1 123 résultats
pp. vii, 306, xxiii [87th Regiment Roster] + Numerous photographs. Profusely illustrated with drawings. Inked ownership of M. O. Smith, 1901, on title page. Mildly XLib. Some signatures loose. 8vo. Original full cloth binding. Gilt lettered. Hardbound. A very good copy of the First Edition of this classic Civil War regimental history. Dornbusch P-238; Nevins I. PA 36
55786Paris, L'Harmattan, 2005. 13 x 21, 267 pp., broché, très bon état.
13692Albany, Superintendent of State Prisons (impr/pr: J. B. Lyon), sd / nd. In-4 oblong, 203-(9) pp., cartonnage éditeur pleine toile imprimé (coiffes et coins de la reliure frottés, garde volante supérieure détachée). Sans la liste des prix. // Oblong 4to, 203-(9) p., publisher's printed clothbound hardcover (wear to binding spine-ends and corners, front flyleaf detached). Without the price list.
193176467Moundsville: Work & Hope 1931. First edition for this year OCLC records no holding for this year but does for 1927 4 1930 3 1932 3 1935 2 1937 1. Octavo. 48 pp. Extensively illustrated from photographs. Publisher's teal wrappers with red lettering and a large decorated border. Some finger soiling to rear wrapper else a very good copy.The publishers Work & Hope and printers and writers were all inmates of the Moundsville Penitentiary in West Virginia. Likely they worked in the hope of getting released as for a time the Moundsville Penitentiary ranked on the United States Department of Justice's Top Ten Most Violent Correctional Facilities list. The photographs herein present a different story of course. We see a beautiful chapel clean and tidy cells and prisoners at work in the shirt shop the broom shop and the whip shop. There are also photographs of the gothic prison itself. When it was built it was outside the town but by the time of closing it was right in the middle of a residential zone One of the countries most famous pre-historic mounds lent its name to the town.'The West Virginia Penitentiary in Moundsville was built in 1876 and closed in 1995. During its working history it was deemed as one of the most violent prisons in the U.S.A. seeing its fair share of riots murders and executions. Conditions were less than adequate and humane with the cells and rooms crawling with vermin and cockroaches.During its operation there were 36 reported murders and 94 executions. This does not take into account the suicides and accidents which take the total number of deaths to nearly 1000" A. Oborn 2019 Work & Hope unknown
0656213485.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
1333741480.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
30815P., Flammarion, sans date (vers 1898), in 12 broché, VII-411pp. ; couverture fanée avec fortes rousseurs.
19121080Londres etc.: Lloyds Greater Britain Publishing Company Limited. 1912. First edition. Large quarto. Publisher's original full dark-green morocco; the upper board triple-ruled in gilt and with the Uruguayan crest in gilt; the spine with five raised bands compartments ruled and decorated in gilt and with titles in gilt. All edges gilt. Marbled endpapers. Title page contents page introduction and first text page with gilt borders and embellishments. Illustrated profusely throughout with black and white photographs and one map. Ownership inscription of the Australian writer Mary Gilmore to the head of the title page: "Mary Gilmore / Her book / 16. 3. 26". A very good copy the binding square and firm with a few small marks and scuffs to the boards rubbing to the spine and joints and wear to the corners. The contents with scattered foxing to the endpapers are otherwise in very good order and clean throughout. An interesting association copy of this comprehensive extensively illustrated and luxuriously produced survey of the people culture history politics economy industry agriculture geography and natural history of Uruguay at the beginning of the twentieth-century belonging to the influential Australian author journalist and poet Dame Mary Gilmore 1865-1962. </p><p>A prolific contributor to Australian literature and the broader national discourse during the first half of the twentieth-century Gilmore wrote for a number of leading newspapers and journals of the period serving as the editor of the women's section of The Australian Worker 1908-1931 as well as The Bulletin The Sydney Morning Herald and the Communist Party's Tribune becoming known as a campaigner for the welfare of the disadvantaged. Her first volume of poetry was issued in 1910 thereafter publishing prodigiously for the ensuing half-century coming to be regarded as one of Australia's most popular and widely read poets. Her poetry essays and memoirs covered a wide variety of themes although public imagination was particularly captured by her evocative views of country life with her best known work - 'No Foe Shall Gather Our Harvest' - serving as a morale booster during the Second World War.</p><p>A political progressive Gilmore gained a reputation as a 'fiery radical' - a champion of the workers and the oppressed. Involving herself with the burgeoning labour movement early in her life she had become a devotee of the utopian socialism of William Lane 1861-1917. In 1896 Gilmore and two hundred others followed Lane to Paraguay where they established a communal settlement called New Australia. She started a family there with William Gilmore whom she married in 1897 but the colony was ultimately short-lived with Gilmore leaving in 1900 living in Buenos Aires for six months followed by a period in Patagonia returning to Australia in 1902 after having saved enough money for a return passage.</p><p>Gilmore maintained a strong interest in Latin American politics culture and literature for the rest of her life. Indeed she also engaged in translation projects bringing Latin American literature to a wider audience notably endeavouring to produce a 'Uruguayan anthology' for which she corresponded with friends and associates in the country. This was perhaps also the origin of the present volume which itself forms a pleasing representation of Gilmore's wide-ranging ambitions.</p><p>By her later years Gilmore was a doyenne of the Sydney literary world and became something of a national icon making frequent appearances in the new media of radio and television and maintaining a significant literary output into old age publishing her last book of verse in 1954 aged 89. She died at the age of 97 and was accorded a state funeral a rare honour for a writer and has featured on the reverse of the Australian ten-dollar note since 1993. Londres [etc.]: Lloyds Greater Britain Publishing Company, Limited. hardcover
233 pages. Footnotes. Bibliography. Index. Reproduction of black and white photo in text. "This compelling first-person account deepens our appreciation of the conflicts, failures, and triumphs of those who find themselves in the hands of their nation's enemies." - from dust jacket. Unmarked but for one high-lighted word in bibliography. Binding tight. Moderate overall wear. Dust jacket now preserved in glossy new archival-grade Brodart. A sound copy. EDWARDS 1582. Book
0331171732.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
0331299615.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
285 pages. Places personal recollections on the record, in permanent form, before it is tool late. Usual library markings. Average wear. Slight lean to spine. Nice working copy. Book
235230Hanoi, Editions en Langues Etrangères, 1972 in-12, 483 pp., broché. Mouillures sur le second plat de couverture et en marge de quelques pages.
216 pages. Index. Bilingual English/Italian. Illustrated primarily in black and white. "The very sensitive story of BC's Italians classified as enemy aliens during World War II. Raymond Culos' documented research and prose provide an enlightened analysis of the Government of Canada's rationale for arresting and incarcerating Italians suspected of being members of a local fascist organization. He also presents testimony of the suffering of family members of the POWs. Culos further illustrates the sense of frustration, anger and yes, sheer mortification felt by hundreds of loyal citizens required to report monthly to the RCMP. In the midst of this incredible chapter in Canada's wartime history the reader becomes aware of the BC Italian Canadians who publicly swore allegiance to King and Country and those who served in the defence of Canada. A number of these servicemen were on active duty while members of their families were being scrutinized by the RCMP." - from dust jacket. An unread copy. Clean, bright and unmarked with negligible wear. Dust jacket now preserved in glossy new archival-grade Brodart cover. A beautiful copy. Gift quality. Book
1410220257.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1837GITh432Paris Au Bureau de l'Observateur des Tribunaux 1837. In-8 broché 352pp. Manques de papier en tête et en queue du dos, plats de la couverture effrangés, rousseurs, sans les 2 fac simile de lettres annoncés, texte complet. Un document intéressant au sujet de cette tentative manquée de coup d'Etat par le futur NapoleonIII.
193158Paris, L. Dépée, 1845 in-8, [4]-XXI-326 pp., avec 5 planches hors-texte, dont un frontispice, demi-toile Bradel fantaisie, dos lisse (rel. de la fin du XIXe). Rousseurs.
238089Paris, L. Dépée, 1845 in-8, [4]-XXI-326 pp., frontispice, demi-chagrin noir, dos à nerfs orné (rel. de la fin du XIXe). Très fortes rousseurs. Dos frotté.
41852996like new. unknown
41852996-nnew. unknown
1982ROD0024446Presses de la Renaissance. 1982. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 237 pages. Mors frottés. Traduction du hongrois par l'auteur et Jean Parvulesco.. . . . Classification Dewey : 365-Prisons
2007RO30365547Oh éditions. 2007. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Coins frottés, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur acceptable. 270 pages. Gondolé. Rares rousseurs.. . . . Classification Dewey : 365-Prisons
1962LFA-126731510Un ouvrage de 283 pages, format 135 x 215 mm, illustré, relié cartonnage sous jaquette, publié en 1962, Librairie Académique Perrin, bon état
Perrin 1962, In-8 cartonnage éditeur sous jaquette illustrée. 280 pages. Bon état.
1967834031967 Paris, Pro-Edit, L'Auteur, 1967, in 8° broché, 238 pages ; illustrations hors-texte ; couverture illustrée.