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19742083002115709817Uwajima-shi 1974. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of books: 1 book Uwajima-shi paperback
193027207Auckland: Wanderlust Magazine. Very Good- with no dust jacket. 1930. First Edition. Hardcover. 3 issues with 25mm tears and small chips at tail of spine. Previous owner's name in ink on front cover of 3 issues. Volume I Number 1 with some creasing to lower corner of front cover and first leaf. Volume I Number 2 with 20mm tear to margin of rear cover. Overall a nice tidy and complete set.; Vol. I. Nos 1-6 Vol II No. 1. Only seven issues were published. This is a complete set. Page dimensions: 248 x 187mm. An early incarnation of a "New Zealand Geographic" type magazine. Numerous black and white illustrations. Some colour illustrations including illustrations of the Pink and White Terraces. Includes Malcolm Ross's article "The First Traverse of Mt. Cook" which shortly before his death Ross called "The finest piece of descriptive work I have ever done". Also includes: "The Climbers" by Malcolm Ross; "A Mountain Lake" by James Cowan; "New Zealand Glaciers" by A. P. Harper; "Fish Tales - True Ones" by G. Bryant Hobbs; "Wakatipu - The Lake that Breathes" by Nomad; "Stewart Island: Its Early History" by G. R. Curtis; "Tales of the Maori War" by E. T. Frost; "Stalking Red Deer" by A. R. Kingsford. . Wanderlust Magazine hardcover
20121-1618930044Time Home Entertainment Inc 2012. Hardcover. New. 96 pages. 11.20x8.30x0.30 inches. Time Home Entertainment Inc hardcover
DADAX0971292051Brand: Kansas City Star Books 0000-00-00. hardcover. New. 0.00x0.00x0.00. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. Brand: Kansas City Star Books hardcover
97013501Hong Kong 1976 Hong Kong. Full set of 12 issues profusely illustrated in color contrained in two red box slipcases complete very clean solid. FIRST & ONLY EDITION January: Blanco's flora de Filipinas early H. K. life the pleasure of So. Philippines. Singapore Torii school. Feb.: Kathmandu frenzy Ati-Atihan Guimet's Afghan treasures pruning Edo flowers. March: Bora-Bora Old Hawaii Indian ivory art. April: Hyderabad Sabah album Humayun Indian feminine beaukty. Mayk: peace in Vietnam Shwe Dagon dating Annamese blue & white Raffles Gamelan G. Orwell's Burma. June:Singapore syndrome Japan-water view Akbar's exploits Indonesia the other Rangoon. July: Philippine skylanddance of Siva Sri Lanka's legend Intramuros kites of Zie. Aug.: Charms of Cheung Chau birds beasts blossoms bugs Chieng Mai Akbar the great. Sept.: Manila China Meiji-Taisho period Ukiyoe Ming poilychromes Darwin Chiuchow cuisine. Oct.: Penang-citron & celadon Island high Himalayas Ch'ing Pai porcelain Hung Tung peasant painter. Nov.:Kora: Yi mag- nificence Percival David Collection Japan Abellana.&c 21 x 28.5 cm. unknown
19401420521940. Tapa dura. 2ª Mano. . Lote de revistas reencuadernadas en época. Incluye REVISTA SEMANA numeros de 1940 124567891011122125272832353637. además nº72 de Julio de 1941 y nº 157 de Febrero de 1943. El retapado incluye números de la REvista FOTOS Semanario gragico Nacionalsindicalista nº 134 23 Septiembre 1939 135 30 Septiembre 1939 137 14 Octubre 1939 142 18 Noviembre 1939 167 11 Mayo 1940 nº 162 6 Abril 1940 182 24 Agosto 1940. Profusamente ilustrao con fotografias b/N. Los números de revista semana recopilan especiales de la Guerra de Invierno entre Finlandia y la URSS. Belico II Guerra Mundial. . . . sin paginar 28x37 cm. tapa dura hardcover
195517705MAD MAGAZINE Volume 1 #23 Educational Comics Inc. 1955 fine in wraps with fine full color contents yielding the following parodies: GOPO GOSSUM SCENES WE'D LIKE TO SEE RIPUP'S BELIEVE IT OR DON'T & THE BAREFOOT NOCOUNTESSA! Educational Comics, Inc paperback
19922080302106807932Nagasaki Prefecture Ninoura Junior High School Alumni Association 1992. Soft Cover. Fine. Size: B5 size 418 pages Number of books: 1 Nagasaki Prefecture Ninoura Junior High School Alumni Association paperback
19932080202105200797Nozu Town Oita Prefecture 1993. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of pages: 788815 Nozu Town (Oita Prefecture) paperback
20082080202102501066Orion Breweries Ltd. 2008. Soft Cover. Fine. The book is in fine condition. Orion Breweries Ltd. paperback
19952080202103000517Motobu Town Sesoko 1995. Soft Cover. Fine. Books: 2 books Motobu Town Sesoko paperback
19672080202104502724East Village Local History Compilation Committee 1967. Soft Cover. Fine. Volume: 1 East Village Local History Compilation Committee paperback
2080202103703037Yonoudzu-mura N.A. Soft Cover. Fine. Page number: 893p Size: 27cm B5 Yonoudzu-mura paperback
19832082702114910425Kochi Central Shipping Union 1983. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of pages: 195 pages Size: B5 Number of books: 1 volume Kochi Central Shipping Union paperback
36037907London 1974-1975 Oriental Art. Vols.20 & 21. Violet buckram cloth very clean solidindices2 complete years 472404p. many color & b.w. photos 22 x 31 cm. FIRST & ONLY EDITION . . ORIENTAL ART MAGAZINE: . . FULL BOUND YEARS OF THE PIONEER & SCHOLARLY ART JOURNAL . . ON FAR EASTERN SOUTHEAST ASIAN CENTRAL ASIAN . . SOUTH ASIAN AND MIDDLE EASTERN FINE ARTS . . . ORIENTAL ART magazine was founded prior to World War II by Dr. William Cohn an Asian Art historian and scholar in Oxford. The journal was issued quarterly. . In the beginning the journal was focused on Asian Art objects curated by the Ashmolean Museum. It was the first publication to pioneer & present the latest research and discoveries in Asian art history archaeology and the fine arts. . In its "NEW SERIES" beginning after the end of the war circa 1948 ORIENTAL ART magazine continued to publish from London. . The focus was on the latest findings by scholars and researchers in Central Asian Chinese Indian Japanese Korean Middle Eastern and Southeast Asian arts. This included the sacred art of Asian religions as well as all facets of Asian art disciplines fine arts and archaeology. It is the best resource for current articles on a wide variety of scholarly and fascinating Asian art subjects. . THE CONTRIBUTORS: . The journal is lavishly color-illustrated with in-depth articles by the leading and eminent scholars exponents researchers and well-known experts. . Consistently useful to museum curators scholars students archaeologists art historians art librarians collectors and dealers as a reliable reference resource. . THE ADVERTISERS: The advertisers represent some of the world's best and most famous art dealers reprenting all aspects of Asian art and art objects. The adverts also illustrated recently acquired sculptures and religious items. This also contributes to the reference value of the journal. BOUND FORMAT: . Each cloth bound volume contains one or two complete years consisting of four issues per year the last issue Winter contains the full index for that year. Issued in Spring Summer Fall & Winter. . Each issue is profusely color illustrated printed on high-quality very heavy glossy paper and permanent bound. . CONDITION: The Bindings: Each binding is clean & solidly. Each volume is bound in a different color using very heavy-duty buckram cloth. Each spine is gold stamped showing from the top: title volume number year and the collector's name at the bottom. . The Journals: Each issue is clean solid and bound with the original covers. The text is immaculate as issued there are no condition issues whatsoever. Each is in collector's condition superbly clean in "like new" condition. HEAVY WEIGHT: The journals and their bindings are heavy. Appropriate postage applies. . unknown
36037909London 1978-1979 Oriental Art. Vols. 24 & 25. Black buckram cloth very clean solidindices2 complete years 487523p. many color & b.w. photos 22 x 31 cm. FIRST & ONLY EDITION . . ORIENTAL ART MAGAZINE: . . FULL BOUND YEARS OF THE PIONEER & SCHOLARLY ART JOURNAL . . ON FAR EASTERN SOUTHEAST ASIAN CENTRAL ASIAN . . SOUTH ASIAN AND MIDDLE EASTERN FINE ARTS . . . ORIENTAL ART magazine was founded prior to World War II by Dr. William Cohn an Asian Art historian and scholar in Oxford. The journal was issued quarterly. . In the beginning the journal was focused on Asian Art objects curated by the Ashmolean Museum. It was the first publication to pioneer & present the latest research and discoveries in Asian art history archaeology and the fine arts. . In its "NEW SERIES" beginning after the end of the war circa 1948 ORIENTAL ART magazine continued to publish from London. . The focus was on the latest findings by scholars and researchers in Central Asian Chinese Indian Japanese Korean Middle Eastern and Southeast Asian arts. This included the sacred art of Asian religions as well as all facets of Asian art disciplines fine arts and archaeology. It is the best resource for current articles on a wide variety of scholarly and fascinating Asian art subjects. . THE CONTRIBUTORS: . The journal is lavishly color-illustrated with in-depth articles by the leading and eminent scholars exponents researchers and well-known experts. . Consistently useful to museum curators scholars students archaeologists art historians art librarians collectors and dealers as a reliable reference resource. . THE ADVERTISERS: The advertisers represent some of the world's best and most famous art dealers reprenting all aspects of Asian art and art objects. The adverts also illustrated recently acquired sculptures and religious items. This also contributes to the reference value of the journal. BOUND FORMAT: . Each cloth bound volume contains one or two complete years consisting of four issues per year the last issue Winter contains the full index for that year. Issued in Spring Summer Fall & Winter. . Each issue is profusely color illustrated printed on high-quality very heavy glossy paper and permanent bound. . CONDITION: The Bindings: Each binding is clean & solidly. Each volume is bound in a different color using very heavy-duty buckram cloth. Each spine is gold stamped showing from the top: title volume number year and the collector's name at the bottom. . The Journals: Each issue is clean solid and bound with the original covers. The text is immaculate as issued there are no condition issues whatsoever. Each is in collector's condition superbly clean in "like new" condition. HEAVY WEIGHT: The journals and their bindings are heavy. Appropriate postage applies. . unknown
36037906London 1972-1973 Oriental Art. Vols.18 & 19. Brown buckram cloth very clean solidindices2 complete years 412468p. many color & b.w. photos 22 x 31 cm. FIRST & ONLY EDITION . . ORIENTAL ART MAGAZINE: . . FULL BOUND YEARS OF THE PIONEER & SCHOLARLY ART JOURNAL . . ON FAR EASTERN SOUTHEAST ASIAN CENTRAL ASIAN . . SOUTH ASIAN AND MIDDLE EASTERN FINE ARTS . . . ORIENTAL ART magazine was founded prior to World War II by Dr. William Cohn an Asian Art historian and scholar in Oxford. The journal was issued quarterly. . In the beginning the journal was focused on Asian Art objects curated by the Ashmolean Museum. It was the first publication to pioneer & present the latest research and discoveries in Asian art history archaeology and the fine arts. . In its "NEW SERIES" beginning after the end of the war circa 1948 ORIENTAL ART magazine continued to publish from London. . The focus was on the latest findings by scholars and researchers in Central Asian Chinese Indian Japanese Korean Middle Eastern and Southeast Asian arts. This included the sacred art of Asian religions as well as all facets of Asian art disciplines fine arts and archaeology. It is the best resource for current articles on a wide variety of scholarly and fascinating Asian art subjects. . THE CONTRIBUTORS: . The journal is lavishly color-illustrated with in-depth articles by the leading and eminent scholars exponents researchers and well-known experts. . Consistently useful to museum curators scholars students archaeologists art historians art librarians collectors and dealers as a reliable reference resource. . THE ADVERTISERS: The advertisers represent some of the world's best and most famous art dealers reprenting all aspects of Asian art and art objects. The adverts also illustrated recently acquired sculptures and religious items. This also contributes to the reference value of the journal. BOUND FORMAT: . Each cloth bound volume contains one or two complete years consisting of four issues per year the last issue Winter contains the full index for that year. Issued in Spring Summer Fall & Winter. . Each issue is profusely color illustrated printed on high-quality very heavy glossy paper and permanent bound. . CONDITION: The Bindings: Each binding is clean & solidly. Each volume is bound in a different color using very heavy-duty buckram cloth. Each spine is gold stamped showing from the top: title volume number year and the collector's name at the bottom. . The Journals: Each issue is clean solid and bound with the original covers. The text is immaculate as issued there are no condition issues whatsoever. Each is in collector's condition superbly clean in "like new" condition. HEAVY WEIGHT: The journals and their bindings are heavy. Appropriate postage applies. . unknown
19562111902158500743Fushimi Branch Mitake-cho Kani-gun Gifu Prefecture 1956. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of pages: 610p. Size: 22cm Fushimi Branch, Mitake-cho, Kani-gun, Gifu Prefecture paperback
19762091502135415901Gakuyu Shobo 1976. Soft Cover. Fine. Volume: 11 Gakuyu Shobo paperback
19682090202120410719Miwa Town Hall Futsangun Hiroshima Prefecture 1968. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of books: 1 Miwa Town Hall, Futsangun, Hiroshima Prefecture paperback
19782091502133905329Nichigai Associates 1978. Soft Cover. Fine. Volume: 1 Nichigai Associates paperback
15512London: John Bowyer Nichols and Son. 1850. 4pp. 8vo. Bifolium. In fair condition on lightly-aged paper. The first page carries the 'pitch' beginning: 'AN HISTORICAL MAGAZINE has long been the great desideratum of our literature.' The author proceeds to claim that 'THE GENTLEMAN'S MAGAZINE has stepped forward to occupy this vacant post.' The page ends: 'Five numbers of the new undertaking are before the public and present a fair example of what the work will henceforth be. The following important subjects have been treated of in some of the recent articles: -'. The second page carries a list of articles in smaller type ending with a list of people featured in 'The well-known OBITUARY'. The third page carries the 'OPINIONS OF THE PRESS.' in double-column and small type ranging from the 'Taunton Courier' 'The Gentleman's Magazine has been revived with a degree of spirit and talent which promises the best assurance of its former popularity.' to the 'West of England Conservative'. The last page carries an advertisement headed: 'This Day is Published price Six Shillings The Pilgrimages of Walsingham and Canterbury. By Desiderius Erasmus. Translated and illustrated with notes by John Gough Nichols F.S.A.' Scarce: the only copy traced on either COPAC or WorldCat at the British Library. [London: John Bowyer Nichols and Son. 1850.] unknown
23157Lithographed by Vincent Brooks Day & Son "Vanity Fair" Office London15th February 1879. Image size: 370 x 210mm14.5 x 8.25" approx. Condition very good.NB Overseas postage will be reduced to cost Lithographed by Vincent Brooks Day & Son, "Vanity Fair" Office, London15th February 1879. unknown
22910HQ Poetry Magazine 39 Exmouth Street Swindon. Between 11 November 1998 and 20 July 1999. A total of 8pp of closely-typed text. In good condition. Also present are an additional four-page copy on pink paper of the first letter and its enclosure. First letter signed 'Kevin Bailey' two others signed 'Kevin B.' aq2 One letter lacks its last page and signature. Long discursive letter with Bailey discussing: his first meeting with Fry at the Actors Centre Swindon; his sense of inadequacy in the face of Fry's other correspondents 'that letter from Lord Olivier is now firmly fixed in my memory'; a trip to Oxford bookshops; his discovery of Fry's work as a student at York; his admiration for the film maker Peter Greenaway; his desire that Fry might send 'a poem or two for use in the next issue of HQ' 'I can offer you a good audience. HQ has a most appreciative readership here and abroad and is taken by university and institutional libraries: New York California Moscow. even HMP Norwich sent free of charge just in case I ever need friends on the inside'; his retirement from 'education work' 'at the age of forty-four I felt that twenty years of compromise between wage-slavery and editing and writing was enough' and pension; his recent poetry and editing work 'Shimon Weinroth the Prof. of English at the University of Jerusalem has engaged me to check-over sic and edit his book of new poems due out next year. Small stuff but it pays a bill or two.'; his work at the Actors' Centre; his interest in astronomy 'often meeting Patric Moore at Meetings of the British Astronomical Association'; his 'part-time job with the charity MENCAP'; his friend the 'fine and innovative poet' Mike Hogan an admirer of Fry's work 'Faber have just taken up his six-book poem'; Gary Bills 'who is being published by Harry Chambers at Peterloo next year'; the recognition of a magazine's poets being a 'sign of maturation'; his 'cash flow hit' and the 'realities of tyrying to be a "proper" writer'; his desire to visit Fry; his 'faith' 'a private matter and very much sans "religion"'; his belief in 'the Art first and the ego second'; his admiration for 'Edward Thomas I have a bush of Old Man taken as a cutting from the original and given to me by "Annie" Thomas daughter the younger at Eastbury - I am a Berkshire man; born at Wallingford and farmers for half a millennium at Yattendon. Robert Bridges was I think my paternal Grandmother's great uncle.'. In the first letter 11 November 1998 he asks Fry with his 'lifetime of experience to share' to 'set down say five golden rules for the poetic playwright . I feel like Morgana le Fey asking Merlin for the secret of Making. I promise to use the magic wisely.' The first letter is accompanied by two pages of dialogue between 'Edward' and 'Helen' with autograph note: 'A small selection from one of my still-born "Verse" plays. K. B.' Copies of the letter dated 10 November 1998 and enclosure are present. In the second letter 11 February 1999 Bailey thanks Fry for sending the poem 'Caedmon Construed' for publication in his magazine. He is 'very willing to use it' but 'would still like to use the speech from "Venus" - partly because I happen to think it very good indeed but also because I wanted to encourage HQ readers to seek out the play and from that your other plays. As you know although HQ like all small press magazines has a relatively small circulation it is read by the "right" people in the right places all over the world. It is taken by a number of UK and US university libraries and "others". It never does any harm to advertise ones work. I'm pretty sure it would generate interest from American and Indian subscribers strangely enough recently I have had a lot of correspondence from India Turkey and Goa and can only assume that HQ's equivalent of Typhoid Mary - an enthusiastic reader - is journeying in the Middle East and spreading an infectious enthusiasm for the magazine. Even a letter from Prof. R. K. Singh head of the Indian School of Mines in Dhanbad. hm curious. A gentle twisting of your arm - let me know. I shall not labour the point.' The third letter15 March 1999 lacks its last page. The final letter 20 July 1999 is in autograph 'telegraphic-style very rushed'. He thanks Fry for his 'contribution to No 22 and is pleased to have met him 'in London earlier in the year'. HQ Poetry Magazine, 39 Exmouth Street, Swindon. Between 11 November 1998 and 20 July 1999. unknown
17629945London R. Baldwin 1762. Copper engraving 18.5 x 12 cm black and white blank verso. Map unknown