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1983WRCLIT51275Richardson TX.: UT at Dallas 1983. Whole numbers one through thirteen. Quarto. Pictorial self-wrappers and pictorial wrappers. Cheap paper of early newsprint issues tanned as usual ink note on one wrapper else very good to fine. Edited by Rainer Schulte et al. The first number includes a retrospective article on four decades of New Directions and an interview with Gregory Rabassa setting the tone of the continuing significant attention to the mechanics of translations and publication and interviews with or articles by translators in subsequent issues. UT at Dallas unknown books
185345547NY:: Leonard Scott & Co. Very Good. 1853. Hardcover. American Edition. Quarto half-bound in light brown calf leather marbled boards gilt lettering and raised bands along spine marbled endpapers double columned. Previous owner's name and date 1854 in pencil on front free endpaper moderate shelf wear occasional moderate foxing throughout text block else very good. Binding is solid. ; 330 pages . Leonard Scott & Co., hardcover books
185445549NY:: Leonard Scott & Co. Very Good. 1854. Hardcover. American Edition. Quarto half-bound in light brown calf leather marbled boards gilt lettering and raised bands along spine marbled endpapers double columned. Moderate shelf wear occasional moderate foxing throughout text block else very good. Binding is solid. ; 338 pages . Leonard Scott & Co., hardcover books
185445550NY:: Leonard Scott & Co. Very Good. 1854. Hardcover. American Edition. Quarto half-bound in light brown calf leather marbled boards gilt lettering and raised bands along spine marbled endpapers double columned. Moderate shelf wear occasional moderate foxing throughout text block else very good. Binding is solid. ; 330 pages . Leonard Scott & Co., hardcover books
196844332NY: Simon and Schuster 1968. First printing. 8vo pp. 318. Includes short biographies of the contributors. Preface by Norman Cousins. Black cloth. Cover slightly worn at corners and ends of spine o/w a VG tight copy. Authors include Constantin Doxiadis Dwight Eisenhower Bucky Fuller Eric Hoffer Reinhold Niebuhr. Simon and Schuster unknown books
185130727<p>Quarto printed circular 2 pages includes a page of favorable reviews of the magazine by newspapers across the country. Sent to Rev. H. Lyman Watertown Mass.</p><p>1851 Decline and Fall of a famous American Political and Literary Magazine</p><p>"The present number will conclude the 14th volume of the American Review…a word of explanation to our friends…The conductors of the Review at the beginning of the present year differed as to the propriety of a certain manner and tone and the introduction of certain ideas into it discussions more especially in reference to the foreign policy of the Government. Not being able in time to reconcile these differences the party who introduce them resigned his position and it will accordingly be perceived by an examination of the numbers since April last that the old and standard ideas of the party those on which the Review had heretofore obtained its wide celebrity and circulation have been resumed.principles of a sound Nationality which in accordance with the Whig interpretation of Constitutional Republicanism…on the eve of a contest that is to establish our present calm and prosperous condition or throw us again into the political Maelstrom of quack democracy where the nation has so often been made the victim of theories generally adopted from foreign politicians or economists who are… disinterested in the feeding of our Democracy…" </p><p>Continues with a plea for financial support from its 5000 subscribers.</p><p>Just as the Whig Party was to dissolve during the coming presidential election year so did the Whig Review disappear after its seven years of distinguished existence its fame being more literary than political having had the distinction of publishing the first printing of Edgar Allan Poe's "The Raven."</p><p>This rare imprint was apparently unknown to the several historians who have published essays about the rise and fall of the Review. Or perhaps they avoided citing the imprint because its verbiage is so ambiguous. What was the foreign policy disagreement that caused a shake-up of the editorial staff Was it the possibility which the Review seemed to encourage of American conflict with Great Britain Or Whig Secretary of State Daniel Webster's divergence from traditional non-intervention in European affairs by support of Hungarian revolutionary Lajos Kossuth Or perhaps the editorial explanation was really a smoke-screen to hide violent disagreement about the hot issue of slavery.</p><p>In any case the imprint is very scarce; WorldCat locates only two institutional holdings though one of these seems to be inexplicably confused with an Abolitionist imprint of seven years later.</p> books