67 156 résultats
19791807HEYNE WILHELM 1979-03/2000. 1.ND. softcover. Leibowitz 33426343 HEYNE, WILHELM paperback
135130Ann Arbor MI: The Legacy Press 2010. full leather clamshell box. Bookbinding. 8vo. full leather clamshell box. 528 pages 374 illustrations. Books Will Speak Plain is published at a time when the historical book is at risk of being ignored put away and forgotten. This handbook combines an overview of the history of the codex with basic information about many of the materials and structures found on historical bindings. The book also includes description-survey guidelines and is supported by a variety of appendices. The book's focus on primarily non-luxury bindings adds depth to an often-neglected segment of the history of bookbinding.<BR> <br /> <BR> <br /> This copy is signed by the author and bound in a full artist-binding by Don Etherington bookbinder and former director of Conservation at both the Library of Congress and the Harry Ransom Center Austin TX. Both covers have been bound in a full crushed moracco binding with leather onlays. The onlays have been stamped in blind using fleuron tooling patterns and the front cover has the title of the book in the center stamped in gilt. The pastedowns and endpapers are created using handmade decorated pastepapers. Handmade silk headbands. Top edge stained silver. Signed by the binder on the rear pastedown. The book is housed in a custom cloth-covered boards clamshell box with a leather spine label with the author and title stamped in gilt.<BR> <br /> <BR> <br /> Preservation is at the heart of Books Will Speak Plain. We have already lost too many historical bindings because their importance was not understood and appreciated. This book is a call to action to urge custodians of every kind of historical book collection public and private to assess the physical character of the historical bindings in their care and record the changes that have accrued to those bindings during their passage through time.<BR> <br /> <BR> <br /> This book is a resource that can be used to recognize binding variations that have long been overlooked and to document such bindings for future scholars. All bibliophiles including book-binders curators private collectors librarians catalogers antiquarian book-sellers scholars of the book and conservators will find this an invaluable reference. Books Will Speak Plain is also a useful textbook for students enrolled in academic courses in the history of the book and book conservation and in practical bookbinding. Photography: J. Wayne Jones - Drawings: Pamela Spitzmueller. The Legacy Press unknown
197095358Big Sur: Ben Ben Press 1970. First edition of Miller's short illustrated work on a visit to St. Remy in the South of France. 12mo original wrappers as issued illustrated. One of only 2000 copies. Association copy inscribed by the author on the verso of the front panel to his second wife June Mansfield "For June All the best! Henry 1/16/67." In fine condition. Miller's second wife June convinced him to commit to writing full time and became the inspirations for most of his best known works including Tropic of Cancer. After they divorced in 1934 they remained close friends and Miller continued to send his new works to her for many decades to come. With the original transmittal envelope addressed to Mrs. June E. Corbett in Miller's hand. Housed in a custom half morocco clamshell box. A significant association most rare and desirable. American writer and artist Henry Miller became renowned for developing his own type of semi-autobiographical novel that blended character study social criticism philosophical reflection stream of consciousness surrealist free association and mysticism. In addition to his large body of literature he also wrote several travel memoirs and painted watercolors. Ben Ben Press unknown books
19476377Berkeley: Henry Miller and Bezalel Schatz 1947. Copy # 168 signed by author and artist. Very Good/The tortured publication history of this title begins with the sixteen months that Miller and Bezalel took to produce the sheets with the help of printer Alfred Stoddard in an edition of 800 copies. A prospectus apparently failed to generate subscribers so according to Schifreen and Jackson fewer than 200 copies were bound Hargrave estimates even fewer. The sheets were then stored in a closet suffering damage from vermin and deterioration from mold. Salvagable sheets were reissued in 1971 some of them in a modified binding and some of the wormy sheets were then acquired by Coast Gallery in 1976 and bound for sale. Our copy #168 is surely from the original 1947 issue with the red fabric patch on the upper board. In the opening text Miller calls the book "a Coney Island of the mind." Ferlinghetti's book of the same name appeared eleven years later. . 37 cm; 40 leaves including two leaves printed on glassine silkscreened in color throughout. Text written in author's hand and color silkscreened. Bound in blue cloth with Bezalel's screened shapes and a piece of red fabric by Eda Kairn. LACKS slip case. SIGNED by Miller and Schatz on justification page. Slight wear at extremities. Unblemished text. References: Shifreen & Jackson A60a; Hargraves #30. ADDITIONALLY: a silkscreened bifolium 315 x 385 mm heavy white paper reproducing two pages of the book with text and illustration signed by Miller and Bezalel; edges a little pinched; AND a three-panel glassine sheet frayed printed on one panel with the full text of the title page which reads: "The one and only life is the night life the life of the mind the night of night the life the mind the night the night life. The is the Coney Island of the mind the Toboggan Slide the Into the Into. The is the without which wherefore and however of the night's bright mind the life and mind of night the mind and night of night or Into the Night Life with Henry Miller and Bezalel Schatz. Henry Miller and Bezalel Schatz hardcover books
1911101601911. MILLER Francis T. The Photographic History of the Civil War. N.Y. 1911. 1st ed. 10 vols. Illus. maps. A fine bright set in orig. cloth. unknown
1943780008New York: Mutual Music Society. Very Good with no dust jacket. 1943. First Edition. Hardcover. Signed on front free-endpaper. Three advertisements laid in. Back cover has a small dent at top center where it appears something dropped along the top.; A rare Glenn Miller item with a rare Glenn Miller signature "Sincerely Glenn Miller" . Published one year before his death and shortly after his entry into the Army. This copy has separate scores for Song of the Volga Boatman and I'm Thrilled included which are discussed as examples in the text. Bound in red cloth with very minor edge wear. Lower corners lightly bumped. Upper edge of rear cover and page block bumped. ; Small 4to 9" - 11" tall; 116 pages; Signed by Author . Mutual Music Society hardcover
95358Big Sur: Ben Ben Press 1970. First edition of Miller's short illustrated work on a visit to St. Remy in the South of France. 12mo original wrappers as issued illustrated. One of only 2000 copies. Association copy inscribed by the author on the verso of the front panel to his second wife June Mansfield "For June All the best! Henry 1/16/67." In fine condition. Miller's second wife June convinced him to commit to writing full time and became the inspirations for most of his best known works including Tropic of Cancer. After they divorced in 1934 they remained close friends and Miller continued to send his new works to her for many decades to come. With the original transmittal envelope addressed to Mrs. June E. Corbett in Miller's hand. Housed in a custom half morocco clamshell box. A significant association most rare and desirable. American writer and artist Henry Miller became renowned for developing his own type of semi-autobiographical novel that blended character study social criticism philosophical reflection stream of consciousness surrealist free association and mysticism. In addition to his large body of literature he also wrote several travel memoirs and painted watercolors. Ben Ben Press unknown
195040466No place: John Kidis 1950. Softcover. Very Good. First edition. Stapled wrappers. Split at the bottom of the spine a very good copy in wrappers with modest edgewear. One of 1000 numbered copies. This is copy #39. The first printed edition of a small manuscript book that Miller had originally prepared for his friend Emil Schnellock in 1939. This copy Inscribed by Miller to June Mansfield his second wife and the inspiration for much of his best fiction: "For June – a souvenir of Paris & Schnellockian days. Henry. 3/51. John Kidis unknown
1925005788Chicago and Toronto: The Bookhouse for Children 1925 Beautiful set of My Bookhouse in two different bindings all with pictorial paste-downs colored decorative endpapers color titles illustrated throughout. In decorative red cloth copyright 1925: In the Nursery Story Time Up One Pair of Stairs Over the Hills Through Fairy Halls The Magic Garden The Latch Key. In decorative green cloth copyright 1928: Flying Sails The Treasure Chest In Shining Armor From the Tower Window Halls of Fame. Light shelfwear and rubbing. Near fine condition. A beautiful set of books. The Bookhouse for Children hardcover
17871466Hartford 1787. Letter. Very good. In the fall of 1785 after Revolutionary War service Greene and family settled to Mulberry Grove in Chatham County Georgia near Savannah where land had been gifted from the State of Georgia and the Carolinas yet Nathanael's time there would be short -within one year Greene was dead. The children's tutor Phineas Miller took up the role of plantation manager. It is within this time period that this letter was written I have sent you the best assortment of garden seeds I am now able to procure - They are from a retailer who received them fput up mark'd and warranted from Col. Wadsworth's gardener. Col. Jeremiah Wadsworth was a friend of General Greenes. I intended to have had a larger assortment selected by himself but he went out to West Division early this morning with the intention of putting them up this evening and Capt. Sweet sails today so that I had no alternativebut to get them of the retailer - I have put on board a salmon for your family and Mrs. Ward with very particular directions to Capt. Sweet to take care of it and hope it may arrive good and prove agreeable - Please to present my most respectful compliments to the Governor and family and permit tme to to be Madam your Most Obedient and Very Humble Servant. -- Phins. Miller. In 1792 after passionate and active work on the part of the widow the crushing debt that General Greene amassed during the Revolutionary War was erased. In this same year Eli Whitney came aboard the plantation to assist. Within the year the cotton gin was fully developed. On March 14 1794 Whitney received a patent for the cotton gin - it was debuted on the plantation grounds. By some reports she was in partnership with Miller in the financial and logistical support of the process of patent and production of the gin. In an 1883 article in The North American Review titled "Woman as Inventor" the early feminist and abolitionist Matilda Joslyn Gage claimed that Mrs. Greene suggested to Whitney the use of a brush-like component which was instrumental in separating the seeds from the cotton. In 1796 Phineas and Catherine were married but Mulberry Grove would not outlast the duo. By 1798 it was sold and the Millers moved to Cumberland Island to land given to Gen. Greene. <br/><br/>Sheet folded with creaselines and wax seal. Foxing with no loss text clear to read. unknown books
1909LBW-8681Paris, A. Gentil, [1909]. En 18 sections montées sur toile et repliées, formant un plan de 0,80 x 1,19 m.
1903Arm331Paris Lahure 1903 Paris - Imprimerie Lahure - 1903 - Exemplaire imprimé pour A. Belinac - Grand In8 ( 25,5 x 18 cm ) - Reliure signée Charles Meunier - Reliure plein maroquin en veau glacé vert marbré , dos à nerfs avec motifs art nouveau mosaiqués au dos et contre plats avec filets et entrelacs dorés , titres dorés , toutes tranches dorées - dos et couvertures conservées - Dans un emboîtage légèrement frotté - 11 illustrations de A. Robaudi gravées au burin et à l'eau forte par H. Manesse - 114 pages - Tirage de grand luxe sur Japon Impérial imprimé spécialement pour Germaine Bélinac ( Soieries Bélinac ) numéroté 4 sur 8 - Carteret annonce 30 exemplaires sur Japon et 70 sur vélin et ne mentionne donc pas d'exemplaire sur Japon impérial . 3 états des eaux fortes signées de l'illustrateur et du graveur , le définitif , un avec remarques et un au trait avec remarques et justifié au crayon par le graveur . Paul de Champeville , auteur dramatique et hommes de lettres fut également chef de cabinet du secrétaire général au Ministère de l'Intérieur à Paris - Il y eut une première édition de ce texte en 1902 chez P. Chevalier à St Etienne et une représentation au théâtre de St Etienne le 11 Janvier 1902. Trés bel exemplaire dans une reliure parfaitement établie par le maître CH. Meunier . L'Histoire des soieries Bélinac commence à Aurec sur Loire en 1882 . Albert Bélinac le fondateur des soieries est né en 1859 . Il dirige l'entreprise jusqu'en 1907 , date a laquelle il succombe à la fièvre typhoide . Albert Bélinac fut un grand Bibliophile .Son fils reprendra l'entreprise aprés la première guerre ; La Maison Bélinac est toujours présente sur le marché du tissus pour la confection et l'ameublement . Charles Meunier ( 1866/1948) tient une place à part dans la reliure Française . Très vite il deviendra l'un des porte étendards de la reliure au coté de Pétrus Ruban et se lancera dans de nombreuses expérimentations - Il composait des reliures uniques pour chaque ouvrage . En 1900 il refuse de participer a l'exposition universelle et fit sa propre exposition dans son atelier ( Fléty 129) . Charles Meunier fonde en Novembre 1900 avec Léon Berubé , l'oeuvre et l'image , revue mensuelle de l'art contemporain et du livre illustré qui compte trois livraisons jusqu'en Septembre 1902 . En 1904 , elle devient la Revue trimestrielle , Les Arts Bibliographiques , consacrée à la littérature contemporaine , à la technique et aux arts du livre et s'arrêtera en Décembre 1907 .
1903Arm331Paris Lahure 1903 Paris - Imprimerie Lahure - 1903 - Exemplaire imprimé pour A. Belinac - Grand In8 ( 25,5 x 18 cm ) - Reliure signée Charles Meunier - Reliure plein maroquin en veau glacé vert marbré , dos à nerfs avec motifs art nouveau mosaiqués au dos et contre plats avec filets et entrelacs dorés , titres dorés , toutes tranches dorées - dos et couvertures conservées - Dans un emboîtage légèrement frotté - 11 illustrations de A. Robaudi gravées au burin et à l'eau forte par H. Manesse - 114 pages - Tirage de grand luxe sur Japon Impérial imprimé spécialement pour Germaine Bélinac ( Soieries Bélinac ) numéroté 4 sur 8 - Carteret annonce 30 exemplaires sur Japon et 70 sur vélin et ne mentionne donc pas d'exemplaire sur Japon impérial . 3 états des eaux fortes signées de l'illustrateur et du graveur , le définitif , un avec remarques et un au trait avec remarques et justifié au crayon par le graveur . Paul de Champeville , auteur dramatique et hommes de lettres fut également chef de cabinet du secrétaire général au Ministère de l'Intérieur à Paris - Il y eut une première édition de ce texte en 1902 chez P. Chevalier à St Etienne et une représentation au théâtre de St Etienne le 11 Janvier 1902. Trés bel exemplaire dans une reliure parfaitement établie par le maître CH. Meunier . L'Histoire des soieries Bélinac commence à Aurec sur Loire en 1882 . Albert Bélinac le fondateur des soieries est né en 1859 . Il dirige l'entreprise jusqu'en 1907 , date a laquelle il succombe à la fièvre typhoide . Albert Bélinac fut un grand Bibliophile .Son fils reprendra l'entreprise aprés la première guerre ; La Maison Bélinac est toujours présente sur le marché du tissus pour la confection et l'ameublement . Charles Meunier ( 1866/1948) tient une place à part dans la reliure Française . Très vite il deviendra l'un des porte étendards de la reliure au coté de Pétrus Ruban et se lancera dans de nombreuses expérimentations - Il composait des reliures uniques pour chaque ouvrage . En 1900 il refuse de participer a l'exposition universelle et fit sa propre exposition dans son atelier ( Fléty 129) . Charles Meunier fonde en Novembre 1900 avec Léon Berubé , l'oeuvre et l'image , revue mensuelle de l'art contemporain et du livre illustré qui compte trois livraisons jusqu'en Septembre 1902 . En 1904 , elle devient la Revue trimestrielle , Les Arts Bibliographiques , consacrée à la littérature contemporaine , à la technique et aux arts du livre et s'arrêtera en Décembre 1907 .
alb516c2f34e4db911aMiller V.F. Terskaya Oblast: Archaeological Tours. In Russian (ask us if in doubt)/Miller V.F. Terskaya oblast': Arkheologicheskie ekskursii. Short description: In Russian (ask us if in doubt).Materials on the Archaeology of the Caucasus Collected by the Expeditions of the Imperial Moscow Archaeological Society: Issue I. Edited by Countess Uvarova M.: Printing by A.I. Mamontov and Co. 1888. 4 VI II 2 135 p. We have thousands of titles and often several copies of each title may be available. Please feel free to contact us for a detailed description of the copies available. SKUalb516c2f34e4db911a
18571610310056Annapolis : Robert F. Bonsall; Baltimore: M. Curlander; State of Maryland; Michie Company 1857. Hardcover. Good. A massive 188 volume set that shows the evolution of Maryland's judiciary. Contains Reports of the Maryland Appeals Court for: 1851 - 1948 with gaps. Additional volumes 1961 1967 1968. Missing volumes: 76 85 90 91 93 172 175 177 190. This collection contains the Maryland Court of Appeals decisions during the mid-19th century to mid-20th century. Vols. 1-8 1851-1855 and vols. 32 1869-1870 41 1874 56 1880-1881 are the Peterson reprint printed circa 1896. Volumes are bound in tan legal cloth with red and black spine labels. Good binding and covers. Internally clean unmarked pages. Some of the early volumes have restoration work where the paper has torn at the margins. Scattered State of Maryland stamps. The set appears to have been from the Court's library. An important legal reference of the supreme court of Maryland. Opinions are arranged chronologically. Each volume has a table of cases a list of the judges of the court an index of petitions for certiorari a table of statutes cited and an index digest. <br> According to Judge Bond the Court was reformed in the 1851 Maryland Constitution which required a written opinion to be printed. For this reason the Reports begin in 1851. Many of the early Reports deal with slavery and "negroes". A few of the more interesting cases include: Northern Central Company vs. Mary Ann Scholl 1860 where the Court ruled that a railway company was liable for the loss of a slave owner of a slave who escaped into free soil Pennsylvania via a train ticket. Adeline Brown vs. Maryland 1865. Brown was accused of encouraging a negro apprentice to flee their servitude. Slavery was abolished in the 1864 Maryland Constitution. To sidestep this inconvenient liberation an apprenticeship scheme was constructed by Maryland to keep black children in bondage involuntary indenture i.e. slavery by another name. The rationale behind this law was that blacks needed to be taught "the habits of industry" and that this was in the best interest of the child. In practice this meant that black children were forced to be servants without pay to their former masters without the right of their parents to have a say. It gave the Court the ability to make this contractual "binding" of master to apprentice until the age of 21. The legislature in keeping with past practices made it illegal to encourage "apprentices" to abscond. In Coston v. Coston 25 Md. 500 Md. 1866 Leah Coston a recently freed slave attempted to gain her children who were being held in this apprenticeship program by her former master. Maryland's apprenticeship program was appealed to the US Supreme Court in Re Turner where Justice Samuel P. Chase ruled decidedly against it. See Zachary S. Schultz's Coston v. Coston 25 Md. 500 Md. 1866: The Plight of One Family Out of Many Fighting Apprenticeship in Reconstruction Maryland. Other landmark cases include In re Taylor 1877 where the court ruled African Americans didn't have the right to practice law not changed until 1888. In re Etta H. Maddox 1901 the Maryland Court of Appeals ruled Women could not practice law in Maryland. This decision was overturned in 1902 when Maddox became the first female attorney in Maryland. In Murray v. University of Maryland Donald Murray a black Marylander successfully sued for admission to the University of Maryland School of Law based on the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Baltimore NAACP attorneys Charles Hamilton Houston and Thurgood Marshall the future Supreme Court Justice argued for Murray. In Weyler v. Gibson 110 Md. 636 1909 the Court ruled in favor of the state taking private property for the expansion of the Maryland State Penitentiary. The case featured the right of the state to use eminent domain and condemnation against a private property owner. In totality the Reports of the Maryland Court of Appeals show the gradual and hard-fought advancement of the rights of all people in Maryland. The Reports illustrate the evolution of Maryland from a conservative Southern agricultural state where the black population was denied basic freedoms to one that guaranteed equal protection under the law. Maryland served as the beachhead for the Nathan Ross Margold and the NAACP's legal strategy of attacking "separate but equal" in Murray and in Williams v. Zimmerman. <br> This collection represents an important history of Maryland law unlikely to be offered for sale again. This is an extremely large and heavy set that requires additional postage for delivery. Annapolis : Robert F. Bonsall; Baltimore: M. Curlander; State of Maryland; Michie Company hardcover
1522979The Colt Press. 1st Edition. Hardcover. SIGNED / VG-/Good. INSCRIBED TO BRUCE E. TEETS NOTED CONRAD BIBLIOGRAPHER FROM HENRY MILLER N.Y.C. 11/18/41. used hardcover in a dust jacket. the jacket is somewhat worn about the edges and slightly scuffed has only small tears at extremeties. corners slightly bumped but pages and binding are clean straight and tight. there are no marks to the text or other serious flaws except discoloration to front endpaper and interior front cover due to acid in the paper. The Colt Press hardcover
1846652L6Fredonia : McKinstry and Co 1846. Leather. Good. 8" by 5.5". None. An uncommon first-hand account of the convict system in Tasmania written by political prisoner Linus Wilson Miller. The first edition of this work. This work follows Linus W Miller who was one of many Canadians transported to the Tasmanian colonies following the 1837-8 Canadian Rebellions. Miller was a Law student who joined the rebels now known as the Canadian Patriots to rise against the British crown from 1837-1838. He was an American citizen from Stockton New York. Miller was captured at the Niagara Peninsula and sentenced at Niagaron-The-Lake to hang. Following his stint on the Hulks in Britain Miller was a part of the second group transported to Van Diemen's Land and arrived in Hobart on the Canton in 1840. Heavily foxed as usual. Van Diemen's Land was Australia's primary penal colony and over 70000 convicts were transported there. Miller writes of the 'wrongs and sufferings of the Canadian State Prisoners'. He produces a sketch of the Canadian rebellion and his life in Tasmania prior to his 1846 pardon. Errata to the final leaf. Fascinatingly this work covers many years and discusses his time in Canada his transportation to England for trial his time in Tasmania his pardon and then return home. Miller discusses the fate of other political offenders his own narrow escape from the death penalty his trial reflections on arrival and most importantly his time at Van Dieman's Land which was colloquially called 'Van Demon's Land' by the convicts. Few accounts on the Canadian exiles have been published and Miller's evocative writing is one of the most uncommon. In the full calf binding. Externally worn. loss to the boards and spine. Loss to the head of spine which has been replaced with cloth. Prior owner's inscription to the recto of front endpaper. Internally firmly bound. Pages are generally bright with tidemarks to the first few pages. Scattered spotting throughout as is quite common to this work. Good McKinstry and Co hardcover
199691026Alexandria VA: VSP Books 1996. Fifth printing stated. Hardcover. Very good/Good. Peter W. Barnes and Cheryl Shaw Barnes and Susan. Unpaginated 32 pages plus covers. Sewn binding. Paper over boards. Color illustrations. Autographed copy sticker on front of dust jacket. Rare political autographs! Signed on the fep by Peter Barnes J. Dennis Hastert Speaker of the House and Trent Lott Senate Majority Leader. The Squeaker of the House and the Senate Mouse-jority Leader have a big job to do: Miss Tuftmore's second grade class in Moussouri has written Congress with an idea for a law to declare a National Cheese! But in a big country it's not always easy to get everyone to agree on an important issue. Children learn about how are laws are made in Congress when the Squeaker of the House and the Senate Mouse-jority leader must pass a bill to establish a national cheese! Peter and Cheryl Barnes are a husband-and-wife team known for creating educational children's books often featuring animal characters to teach history and government. John Dennis Hastert born January 2 1942 is an American former politician and convicted felon who served as the 51st speaker of the United States House of Representatives from 1999 to 2007. A member of the Republican Party he represented Illinois's 14th congressional district from 1987 to 2007 and was the 6th longest-serving speaker in history and the longest serving Republican. Chester Trent Lott Sr. born October 9 1941 is an American lobbyist lawyer author and politician who represented Mississippi in the United States House of Representatives from 1973 to 1989 and in the United States Senate from 1989 to 2007. Lott served in numerous leadership positions in both chambers of Congress as one of the first of a wave of Republicans winning seats in Southern states that had been solidly Democratic. Later in his career he served twice as Senate Majority Leader and also alternately Senate Minority Leader. VSP Books hardcover
14180Shelton CT: First Edition Library 1983. Limited Edition. Softcover. Fine. Varying sizes; three books in four total volumes housed in publisher's clamshell boxes with applied leather labels as issued. A very fine set with no flaws except for very gentle bumps to some corners of the clamshell boxes; still a lovely gift-quality set. Each of these three books was published in Paris in English and distributed in a discreet or clandestine manner due to being banned in the United States or United Kingdom due to explicit sexual content. All three are very difficult to locate in fine unrestored condition and each commands very high prices at auction or in the trade. As such these facsimiles which are exact replicas almost to the millimeter of the first editions are adequate budget-friendly substitutes or placeholders. <br /> <br /> Though issued as a set we tend to find copies of these titles sold individually and they are often mistakenly broken up by unwitting booksellers or estate liquidators. A pleasingly intact set. First Edition Library unknown
1993259208New York: Privately Printed by W. Thomas Taylor. The Anglers' Club of New York 1993. First edition number 34 of 48 copies SIGNED by Francis Patricia Miller Sherwood Nick Lyons & Tom Taylor with a leaf of original typescript with annotations tipped in at back. Frontispiece portrait from photograph by Hermann Kessler. Set in Minion type and printed on Arches mouldmade paper169 3 pp. 1 vols. 8vo. Full dark blue morocco grey spine label titled in silver. As new in cloth folding box. First edition number 34 of 48 copies SIGNED by Francis Patricia Miller Sherwood Nick Lyons & Tom Taylor with a leaf of original typescript with annotations tipped in at back. Frontispiece portrait from photograph by Hermann Kessler. Set in Minion type and printed on Arches mouldmade paper169 3 pp. 1 vols. 8vo. Deluxe Edition One of 48 copies. Superbly produced posthumous volume in tribute to Alfred Miller best known through his pseudonym Sparse Grey Hackle. An outstanding selection of his writings with a biographical essay by Francis and appreciations by his daughter and Nick Lyons.<br/><br/>Rare on the market in this state a clothbound edition of 300 was also produced. Privately Printed [by W. Thomas Taylor]. The Anglers' Club of New York unknown books
1970404886Albuquerque NM: Loujon Press 1970. A fine copy the original subscriber's copy and virtually untouched since publication a few areas of trivial wear to box a few of the prints with some soft handling creases not affecting image. Complete suite: printed book in original comb binding and decorative paper wrapper in sunken panel of wooden box with 12 color prints reproducing Miller's calligraphic watercolors 17 x 22 inches. Original subscriber's brass name plaque on sliding box cover. One of 385 copies of "Edition G" signed by Miller on the colophon in the text volume. Loujon press issued 7 deluxe editions of the suite and note that "Unfortunately because of the extra spur-of-the-moment costly format changes in the production's not-from-a-blueprint progressive creation plus press breakdowns a ceiling collapse that tattered stacks of printed pages & a mountain of wind gust that blew in windows next day sprinkling glass particles everywhere just prior to insurance coverage source exhaustion of short term loans at high interest plus a 20 percent of gross and inability to hire skilled help imprisoned the entire production-design editing book printing & page collation the handcrafting in entirety of portfolio boxes from raw uncut wood to what is seen here in completion very few of them exact duplicates even in any one edition's labeled individual classification-inside the confines of 18-hour workdays 7 a week by only two workers Louise Gypsy Lou & Jon Webb the editors necessitating see the beginning this sentence instead of 999 copies a reduction in total publication of the 7 editions to 699 books & 699 portfolios with quantity changes in 5 of the 7 editions." <br/><br/> Loujon Press unknown books
1846WRCAM20367Fredonia N.Y. 1846. xi1378pp. Modern three-quarter calf and marbled boards. Faded library stamp on titlepage. Foxing throughout. About very good. Miller an American citizen who participated in the Canadian rebellion of 1837-38 was transported to the penal colonies in Van Dieman's Land and New South Wales. He was one of nine political exiles who published accounts of their experiences. His is a vivid firsthand narrative of the Rebellion; his trial conviction and transportation; life in the penal colony; and subsequent pardon and return home. This is one of the rarest of the Canadian exile narratives of interest for both its Australian and North American connections. FERGUSON 4349. HOWES M613. SABIN 49037. COHEN 4305. LANDE 1980. TPL 2790. STORY p.699. hardcover books
181234742New York: various 1812. Ten sermons bound in contemporary half sheep and marbled boards rubbed gum label at spine base. Rubberstamp on blank front pastedown. Manuscript table of contents. Each sermon as follows:<br/><br/> 1. A SERMON PREACHED IN NEW-YORK JULY 4TH 1793. BEING THE ANNIVERSARY OF THE INDEPENDENCE OF AMERICA: AT THE REQUEST OF THE TAMMANY SOCIETY OR COLUMBIAN ORDER. BY.ONE OF THE MINISTERS OF THE UNITED PRESBYTERIAN CHURCHES IN THE CITY OF NEW-YORK. New York: Greenleaf. 1793. 38 2 blanks pp. Very Good. On the final blank is Miller's written notes. The Tammany Society should "stand as guardians over those inestimable rights and privileges which have been so dearly purchased." Christianity teaches the equality of all. Slavery will "be forever banished from a nation" which regards everyone "as subject to the same great laws and amenable to the same awful tribunal in the end." <br/>Evans 25823. <br/> 2. A DISCOURSE DELIVERED IN THE NEW PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH NEW-YORK: BEFORE THE GRAND LODGE OF THE STATE OF NEW-YORK AND THE BRETHREN OF THAT FRATERNITY ASSEMBLED IN GENERAL COMMUNICATION ON THE FESTIVAL OF ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST JUNE 24TH 1795. New York: Childs. 1795. 32pp. Light to moderate foxing Good. Verso of title page has Miller's notes laid in explaining another of his discourses should have been inserted. His Discourse says Masonic principles "are such as the blessed Redeemer perpetually dropped from his hallowed lips." <br/>Evans 29081.<br/> 3. A SERMON DELIVERED FEBRUARY 5 1799; RECOMMENDED BY THE CLERGY OF THE CITY OF NEW-YORK TO BE OBSERVED AS A DAY OF THANKSGIVING HUMILIATION AND PRAYER ON ACCOUNT OF THE REMOVAL OF A MALIGNANT AND MORTAL DISEASE WHICH HAD PREVAILED IN THE CITY SOME TIME BEFORE. New York: Forman. 1799. 36pp scattered foxing. Good. With a chart showing 2082 deaths listed by religions including eleven Jews; also listing forty-three Negroes. <br/>Evans 35821. Not in Austin.<br/> 4. A SERMON DELIVERED MAY 9 1798 RECOMMENDED BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES TO BE OBSERVED AS A DAY OF GENERAL HUMILIATION FASTING AND PRAYER. New-York: Swords. 1798. 46 2 blanks pp. Very Good. The "events in Europe" are characterized by atheism profaneness a "selfish and mercenary spirit." Miller warns against the "curse" of "European connections."<br/>Evans 34109.<br/> 5. A SERMON DELIVERED DECEMBER 29 1799; OCCASIONED BY THE DEATH OF GENERAL GEORGE WASHINGTON LATE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES AND COMMANDER IN CHIEF OF THE AMERICAN ARMIES. New York: Swords. 1800. 39 1 blank pp with the half title. Light toning Very Good. Evidently Miller's sermon was similar to one delivered by Dr. Erskine of Edinburgh because an 'Advertisement' on the verso of the title page denies that "such coincidence" was the result of plagiarism. <br/>Evans 37964. Stillwell 171a.<br/> 6. A SERMON DELIVERED BEFORE THE NEW-YORK MISSIONARY SOCIETY. APRIL 6TH 1802. TO WHICH ARE ADDED THE ANNUAL REPORT OF THE DIRECTORS AND OTHER PAPERS RELATING TO AMERICAN MISSIONS. New York: Swords. 1802. 81 3 blanks pp. Lightly foxed else Very Good.<br/>AI 2660 5.<br/> 7. THE GUILT FOLLY AND SOURCES OF SUICIDE: TWO DISCOURSES PREACHED IN THE CITY OF NEW-YORK FEBRUARY 1805. New York: Swords. 1805. 72pp with the half title. Mild foxing Very Good.<br/>AI 8903 4.<br/> 8. A SERMON PREACHED MARCH 13TH 1808 FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE SOCIETY INSTITUTED IN THE CITY OF NEW-YORK FOR THE RELIEF OF POOR WIDOWS WITH SMALL CHILDREN. New York: Hopkins and Seymour. 1808. 31 1 blank pp. Very Good.<br/>AI 15610 3. <br/> 9. THE ADDRESS INTRODUCTORY TO THE ORDINATION SERVICE AND THE CHARGE TO THE MINISTER. Pages 19-38 comprising Miller's Address in a pamphlet on Reverend Gardiner Spring's ordination AI 20738. With Miller's handwritten notes. <br/> 10. THE DUTY OF THE CHURCH TO TAKE MEASURES FOR PROVIDING AN ABLE AND FAITHFUL MINISTRY: A SERMON DELIVERED AT PRINCETON AUGUST 12 1812 AT THE INAUGURATION OF THE REV. ARCHIBALD ALEXANDER D.D. AS PROFESSOR OF DIDACTIC AND POLEMIC THEOLOGY IN THE THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY OF THE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. Pages 5-54 comprising Miller's remarks in a pamphlet comprising his and other Addresses on the occasion. See American Imprints 26080. various unknown books
1949204217New York: The Viking Press 1949. First edition. Mild dampstain affecting lower edge especially on rear slight shelf wear still an unusually nice copy in an unfaded dust jacket with a pair of small closed tears to the front loght rubbing to the extremities and evidence of the aforementioned dampstain to the lower rear panel. A much nicer copy than it sounds. 8vo 139pp; orange cloth. The first printing with the printer identified and "March 1949" on the copyright page; dust jacket with price of $2.50 on the front flap and photo of Miller on the rear flap. While not a rare book -- there are at any given given moment several dozen copies available it is a difficult book to find in top condition. This does not quite fit that particular bill but despite its stated flaws it is a handsome copy and a good value. The Viking Press unknown
19763116329Santa Barbara: Capra Press. Fine with no dust jacket. 1976. First Edition; First Printing. Leather in Slipcase. 0884960501 . SIGNED lettered edition. Copy "I" of 26 with an original b&w drawing by Henry Miller bound-in opposite title page. Fine in black leather binding in publisher's unprinted acetate protectve wrapper enclosed in plain orange cloth slipcase. Couple trivial spots of rubbing at edges of slipcase. ; 6 1/2" x 9 1/2"; 138 pages . Capra Press. hardcover