726 résultats
201264996London: Jonathan Cape 2012. First edition. 375 pp. Fine in fine dust jacket. London: Jonathan Cape unknown books
200269537London: Jonathan Cape 2002. First edition. 279 pp. Pages lightly toned cheap paper else fine in fine dust jacket. London: Jonathan Cape unknown books
199773396London: Jonathan Cape 1997. First edition. 214 pp. Pages toned cheap paper else very near fine in like dust jacket. London: Jonathan Cape unknown books
199771841London: Jonathan Cape 1997. First trade paperback printing. 214 pp. Pages toned else near fine in glossy illustrated wrappers. SIGNED by Warner on the title page. London: Jonathan Cape paperback books
1937229412New York 1937. unbound. 1 page 11 x 7.25 inches New York June 11 1937. In this letter Warner turns down a request in full: "Thanks for your letter of the 8th inst. I regret exceedingly that there is nothing I can do for you in this direction at this time." Horizontal folds; very good condition.<br/><br/> Polish-born American film executive and pioneer who was one of the founders of Warner Brothers Pictures with brothers Harry Sam and Jack. He served as the studio's treasurer until 1956. Albert was never President of Warner Brothers Pictures yet he often represented himself in this manner when conducting business on behalf of his brothers and the studio.<br/><br/> unknown books
200133620Philadelphia: The Athenaeum of Philadelphia 2001. Softcover. VG. Blue illus. wraps. 86 pp. 44 bw plates. Issued in conjunction with a 2001-2002 exhibition of architecture-related pieces from the collection of Robert L. Raley. The annotated and illustrated catalogue addresses 44 pieces and includes architectural drawings by Robert Adam Ottavio Bertotti Scamozzi William Dugdale John Ferrar Roland Freart William Gilpin John Haviland Thomas Sheraton Abraham Swan and many others. The Athenaeum of Philadelphia unknown books
18949268New York/boston: Thomas Y. Crowell & Co. Very Good. 1894. Hardcover. blue cloth; 430 pgs. Plus ads; rear hinge separated with book starting to come out of the case; front hinge is sound; early owner's name in ink: Nelson D. Miller '00 Stanford Univ. Calif.; Third Edition . Thomas Y. Crowell & Co. hardcover books
19312289154Grosset & Dunlap 1931. Hard Cover. Near Fine/Near Fine. King Ruth. Jacket edges very lightly rubbed. Top corner of front board lightly bumped pencil name on front endpaper. 1931 Hard Cover. 295 pp. Illustrated by Ruth King. This story of a forsaken house a lost diary a sack of gold dust lying hidden in an abandoned mine keeps readers tense with excitement. Grosset & Dunlap hardcover books
1881013886New York: Robert Carter and Brothers 1881. Cloth. A Good Copy. 16mo - over 5¾" - 6¾" tall. 112p. The author here deals with "worldly amusements" beginning with music dancing theatre and gambling. She warns of the young girl who attends the theatre just one time then becomes addicted and attends again and again. There she sees actors in brilliant costumes without realizing they often are of a terrible moral character. Imagine a man she does not know from the seat behind her peering over her shoulder to "look at the program" on in an opera men actually touch a woman. All of these terrible violations trouble the writer of this description of the book but alas the book must be offered if only to prevent young men and young girls discovering the terrible allure of "worldly amusements."--It would appear that the church members are tired of a drab life and sometimes seek the vain attractions of the world. It is likely there song would be "Tempted and Tired" rather than the standard gospel song tear on p. 26-27 not affecting text. Robert Carter and Brothers unknown books
1872007507New York: Robert Carter and Brothers 1872. 12mo. Half-title with ads on the verso 339 10pp. publisher's ads. Author of sentimental juvenile novels. Bound in brown cloth stamped along the edges in blind spine lettered and decorated in gilt lacks the front free endpaper. A stain on the lower portion of p.121 slightly marks adjoining pages. Robert Carter and Brothers unknown books
185923701859. WARNER Anna Bartlett. HARD MAPLE. With Vignettes. Boston: Shepard Clark & Brown 1859. 16mo. blue cloth stamped in gilt. First Edition. BAL 21052. Good covers right hinges tight foxing text. $50.00. <br/><br/> hardcover books
18685792New York: Harper & Brothers 1868. First edition. Didactic fiction for juveniles on gardening. Quite charming. 17 cm; 268 6 pages. Wood engraved floral illustrations in text. Bound in green cloth decorated in gilt on spine. Very good. Harper & Brothers hardcover books
1908133549Boston: Little 1908. Octavo inserted frontispiece with illustration by Alice Barber Stephens original pictorial light blue-gray cloth stamped in orange white black and gold. First edition. A novel. Smith American Fiction 1901-1925 W-129. Tiny stain to front cover cloth just a bit rubbed at spine ends and corner tips a very good copy. #133549 Little unknown books
1905814901905. WARNER Anne. THE REJUVENATION OF AUNT MARY. With four full-page illustrations. Boston: Little Brown and Company 1905. First edition. 8vo. salmon pictorial cloth; viii 323pp. ads. Minimal rubbing at boards else very good. unknown books
1904814911904. WARNER Anne. SUSAN CLEGG AND HER FRIEND MRS. LATHROP. Boston: Little Brown 1904. First edition. Olive pictorial cloth. A fine sharp copy in a dust jacket split at folds separated also at spine but neatly taped on verso and otherwise quite fresh. Rare in the jacket. unknown books
1904133552Boston: Little 1904. Octavo inserted frontispiece with illustration by W. J. Enright original pictorial olive green cloth stamped in black white and brown binding design by Amy Sacker. First edition. The first collection of the author's very popular Susan Clegg stories. Smith American Fiction 1901-1925 W-137. A very good copy. #133552 Little unknown books
1906133551Boston: Little 1906. Octavo inserted frontispiece with illustration by Decorative Designers original pictorial reddish-brown cloth stamped in orange gray and green binding designed by Decorative Designers. First edition. The second collection of the author's very popular Susan Clegg stories. Smith American Fiction 1901-1925 W-139. A very good copy. #133551 Little unknown books
191410525Boston: Little Brown & Co. Very Good. 1914. Hardcover. ex-lib; Good . Little Brown & Co. hardcover books
1908133550Boston: Small 1908. Octavo four inserted plates with illustrations one in color by Paul K. M. Thomas title page printed in lavender and light green text printed in lavender and black throughout original pictorial lavender cloth stamped in purple black and gold t.e.g. other edges untrimmed decorated endpapers. First edition. A short story with strongly allegorical aspects about a woman and a panther Destiny etc. A good example of American Edwardian book design with its art nouveau aesthetic. Smith American Fiction 1901-1925 W-130. Mild bumps to front corner tips else a fine copy. A very nice copy of a pretty book. #133550 Small unknown books
1905404611905. WARNER Anne. THE REJUVENATION OF AUNT MARY. Boston: Little Brown and Co. 1905. Small 8vo pictorial brown cloth stamped in green black & white. Lengthy signed presentation from Warner on three front pages about the origin of the book dated July 5 1906- quite interesting!! Very Good bookplate on front pastedown; some wear & soil; hinges cracked but still tight. $175.00. <br/><br/> hardcover books
162888hardcover. Foreward by Alan Lomax. Illustrated with numerous b/w photographs. 501pp. Small thick oblong 4to red cloth d.w. Syracuse UP 1984. First edition. A fine copy in a very good dust wrapper.<br/><br/> unknown books
198285187University Park:: Pennsylvania State University Press. Near Fine in Near Fine dust jacket. 1982. Hardcover. 027100326X . First edition. Near fine in a near fine dust jacket. . Pennsylvania State University Press, hardcover books
1955001003Houston: The Houston Civil War Round Table 1955. First Edition. Folded Leaves. Very Good. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. Folder leaves in wrapper 10 leaves. In black lettered brown paper wrappers. Folded once. The Houston Civil War Round Table unknown books
1996291648Spokane.: The Arthur H. Clark Company for the Sonoma Valley Historical Society. 1996. Blue cloth gilt spine title. Near fine in a fine dust jacket. 26x18.5 cm. Heavy book may require extra shipping. weight: 3.1 lb. The Arthur H. Clark Company for the Sonoma Valley Historical Society. hardcover books
30750<p>1817 Leading Philadelphia bookseller-publisher and cartographer lauds "Western Emigration"</p><p>quarto one page plus stamp-less address leaf in very good legible condition.</p><p> Happily responding to Guilford's offer of honorary membership in the Society: </p><p> "… Being convinced that a very imperfect knowledge is generally possessed by persons on the Seaboard Section of our country in relation to their trans-mountain brethren and of their country I rejoiced to find an association instituted for the purpose of defusing information of the fairest portion of our favored land and I cannot hesitate to believe but that great facilities will be derived by the enterprising emigrant to our shores who is seeking a peaceful asylum for himself and a secure and happy establishment for his posterity … it will give me pleasure to add any feeble assistance I can give in promoting the objects of its institution…"</p><p> Warner was a young Quaker bookseller and publisher of Philadelphia – he also had bookshops in Charleston and Richmond Virginia the latter managed by John Grigg later founder of the Lippincott firm. As publisher Warner's notable imprints included an 1818 edition of the Federalist Papers and in 1820 possibly the earliest separately issued folding map of the United States to extend from the Atlantic to the Pacific coast based upon cartographer John Melish's classic 1819 wall map as well as the "western detail" maps of Lewis and Clark Humboldt and Pike. As such it "galvanized geographic ideas" about "tenuously explored lands beyond the Rocky Mountains."</p><p> The letter makes clear Warner's abiding interest in American lands to the west – and sympathy for the courageous Emigrants who were then flowing westward. Perhaps Warner shared this interest with Melish in a friendship unrecorded by history. Two years later Melish published 'Information and Advice to Emigrants to the United States and from the Eastern to the Western States." Their sympathies were controversial at the time especially in Connecticut whose retained "Western Reserve" lands extending across the northern part of present day Ohio were the center of emigration. In 1817 residents of Connecticut "highly wrought up over the emigration problem" exerted "every influence … to stem the ever growing outward tide of fortune seekers" lured by "glowing descriptions of land speculators" who glossed over the dangers of floods and storms and the fraudsters preying upon the innocence of the newcomers. </p><p> The Western Emigration Society led by Nathan Guilford later to be hailed as "father" of the Ohio public school system was in fact formed to provide both information and philanthropic support to emigrants though Connecticut newspapers "exposed" the organization for promoting a "deplorable species of madness" in "unhealthy regions where men worked themselves into untimely graves" unaware of the "burdensome privations of a land without churches schools and roads."</p> Guilford was indeed a very effective lobbyist for emigration to the West. The same month that he wrote Warner he must have offered "honorary membership" to dozens of other Eastern notables including then General Andrew Jackson. Those letters and their congenial replies appear in the Ohio Historical Society and other archival collections. Benjamin Warner's response may have been one of the most interesting. Warner died prematurely three years later at the age of 35. books