67 166 résultats
1986499455Santa Barbara: Black Sparrow Press 1986. Hardcover. Fine/Fine. First edition. Octavo. 327pp. Illustrated. Quarter cloth and decorated paper-covered boards. Fine copy in fine publisher's unprinted acetate dust jacket. Copy letter Z of 26 lettered copies handbound in boards by Earle Gray and signed by Paul Bowles and Jeffrey Miller. Black Sparrow Press hardcover
198631662Santa Barbara: Black Sparrow Press 1986. First edition. `. Cloth and boards acetate jacket near fine. 122/200 numbered and signed copies. Black Sparrow Press unknown
187413888Providence RI: Lithographed by the Graphic Company N.Y. 1874. 1874. Good. - Small oblong quarto 9-3/4 inches high by 11-1/4 inches wide dark blue cloth titled in gilt with a vignette in gilt & decorations in black on the front cover. The binding is rubbed & bumped with the cloth chipped along the edges. There are small pieces out of the head & tail of the spine. Title & 14 leaves of heavy stock lithographed on 1 side only with brief text on each leaf surrounded by caricatures by Walter Francis Brown. There is foxing throughout & the front edges of the front endpaper & flyleaf are slightly chipped. Good. <p>First edition.<p>Painter and illustrator Walter Francis Brown 1853-1929 was born in Providence Rhode Island. He was an illustrator for Charles Miller's "Roger Williams" and for "A Tramp Abroad" by Mark Twain. Providence, RI: Lithographed by the Graphic Company, N.Y., 1874. hardcover
185061350London: Ward & Lock 158 Fleet Street 1850. First edition was 1843. Wioth 27 black and white illustrations by "Phiz". 400 pp. 1 vols. 8vo. Bound in three quarter red polished calf gilt spine edges marbled. Browne Hablot. First edition was 1843. Wioth 27 black and white illustrations by "Phiz". 400 pp. 1 vols. 8vo. not in Wolff. not in Wolff <br/><br/> Ward & Lock, 158, Fleet Street unknown
1969618511Tuscon Arizona: Loujon Press 1969. Softcover. Very Good. No. 4/5 double issue softcover issue. Tall octavo. 191pp. Unprinted wrappers with integral dust jacket tipped-on inside the front cover printed on several paper stocks. Jacket and early exposed foredges foxed and wrappers soiled middle 20 or so pages on tan stock with light but unobtrusive staining sound and near very good. Without the fragile outer jacket and sealed flowers but we are unsure if they were issued with the softcover edition. Contributions by William Wantling Charles Bukowski Diane Di Prima Denise Levertov Lawrence Durrell Michael Hamburger Douglas Blazek d. a. levy Thomas Merton Robert Bly Jackson Mac Low Jean Cocteau and many others. Also prints an "Homage to Kenneth Patchen" with contributions by Bro. Antoninus Allen Ginsberg Hugh MacDiarmid Lawrence Ferlinghetti Henry Miller and others. A cool magazine "Handset Mostly & Hand Bound At Loujon's Desert Workshop Printery Arizona U.S.A. . Loujon Press unknown
14534Toronto: The Ryerson Press 1935. First edition. Octavo red cloth pp. 136. With Miller's signed presentation inscription to Mr. and Mrs. George Wardle on the front free endpaper and signed by Miller on the half title. Foxing to endpapers and page edges else covers bright in unprinted glassine wrapper chipped at the edges. Toronto: The Ryerson Press, (1935). First edition. hardcover
1956588905Ranches of Taos New Mexico: The Naked Ear / Motive Book Shop 1956. Softcover. Very Good. First edition. 24mo. 12mo. Illustrated with drawings and a photograph. Stapled wrappers illustrated with a detail from a Henry Miller painting. Little magazine four of the poems are by Robert Creeley. Rear cover is an ad for Indian Tales by Jaime De Angulo with blurbs by Crews Marianne Moore and William Carlos Williams. First issue of a little magazine that lasted until 1959. Scarce. The Naked Ear / (Motive Book Shop?) unknown
1978352905New York: The Studio Museum in Harlem 1978. First edition. Illustrated in color and black and white. 4to oblong small quatro. Orange pictorial wrappers black titles on front and along spine toning to spine; else a near fine copy. First edition. Illustrated in color and black and white. 4to oblong small quatro. Catalog for the exhibition at The Studio Museum in Harlem April 9th - July 2nd 1978. The Studio Museum in Harlem unknown
1928588537Philadelphia: The American Academy of Political and Social Science 1928. Hardcover. Very Good. Tall octavo. 359pp. Red cloth boards with gilt spine lettering with neat ink owner name and initials. Very good or better with wear to the edges some light bumping and a bit of fraying at the spine ends. A full issue of The Annals of The American Academy of Political and Social Science devoted to The American Negro. Contributors include W.E.B. Du Bois "Race Relations in the United States" E. Franklin Frazier "The Negro Family" James Weldon Johnson "Legal Aspects of the Negro Problem" Horace Mann Bond Kelly Miller Walter White Alain Locke Monroe Work Charles S. Johnson and others. Reprinted on a couple of occasions the first edition is scarce. The American Academy of Political and Social Science hardcover
1928429813Philadelphia: The American Academy of Political and Social Science 1928. Softcover. Very Good. Tall octavo. 359pp. Printed gray wrappers. Small tears and chips on first couple of leaves modest tidemark on spine very good or better. A full issue of The Annals of The American Academy of Political and Social Science devoted to the American Negro. Contributors include W.E.B. DuBois "Relations in the United States" E. Franklin Frazier "The Negro Family" James Weldon Johnson "Legal Aspects of the Negro Problem" Horace Mann Bond Kelly Miller Walter White Alain Locke Monroe Work Charles S. Johnson and others. Reprinted on a couple of occasions the first edition is scarce. The American Academy of Political and Social Science unknown
1918005718Paris: La Vie Parisienne 1918. First Edition . Illustrated Wraps. Very Good. 13.75" x 10.5. Chéri Hérouard Georges Léonnec Suzanne Meunier Carlegle others uncredited. . Paris: La Vie Parisienne 1918. Illustrations - ephemera from an unassembled issue of March 23 1918 of La Vie Parisienne from its Golden Age by some of the forty or fifty great illustration artists who gained famed in large part for their work in that famed Society magazine. 8 pages remaining here from a partly stapled but not fully assembled original copy of the issue; one seam is even unopened. The included art is by Chéri Hérouard Georges Léonnec Suzanne Meunier Carlegle and others uncredited. Text in French. Illustrated wraps in the very large folio size 13.75" x 10.5" 8 glossy pages here of an original 19. As remaining ephemera these pages are in Very Good condition and more than suitable for framing or other applications; a touch of crinkle some tiny seam chips and short closed edge cuts none of which show up well in the scans which see. The two-page spreads - of a folio size publication - are too large to be completely included on even a large-format scanner but you will get the idea. The conceits of Art Nouveau and Art Deco evolving one to the other at the time as those could be manifested through depiction of the wonders of French women may never have been more stunning than they were through the remarkable sensibilities of the coterie of artists who regularly contributed to La Vie Parisienne. These pages are from an unassembled original - and of course first and only edition - example of that unique publication. As such extraordinarily hard to replace whether in full issues or as surviving frame-able ephemera as here. l-eph2 <br/> <br/> La Vie Parisienne paperback
18252310Buda: Typis Regiae Literarum Universitatis Hungaricae 1825. In later paper. In very nice conditon old collection stamp on the title page. In later paper. 255 p. with the portrait of Peter Kubinyi. First editon. The first printed catalogue of the Hungarian National Museum's collection. First editon. Edited by Miller Jakab Ferdinánd 1749–1823 the first director of the museum. Very rare. Typis Regiae Literarum Universitatis Hungaricae unknown
18838583New York: Chautauqua Press 1883. First Edition. Original wraps. Very Good. 3 1/4 X 5 Inches. "The most American thing in America." - President Theodore Roosevelt on Chautauquas<br /> <br /> Four early course offering and yearly updates from the Chautauqua Literary and Scientific Circle of Chautauqua Lake New York. The original Chautauqua meetings were the brainchild of John Heyl Vincent a Methodist minister and Lewis Miller a businessman who imagined a place where women and men could come to exchange ideas and learn of cultural advancements around the world. Founded in 1878 these four early course offerings date from 1883 to 1889. The 1885 issue is accompanied by an original illustrated postcard from the organization. <br /> <br /> The Chautauqua Literary and Scientific Circle was an important step in the advancement of women in American society. Although only a baby step the courses offered and the idea behind the movement was in part to open up education to women especially rural women in America. With a correspondence learning platform Chautauqua's brought education into the home which we know is the domain of the woman. I believe the University of Phoenix and the TED Talks owe a royalty to the CLSC! NOTE: 2 of these have are unrepresented on OCLC and a population of only SIX of the other two - see notes on reverse. VERY SCARCE IN COMMERCE.<br /> <br /> Some light wear to spines and edges. Chautauqua Press unknown
1771ST19567-172London: Printed for the Author; And Sold by John and Francis Rivington et al 1771. Sixth Edition. 270 x 200 mm. 10 1/2 x 8". 464 leaves. <br/> Early half calf over marbled boards skillfully rebacked in the 19th century with sheep raised bands spine with blind-tooled flowers gilt lettering hinges neatly reinforced. With 13 total illustrations including the engraved frontispiece and 12 folding plates depicting plants and agricultural structures. Spine with faint remnants of labels in top and bottom panels occasional marginal notations in pencil in a neat 19th century hand. Henrey 1123; ESTC T59414. Light general wear to the binding but everything sound and agreeable externally. A few spots of no consequence internally with the text generally clean and pleasing and the plates quite fresh. A pleasing copy.<br/> <br/> This is an influential work by the author DNB calls "the most distinguished and influential British gardener of the eighteenth century." A contemporary of Linnaeus and Sir Hans Sloane Philip Miller 1691-1771 was a gardener horticulturalist and Fellow of the Royal Society. Following the immense success of his "Gardeners Dictionary" in 1732 Miller released an abridged version three years later. The abridgment proved to be as popular as the original version. Swedish naturalist Pehr Kalm wrote in 1753 that "I have asked several of the greatest and best horticulturists both in England and America what author and what book they had found and believed to be the best in horticulture. . . . They have all answered with one mouth that Miller’s 'Gardener’s Dictionary' either in folio or the abstract in 8vo. i.e. the abridgment was the best of all and that when one has it no other book is afterwards required." Our sixth edition "enlarged" from the version discussed by Kalm was the final edition published during Miller’s lifetime. Printed for the Author; And Sold by John and Francis Rivington [et al] unknown
1992SCULPTURE300617Auch, Tristram / Editions ARPAP / Galerie Marwan Hoss, 1992, 25 x 35,5, 303 pages sous cartonnage éditeur et jaquette illustrés. Traduction de l'anglais par Claude Minière et Margaret Tunstill. Textes de Rémy de Gourmont, Mady Ménier et Francine Koslow Miller. Sculptures photographiées par Christian Roger.
193749931London: Golden Cockerel Press 1937. First "unlimited" edition. 8vo. 108 2 pp. Publisher's cream cloth gilt lettered to the spine top edge gilt orange printed dust jacket. Frontispiece and five plates. Tanning to the jacket spine with a little edge wear some mild darkening to the cloth very good overall. London: Golden Cockerel Press unknown
1961H37614Minneapolis: Henry Miller Literary Society 1961. Very good. 5 items all single sheets of various dimensions. 1 "As the Grass Grows" - Herbert Read's review of "Big Sur and the Oranges of Hieronymous Bosch" that originally appeared in the New Statesman 29 March 1958. 9 x 6.25 inches. 2 1961 collection of articles on "Tropic of Cancer" and censorship arranged on doublesided broadsheet 13 x 8.5 inches on yellow paper with letters to the editor and cartoon from Honolulu Sunday Advertiser and accompanying article "Is 'Tropic' Art or Dirt" Herb Caen and others in the San Francisco Chronicle on Miller Milwaukee Journal article by Gerald Kloss on upcoming Milwaukee court test of "Tropic" review of Canadian production of "The Alcoholic Verteran with the Washboard Cranium" and other material. 3 1960 reproduction of pagae from the Heinemann catalogue advertising The Henry Miller Reader edited by Lawrence Durrell 8 x 5 inches. 4 Reprint of A. L. Milgram's "Henry Miller and Friends" which appeared in Select Magazine September 1961. 11 x 8.5 inches doublesided very good some tanning. Has reproduction of photos of Thomas Moore and Edward Schwartz who ran the Henry Miller Literary Society in Minneapolis. 5 "Of Freedom and Henry Miller" by John Wilcock from the Village Voice April 6 1961. 13 x 4.5 inches single sided sheet. All uncommon in the trade rare Milleriana! Henry Miller Literary Society unknown
1947H37609Big Sur 1947. Very good. Actually 3 copies: one has "Now $175.00" in bold red with an arrow. 12 x 9" doublesided all very good with light wear -- corner bumping one with a very short tear to top edge . reprinting the review by Bufano that appeared in the June-July 1947 issue of What's Doing. Probably issued by Miller himself but we're unsure. The book was published in Berkeley in 1947 in a limited edition that was entirely screen printed. It has asking prices of upwards of $1500 these days. This flyer is rare in the trade and unclear if there are any copies at all in institutions except perhaps in the Philip Peatman collection. Priced for the three. unknown
1961H37601Minneapolis: Henry Miller Literary Society 1961. Very good. 14 x 9.75 inches on pale blue paper. Reprints articles and editorials from Minneapolis newspapers on the censorship of Tropic of Cancer along with an editorial from The Nation by Terry Southern reminding his readers that there are plenty of Miller's works that were still banned. Uncommon; OCLC cannot locate any copies in institutions. Henry Miller Literary Society unknown
19743210Grosset & Dunlap 1974. Hardcover. Very Good/Very Good. Inscribed to Henry Miller using a nickname from HM's friend Bob Snyder. <br/><br/> Grosset & Dunlap hardcover
19693254Prague 1969. Hardcover. Very Good/Very Good. Inscribed to Henry Miller. With Property of Henry Miller written in HM's hand above the inscription. Black and white photographs of Prague. <br/><br/> hardcover
1961H37602Minneapolis: Henry Miller Literary Society 1961. Wraps. Fine. 11.75 x 8.5 inches 4 pp fine. With page-long letter from Miller to "Eddie Schwartz and all my good friends in the Society" dated December 1 1961 reporting on his doings in Europe. With articles by Schwartz and Thomas H. Moore including "Book Burners Harass Stores Selling 'Tropic of Cancer" recommended stories squibs relating to Miller and his friends new Miller items on the market etc. The Newsletter lasted 13 issues from 1958 to 1964 all are rare in the trade. OCLC lists approximately 8 holdings for the run. Henry Miller Literary Society unknown
1960H37603Minneapolis: Henry Miller Literary Society 1960. Wraps. Very good. 12 x 8.5inches 4 pp very good. With 1 1/2 page letter from Miller to Alfred Perles with copy for "Eddie Schwartz" written from Paris enroute to Switzerland October 23 1960 mainly on German culture and politics. Most of the rest of this newsletter are short articles and squibs on Miller-related topics. The Newsletter lasted 13 issues from 1958 to 1964 all are rare in the trade. OCLC lists approximately 8 holdings for the run. Henry Miller Literary Society unknown
1961H37611Minneapolis: Henry Miller Literary Society 1961. Wraps. Very good. 12 x 8.5 inches 4 pp very good. With 1-page letter from Miller to Schwartz from Cannes with reflections on his journeys through Italy and Germany. Most of the rest of this newsletter are short articles and squibs on Miller-related topics including reportage of the death of Blaise Cendrars Karl Shapiro hurt in crash salture in Newsweek to Frances Steloff of Gotham Bookmart list of newly published Miller items illness of Kenneth Patchen etc. The Newsletter lasted 13 issues from 1958 to 1964 all are rare in the trade. OCLC lists approximately 8 holdings for the run. Henry Miller Literary Society unknown
3331Soft cover. Fine. Complete run of seven issues published in the Netherlands by Henk van Gelre. Includes original pieces by Henry Miller as well as words about him. Illustrated with photographs. In excellent condition. <br/><br/> paperback