trade paperback in pictorial wraps. Erotica by five Italian lesbian authors. Babilonia Edizione paperback books
155453hardcover. Illustrated. 127pp. 4to decorative boards. Rochester: Grange Books 1998. Near-fine copy in a very good slightly worn dust wrapper.<br/><br/> unknown books
200187018Montevideo: Centro Municipal de Exposiciones; Editorial DobleEmme 2001. 24cm. 32p b/w and color plates bio/chrons. bibl. color fldg. pict. wrps. Recompilation of the abstract paintings of Fernando López Lage b. Uruguay 1964 a multifaceted personality artist academic director of an artistic center and exhibition organizer and considered a ineludible reference in the art world of Uruguay Centro Municipal de Exposiciones; Editorial DobleEmme unknown books
2007224466London: Headline Publishing Group 2007. First British Edition. Hard Cover. Near Fine binding/Near Fine dust jacket. No marks of any kind. Near Fine binding / Near Fine dust jacket. Headline Publishing Group unknown books
1914SKU1016415Charleston: Band and White Printers Spartanburg 1914. PAPERBACK. Good. Printed in 1914 paper covers have considerable wear with some chipping to the edges and light soiling internally clean spine has a 3/4 inch chip at the bottom edge- binding is in good condition three letters written in pencil on the front cover- no other marks or notations. Ships from our open bookstore in S.C.! Band and White Printers, Spartanburg paperback books
279487New York: Fleming Schiller & Carnrick. unbound. Huneker Clio. Print. Color lithograph. Page measure 12" x 10.75". Repairs to top margin.<br/><br/> M'lle New York was an avant-garde magazine founded in 1895 by James Gibbons Huneker a bohemian musician and Vance Thompson a Princeton graduate both of whom had spent time in Europe and become enmeshed in fin-de-siècle literature drama and music. Struck by the tameness of New York magazines in comparison to their counterparts in France and London they put together their pink-and-black-printed attack on American gentility with fiction poetry illustration and decadent critiques--often published anonymously or with pen names--of what they saw as the lowbrow public. Despite the magazine's ridicule of democratic culture it participated in introducing New Yorkers to the work of some important Modernists. Its editorial run only lasted four years and while both men went on to continue their cultural crusade in other publications M'lle New York stands out as as a manifesto of their anti-philistine perspective.<br/><br/> Fleming, Schiller & Carnrick unknown books
180328096London: Printed for the Author and Sold by Mr. Symonds Mr. Fisher Mr. Lee et al. 1803 1803. First edition. Cloth a little worn; some scattered foxing; very good copy. 2 vols in 1 small 8vo 19th century blue-green pebbled cloth gilt lettering. Frontispieces. 26-page list of subscribers. The collected poetry of Thomas Clio Rickman 1761-1834 including a sonnet and poem to his friend Thomas Paine and poems to David Garrick Charles Churchill Lord Chesterfield William Cowper Philip Thicknesse and Edmund Burke among others. The poems previously appeared in self-published broadsides and periodicals. In 1810 Rickman published an Elegy to the Memory of Thomas Paine and in 1819 an important biography of Paine. <br/><br/> London: Printed for the Author, and Sold by Mr. Symonds, Mr. Fisher, Mr. Lee, et al., 1803 hardcover books
181927993London: Printed and Published by Thomas Clio Rickman 1819 1819. First edition. Sabin 71242; Gimbel page 136; Howes R278. Boards stained; prelims including frontis and title-page a little foxed; very good copy. 8vo recent drab paper spine and printed paper label original blue paper boards untrimmed. Frontis portrait engraved by William Sharp after the portrait by George Romney. Three-page checklist of Paine's published works followed by four pages of publisher's terminal advertisements. An important memoir of Thomas Paine by his lifelong friend and supporter Thomas Clio Rickman 1761-1834 the reform-minded bookseller and poet. "Rickman's name will be forever linked with Paine for he was to Paine what Boswell was to Johnson" - John Keane Tom Paine. Paine lived with the Rickmans while he finished the controversial second part of The Rights of Man in 1792 during which time Rickman arranged to have the famous portrait made of Paine by George Romney. After Paine fled to France that summer Rickman joined him there to avoid imprisonment for selling Paine's books. Rickman was something of a versifier and wrote several poems about Paine usually sonnets and an Elegy in 1810 reprinted here. Following the memoir are miscellaneous poems and writings by Paine. Prior to Rickman's biography Paine's life had been the subject of two unfriendly biographies by hack journalists which Rickman discusses in the preface. The publisher's terminal advertisements include probably the only checklist of the writings of Rickman. Early ownership notations on the front free endpaper; later bookseller's receipt pasted to the front paste-down listing this book with several others sold to Mr. James Morris of Albany New York by John Skinner Bookseller dated December 4 1901. <br/><br/> London: Printed and Published by Thomas Clio Rickman, 1819 hardcover books