67 156 résultats
191562777Seattle: Western Blower Company ca. 1915. 8vo. 56 pp. Text illustrations schematics and drawings throughout. Textured beige softcovers raised gilt decorative lettering front cover yapp fore-edges minor dustaoiling edgewear couple minor stains at lower fore-edge still a VG- copy. First edition of this exceedingly scarce trade catalogue for Turbine Multiblade Fans designed as exhaust fans for ventilation systems in factories ships mines sawmills lumber mills and several models were specially designed as reversible fans. Miller 1852-1924 was born in Pennsylvania and later set up a logging and steel sheet metal fabrication company in Minnesota before moving the company to Seattle WA at the beginning of the 20th Century. Although originally named John K. Miller Co. it had changed over to Western Blower Company by 1910 and would later operate for decades from 1914 forward at their factory building on 1800 Airport Way. No copies in Worldcat. Western Blower Company, paperback
49594P., Hachette, 1955, in 4° broché, 128 pages ; couverture illustrée.
72619P., Tredaniel, 1980, in 12 broché, 141 pages ; couverture rempliée illustrée ; des phrases soulignées.
189022737S.l., s.n., s.d. (vers 1890) ; chemise in-8°, cartonnée, demi-percaline bleu-pétrole illustrée sur les 2 plats en couleur, rubans de fermeture, 16 feuillets libres imprimés recto seul, de dessins humoristiques en noir aquarellés, texte en italique rouge, papier Japon.
41005P., LArtisan du Livre, 1932, petit in 8° broché, 120 pages.
1908154061908 Paris Mercure de France 1908 In-12 Broché pp illustrations in et ht EDITION ORIGINALE illustrée de 26 reproductions . Pas de grand papier annoncé. Couverture ombrée, rdos bruni,. ---- Marcel Réja, docteur Paul Meunier (1873-1957), était aliéniste à l'asile de Villejuif.tL'ART CHEZ LES FOUS,est l'un des premiers ouvrages en France à étudier sous un aspect esthétique la création artistique des aliénés, mais aussi des enfants ou des "sauvages" l'ouvrage est une référence historique pour l'histoire de l'art "brut"
1945842271945 Paris, Haumont, 1945, in 8° broché, 125 pages ; couverture rempliée.
196271976AB1962. New York The Noonday Press 1962. 14 cm x 20 cm. XV 266 pages. Original softcover. Very good condition with signs of external wear. Includes for example the following essays: The complex figure in Melville's carpet / Typee and Omoo: the quest for the garden / Moby Dick: the grand hooded phantom / Israel Potter: survival in the desert / Clarel: cross bearers all / Billy Budd: the catastrophe of innocence / The quest for form etc. paperback
197350226Washington DC: Dumbarton Oaks Trustees for Harvard 1973. Folio. 193 1 pp. Brick-red cloth black lettering on spine minor shelfwear slight bumping to corners w/ d.j. minor edgewear slight rubbing VG/NF copy. First edition of this excellent archaeological study of Mesoamerican mural paintings at the famed city of Teotihuacan a pre-Columbian city whose population was perhaps 125000 peole. Dumbarton Oaks, Trustees for Harvard, hardcover
12759Paris, Variété, 1947. Grand in-12, couverture rempliée, non coupée, 94 pp.
44681P., Variété, 1947, petit in 8° broché, 93 pages.
3402Planète plus, n°16, Paris, 6-1970. In-8, br., 148 p.
6314Paris, Régine Deforges, (octobre) 1977. In-8 (209 x 134 mm), broché, 160 pages.
6917P., Grasset, 1994, 1 vol. in-8 broché sous couverture illustrée, de 337 pp. + table. Un coin légèrement écorné, bel exemplaire par ailleurs.
11206N.R.F. 1975. In-8° broché. Jaquette photographique. 16 photographies de Brassaï hors texte. 264 pages. E.O. sur papier ordinaire.
1969772851969 Paris, Buchet / Chastel, 1969, in 8° broché, 187 pages ; illustrations hors-texte ; couverture illustrée ; traces de mouillures marginales.
16761Paris, Planète Plus, 1970. In-8° carré, 146p. Broché, couverture illustrée.
24730Sans lieu, Régine Deforges, (1977). In-8°, 157p. Broché, couverture illustrée.
40709Lyon, La Manufacture (coll. "Qui suis-je?"), 1986. Pt. in-8°, 191p. Broché, couverture illustrée.
40495Jarnac, La Tour de Feu, 1955, in 8° broché, 172 pages.
L3222Chez l'auteur. Drôme. Place de l'Hôtel de Ville, Die, 1959. In-8 br. Bel envoi autographe d'Henry Miller à Maurice [Nadeau] sur le livre de son ami Albert Maillet.
4592Paris, Eric Losfeld, 1971. In-8, broché, couverture illustrée en couleurs, (dessin de H. Miller), 190 pp.
39070P., Corréa, 1947, in 12 broché, 169 pages.
200804371Toulon, Soleil, 1996 ; in-4, 80 pp., cartonnage de l'éditeur. Eo.
190280687New York: The Abbey Press 1902. First Edition. First Printing. Octavo. 20cm. Bound in 20th century grey cloth by Meister and Smethie titled in black to spine and front board. 369pp. The later cloth binding is strong and functional clearly following the brief of holding the book together for a century without too much attention to aesthetics some light scuffing and edgewear perhaps a little discolouration here and there but constructed of the kind of book cloth that will outlast an earthquake. A very good copy by virtue of completeness and solidity. Internally clean albeit with a rather brutal stitching job to the text block which has resulted in the prelims being a little loose in the gutter. Inscribed in pencil to the front flyleaf by the editor who was also the bereaved sister of the book's subject Major General Earl Van Dorn of the Confederate Army:<br /> "From 'Aunt Emily' Vandorn to Constance Kearny Vertner"<br /> Constance Kearny Vertner's pencil ownership is also present on the front flyleaf she was indeed Emily's niece being the daughter of her elder sister Jane who married Senator John Vertner of Lexington Kentucky which is quite the collection of Southern aristocracy. <br /> The book itself was an attempt by Emily Van Dorn to salvage something of the reputation of her dead brother after his death at the hands of a man whose wife and possibly 15 year old daughter rumours abound he was said to be having an affair with. On the face of it Major General Van Dorn was an extremely gifted cavalry commander and a less gifted infantry officer who cut his teeth fighting the Cheyenne in the US Army and later ended up fighting the US Army distinguishing himself at 2nd Corinth the Raid on Holly Ridge and other engagements. The General's reputation for womanising however and his erratic military performance when commanding anything other than his beloved cavalry caused him to be a dangerous combination of lauded and highly suspect depending upon who you asked. His eventual death shot in the back of the head by Dr. George Peters of Tennessee was met with sadness and censure but little surprise. The customary thing to do at the time regarding a man killed whilst committing adultery was to express public disdain and condemnation whilst keeping one's true feelings private. Emily Van Dorn's published attempts at salvage made it quite clear that whilst his contemporaries and colleagues might have tutted in public the sympathies and memories they expressed to her and her family suggested otherwise. There was also the added suggestion that Dr. Peters acted on behalf of the Union and that he received a mysterious and substantial land grant in Arkansas in payment. Emily Van Dorn perhaps unsurprisingly held to this version of events. A scarce book in any condition and even more so with a family association. The Abbey Press unknown