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19310008036CHICAGO ILLINOIS IL UK BRITAIN. Good. 1931. On offer is a superb group including 2 five-year diaries and a collection of papers that provide and incredible window into life in America in the decade immediately preceding WWII. The 2 diaries measure 5 inches by 4 inches and 5 1/2 inches by 4 1/2 inches respectively. They each contain 365 pages and are 100% complete. The first diary has damage to the cover - specifically it has come detached and partially torn. The second diary's leather cover is worn. All pages though are intact and attached. Included with the diaries are dozens of loose papers notes photographs and memorabilia. These round out the picture painted in the diaries. Ruth Gilbert McClain lived in Chicago IL. Born in 1914 she is 17 when she begins her 10 years of diary entries. She was a journalist who worked for several newspapers in both the United States and the United Kingdom. She was married to Patrick Dolan an American who worked in broadcast media WBBM Radio see Oct 6 1939. Casual research does not turn up any biographical data but there are many context clues within the diaries and accompanying papers. The diaries span the years 1931 through 1940 in 2 five-year volumes. In the first volume she is still a journalism student at the University of Illinois. The diary is filled with references to school assignments and her busy social life. "My paper went to the printers intact - but oh did I get 'squelched' by Miss Russell. She pains me." Jan 8 1931. She details many many dates and social events that she attends: "Went to Worlds Fair. Tried to get a job at Libbys through W.F. personnel office - no luck . " June 6 1934. She finished her studies in June 1935 and notes her graduation: "GRADUATION very impressive and now I have my BSc with honors ." June10 1935. The diary ends with several interesting events - on Dec 9th 1935 she meets President Roosevelt. She also meets another journalist: "Met a cute man - PAT DOLAN born in Ireland and educated in Ireland."Nov 20 1935. Notwithstanding her comments about other romantic interests she will end up marrying Pat Dolan. Her second diary is much more work-focused. On Oct 5th 1936 she notes President Roosevelt dedicating a bridge. Other world events are noted as well: "Hindenburg exploded 36 dead ." May 6 1937 "First day of NAZI TIMES story ." Sept 9 1937 "Assigned to the Ada Szceythsiski murder trial- Glad but worries me . "Jan 24 1938. She travels extensively and in 1937 finds herself in England. Her papers contain a separate loose-leaf account of her trip on the passenger liner MV Georgic. She doesn't waste any time upon arrival: "LONDON Arrived at dawn! . Chamberlain's address WAR saw Buckingham Palace & Whitehall" Sept 27 1938 "Got a job 9 guineas $47.25 at the Daily Mirror and Sunday Pictorial ."Oct 5 1938 She notes the build-up to war being declared in 1939 culminating with: "GB declared war at 5 am Chicago time - F rance at 11 am CT - fighting only along French border and in Poland Bremen captured by British Chamberlain King Daladier FDR spoke" Sept 3 1939. She has travelled extensively in Europe including the UK Ireland the Netherlands Paris etc. In addition to the diaries there is a collection of papers that include telegrams from her husband cards and notes from friends loose-leaf journals photographs newspaper clippings ticket stubs and much more. This collection is truly a time capsule. It is written by a well-educated woman with a good eye for detail and an excellent manner of communicating. For a historian this is a treasure trove especially the time she spent in Europe on the eve of WWII. Whether places of interest major events or commentary on life as she sees and experiences it these diaries and papers are an outstanding resource. They would be valuable in a Women's Studies program as they show a clear contrast with the more traditional roles that women assumed in the early 20th century.; Manuscript; 24mo - over 5" - 5¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF 20TH CENTURY 1930S U.S. BRITAIN RUTH GILBERT MCCLAIN; PATRICK DOLAN; CHICAGO ILLINOIS AMERICAN; CHICAGO HERALD; DAILY MIRROR; WBBM RADIO; WORLD WAR II; CHICAGO WORLD FAIR; HINDENBURG UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS AT URBANA-CHAMPAIGN JOURNALISM FEMALE JOURNALISTS WOMEN STUDIES AMERICANA HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS DIARY DIARIES JOURNALS PERSONAL HISTORY SOCIAL HISTORY HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL ANTIQUITÉ CONTRAT VÉLIN DOCUMENT MANUSCRIT PAPIER ANTIKE BRIEF PERGAMENT DOKUMENT MANUSKRIPT PAPIER OGGETTO D'ANTIQUARIATO ATTO VELINA DOCUMENTO MANOSCRITTO CARTA ANTIGÜEDAD HECHO VITELA DOCUMENTO MANUSCRITO PAPEL . hardcover
146438New Haven: Yale University Press 1988. First edition of this collection of essays. Octavo original cloth. Association copy inscribed by the editor on the title page "For Justice Ginsburg - with deepest respect admiration & gratitude In sisterhood Elizabeth Ann Bartlett." From the library of Ruth Bader Ginsburg. Arguably the most famous Supreme Court Justice in American history lawyer and jurist Ruth Bader Ginsburg served as an associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States from 1993 until her death in 2020. Popularly dubbed “the Notorious R.B.G.†a play on the name of famed 90s rapper The Notorious B.I.G. Ginsburg was responsible for some of the most eventful legal decisions of the past half-century. When she was nominated by President Bill Clinton in 1993 to replace retiring justice Byron White Ginsburg became both the first Jewish woman and the second woman to serve on the Court after Sandra Day O’Connor. Ginsburg was born and grew up in Brooklyn New York earned degrees at Cornell University and Columbia Law School and began her career as a professor at Rutgers Law School and Columbia Law School teaching civil procedure as one of the few women in her field. She spent much of her early legal career as an advocate for gender equality and women’s rights winning many arguments before the Supreme Court and in 1972 co-founded the Women’s Rights Project at the American Civil Liberties Union which participated in more than 300 gender discrimination cases by 1974. In 1980 President Jimmy Carter appointed her to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit where she served until her appointment to the Supreme Court in 1993. During her tenure as associate justice of the Supreme Court Ginsburg received increasing attention for her fiery and passionate dissents that reflected liberal views of the law. She authored several important majority opinions related to gender discrimination voting rights and affirmative action in cases such as United States v. Virginia 1996 which struck down the Virginia Military Institute’s male-only admissions policy as violating the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment Olmstead v. L.C. 1999 in which the Court ruled that mental illness is a form of disability covered under the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 and Friends of the Earth Inc. v. Laidlaw Environmental Services Inc. 2000 in which the Court held that residents have standing to seek fines for an industrial polluter that affected their interests and that is able to continue doing so. In 2002 Ginsburg was inducted into the National Women’s Hall of Fame she was named one of Forbes’ 100 Most Powerful Women in 2009 and one of Time magazine’s 100 most influential people in 2015. Her powerful and fiery dissent in the 2013 Supreme Court case Shelby County v. Holder in which she argued against the majority’s decision to strike down key provisions of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 emphasizing the continued need for its protections against racial discrimination in voting earned her the nickname “The Notorious R.B.G.†– a moniker she came to embrace which has since become a celebration of her important legal career and legacy. Widely regarded as one of the most remarkable women in American history Ginsburg redefined and transcended the traditional role of Supreme Court justice ascending to the status of intergenerational feminist pop culture icon. Near fine in a good dust jacket. Housed in a custom half morocco clamshell box by the Harcourt Bindery. "All history attests that man has subjected woman to his will used her as a means to promote his selfish gratification. but never has he desired to elevate her to that rank she was created to fill" Sarah Grimké 1838. Sarah Grimké and her sister Angelina were pioneering figures in the nineteenth-century abolitionist and women's rights movements. Grimké's "Letters on the Equality of the Sexes" published more than 150 years ago was the first full-length philosophical statement on "the woman question" written by an American woman. Here the letters are reproduced in a new edition along with five previously unpublished essays written by Grimké. Yale University Press hardcover
1970146040c.1970. A collection of signatures from 10 esteemed children's authors and illustrators with additional doodles by the signees presumably signed at the same gathering as the signatures are in the same pen. Ruth Krauss was the author of many children's books including The Carrot Seed one of many collaborations with her husband illustrator Crockett Johnson; eight of her books were also illustrated by Maurice Sendak. Remy Charlip was a dancer choreographer and founding member of the Merce Cunningham Dance Company before finding an even larger audience writing and illustrating children's books including Dress Up and Let's Have a Party. Maurice Sendak wrote and illustrated many books his most popular being Where the Wild Things Are. Margaret and H. A. Rey were a married couple and were best known for their Curious George series. Karla Kuskin wrote or illustrated over 50 titles also writing under the pseudonym Nicholas J. Charles. She also reviewed children's literature for The New York Times Book Review. Ezra Jack Keats is most famous for The Snowy Day which he wrote and illustrated in 1962 winning the next years Caldecott Medal. Miriam Schlein wrote nearly 100 books that helped teach children about various subjects including animals and space and time. Harvey Weiss wrote The Big Clean Up together with many "How to" and factual books for children and young adults. Crockett Johnson is best known for the comic strip Barnaby with Mr O'Malley. Ten autographs on 2 leaves of ruled paper removed from a spiral bound notebook. Remy Charlip has added a drawing of a cat Maurice Sendak a drawing of a sitting dog H. A. Rey a drawing of a giraffe Karla Kushkin a drawing of two dogs Ezra Jack Keats a drawing of a stick man Harvey Weiss a drawing of a worried face and Crockett Johnson a drawing of Mr O'Malley flying. All in excellent condition. Presented in black wooden frame with museum acrylic glazing. unknown
147660New York: Bloomsbury Academic 2010. First edition of the second edition of this scholarly work about the historical theories of women and gender. Octavo original pictorial wrappers. Association copy inscribed by the author on the half-title page "Florence 31 January 2016 For Justice Ginsburg en homage amical Laura Lee Downs." American lawyer and jurist Ruth Bader Ginsburg served as an associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States from 1993 until her death in 2020 and was responsible for some of the most eventful legal decisions of the past half-century. Nominated by President Bill Clinton in 1993 to replace retiring justice Byron White Ginsburg became the first Jewish woman and the second woman to serve on the Court after Sandra Day O’Connor. Ginsburg spent much of her legal career as an advocate for gender equality and women’s rights winning many arguments before the Supreme Court. During her tenure as associate justice of the Supreme Court Ginsburg received attention for her fiery and passionate dissents that reflected liberal views of the law. She was popularly dubbed “the Notorious R.B.G.†a moniker she later embraced. She authored several important majority opinions related to gender discrimination voting rights and affirmative action in cases such as United States v. Virginia 1996 which struck down the Virginia Military Institute’s male-only admissions policy as violating the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment Olmstead v. L.C. 1999 in which the Court ruled that mental illness is a form of disability covered under the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 and Friends of the Earth Inc. v. Laidlaw Environmental Services Inc. 2000 in which the Court held that residents have standing to seek fines for an industrial polluter that affected their interests and that is able to continue doing so. In fine condition. Housed in a custom half morocco clamshell box by the Harcourt Bindery. "Puts the entire range of women's and gender history into context showing how it challenges the conventional pieties opens up new veins of research and transforms our understanding of every aspect of history" Lynn Hunt University of California. Bloomsbury Academic unknown
1931BRNYY01New York: Cosmopolitan Book Corporation 1931 First edition first printing. Original publisher's gray cloth lettered in blue with an illustration of Babe Ruth to the front cover dust jacket with matching illustration to the front panel and lettered in dark red. About near fine with mild wear to the spine ends and a small former owner's signature from 1931 to the front endpaper; dust jacket with some shallow chips slight loss to the spine end splitting along fold at spine and front panel else very good or better. A very attractive example in the extremely scarce dust jacket. Housed in a dark blue custom folding box. . First Edition. Hard Cover. Near Fine/Dust Jacket Included. New York: Cosmopolitan Book Corporation hardcover books
19282110107G. P. Putnams' Sons 1928. first. hardcover. near fine/very good. First edition as stated on copyright page. Book near fine minor rubbing at corners and spine ends. Previous owner's name on front free end paper. Dust jacket very good some rubbing wear tanning. Housed in custom-made slipcase. G. P. Putnams' Sons unknown
19820001789BELLFLOWER CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES CA. Very Good. 1982. On offer is a fascinating manuscript relic of many years study of Indian literature history philosophy and all matters spiritual and New Age thought being a journal dated 1982 handwritten by Indologist Ruth Reyna Ph.d. dedicated to her Grandson. Dr. Reyna used the book as a collection of specific quotes or writings she had written over a four decade period. This passage gives the gist of it: 'My special diary tintinnabulations of the mind refers to soft ringing in the ear which heralds my innermost thoughts'. There are approximately 90 pages of writings and notes including a retrospective diary section. The earliest quotes appear from 1957 through the 1980s with a few later to 1993 in a weaker hand. Many of the later entries deal with her declining health with some very intimate entries dealing with her mortality. Reyna was noted for having deciphered some old Sanskrit documents that detailed ancient flying machines how to build them etc. She is mentioned in David Hatcher-Childress' books. Overall VG.; Manuscript; 12mo - over 6¾" - 7¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF INDOLOGIST RUTH REYNA SPIRITUALITY HINDUISM BUDDHISM ANCIENT HISTORY FORBIDDEN KNOWLEDGE HISTORY REWRITTEN TINTINNABULATIONS DAVID HATCHER-CHILDRESS SANSKRIT KAALA CHAKRA VEDIC THOUGHT SHAKUNA VIMANA SUNDARA VIMANA RUKMA VIMANA TRIPURA VIMANA ASTROLOGY ASTROLOGICAL GENDER STUDIES SOCIAL STUDIES WOMEN STUDIES SUFFRAGE ASTROMANCY CELESTIAL BODIES ASTRONOMY HOROSCOPE CHARTS FORECASTING HOROSCOPY DIVINATION OCCULT SORCERY HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH DIARY JOURNAL LOG KEEPSAKE WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS DIARIES JOURNALS LOGS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL PERSONAL HISTORY AMERICANA ANTIQUITÉ CONTRAT VÉLIN DOCUMENT MANUSCRIT PAPIER ANTIKE BRIEF PERGAMENT DOKUMENT MANUSKRIPT PAPIER OGGETTO D'ANTIQUARIATO ATTO VELINA DOCUMENTO MANOSCRITTO CARTA ANTIGÜEDAD HECHO VITELA DOCUMENTO MANUSCRITO PAPELPARAPSYCHOLOGY PSYCHICAL RESEARCH PSYCHIC PHENOMENA HERMETIC MAGIC CHALADEAN DEMONOLOGY NEO-PLATONIC . unknown
147665New York: Hill and Wang A Division of Farrar Straus and Giroux 2009. First edition of this biography about one of the founding philosophers of the American movement for women's rights. Octavo original pictorial wrappers illustrated with black and white photographs. Association copy inscribed by Bill Bader on the half-title page "For Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg With respect and best wishes on her birthday Bill Bader 8 March 2011." American lawyer and jurist Ruth Bader Ginsburg served as an associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States from 1993 until her death in 2020 and was responsible for some of the most eventful legal decisions of the past half-century. Nominated by President Bill Clinton in 1993 to replace retiring justice Byron White Ginsburg became the first Jewish woman and the second woman to serve on the Court after Sandra Day O’Connor. Ginsburg spent much of her legal career as an advocate for gender equality and women’s rights winning many arguments before the Supreme Court. During her tenure as associate justice of the Supreme Court Ginsburg received attention for her fiery and passionate dissents that reflected liberal views of the law. She was popularly dubbed “the Notorious R.B.G.†a moniker she later embraced. She authored several important majority opinions related to gender discrimination voting rights and affirmative action in cases such as United States v. Virginia 1996 which struck down the Virginia Military Institute’s male-only admissions policy as violating the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment Olmstead v. L.C. 1999 in which the Court ruled that mental illness is a form of disability covered under the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 and Friends of the Earth Inc. v. Laidlaw Environmental Services Inc. 2000 in which the Court held that residents have standing to seek fines for an industrial polluter that affected their interests and that is able to continue doing so. In near fine condition. Housed in a custom half morocco clamshell box by the Harcourt Bindery. "Ginzberg brings Elizabeth Cady Stanton to life as never before showing her personal and philosophical faults without defensiveness while conveying her principled and passionate radicalism and the continued relevance of her thought" Linda Gordon Professor of History New York University. Hill and Wang, A Division of Farrar, Straus and Giroux unknown
2016C121301Yale University Press. As New. 2016. Hardcover. 0300184506 . FREE UPGRADE to Courier/Priority Shipping Upon Request - IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - Flawless copy brand new pristine never opened One1 I Two 2 II Three 3 III 4 IV Catalogue Raisonné Catalogue Raisonne Catalog Raisonnee uvre Oeuvre Complete Works -- with a bonus offer-- - May be EITHER: out of print OOP and extremely rare in this pristine condition; signed by author or contributor; or a first or special edition; inquire for details . Yale University Press hardcover
198632296Lille, Alain Buyse / Gérard Duchêne / Gérard Durozoi, 1986-1995. Ensemble de neuf numéros de la revue "Pièces" (qui en a compté dix, regroupant 165 travaux de Sérigraphies) : en feuillets sous coffret cartonné et titré (35 x 25,5 cm).- Le premier numéro de la revue est tirée à 100 exemplaires, le nôtre étant l'un des 10 premiers (signé E. A.), toutes les planches y sont signées de leurs auteurs : Vera Molnar, Marcel Alocco, Arden Quin, René Bonargent, Philippe Boutibonnes, Jean-Luc Coatalem, Danie Deleuze, Pierre Dhainaut, Martine Diemer, Jochem Gerz, Jacques Herold, Joël Hubaut, André Lambotte, Jean-Pierre Le Goff, Ghérasim Luca, Pierre Tual). Les 8 numéros suivants ont chacun une sérigraphie signée. Le second n° est tiré à 130 ex., celui-ci le n° 86 dont seule est signée la planche originale au pochoir de Gérard Duchêne, et comporte 17 sérigraphies des artistes : Pierrette Bloch, Yves Buin, Pierre Buraglio, Max Charvolen, Eddy Devolder, Jean-François Dubreuil, Gérard Duchêne, Gérard Durozoi et Dominique Grisor, Shirley Jaffe, Jean Mazeaufroid, Jean Messagier, Alberto Parres, Gérard Pascual, Jeanpyer Poels, Patrick Saytour, Pierre Tilman, Endre Tot.- Le troisième n° est tiré à 155 exemplaires, celui-ci le n° 113 : Alain MARTIN (signée). Annick Blavier & Pierre Vandrepote / Michel Butor & James GUITET / Marie-Line Debliquy / Eugénie DUBREUIL / Gaspar Hons / Charles Juliet / Jean LE GAC / Baudouin LUQUET / Pascal Mahou / Alain MARTIN / Jean MAS / Georges Merillon / Patrick ROUSSEAU / Gérard TITUS CARMEL / Luc Van Malderen / BEN Vautier.- Le quatrième n° est tiré à 180 ex. : Arthur Aeschbacher, Mireille Andrès, Jean l'Anselme et Ch. Zeimert, Yves Brochard et Claude Darras, Pierre Buraglio et Anne Deguelle, Michel Butor, Stig Dagerman, Noël Dolla, Danièle Gibrat, Bernard Guerbadot, Monique Kissel, François Martin, Bernard Messing, Patrick Raynaud, James Sacré.- Le cinquième n° est tiré à 190 ex., celui-ci le n° 149 : Gilles ARNOULT. ANTOINE / Gilles Arnoult / Philippe Compagnon / Gérard DUCHÊNE et Gérard DUROZOI / Christian Hibon / Gervais Jassaud / Joël KERMARREC / Jean-Clarence Lambert / Jean-Philippe Mattern / Françoise Paressant / Rémy Penard / Yves POPET / Joan RABASCALL et Pierre Restany / Herbert Titz / Jacques VILLEGLÉ / Marie Redonnet.- Le sixième n° est tiré à 180 ex., celui-ci le n° 103 : ARMAN & Lepage / Brochard & Darras / Alain BUYSE / Tom Drahos / Paolo Faber / Bernard Lallemand / Jacques Lizène / Baudouin LUQUET / Paul Marie / Jean Mazeaufroid / Bernard Messing / Vera MOLNAR / Raphaël MONTICELLI / François MORELLET / Christine O'Loughlin / Hervé TÉLÉMAQUE / André Théval.- Le septième n° est tiré à 180 ex. : Jean-Jacques OSTIER. Andreu ALFARO / Alin Anseeuw / Waldo BALART / Jeanne Bresciani / Jean-Pierre Broux / Sara GIBERT / Sonia Guérin / Robert Guillermet / Bernard HEIDSIECK / Carlos KUSNIR / Eugéne LEROY / Daniel NADAUD / Jean-Jacques Ostier / Mehdi QOTBI / Joan RABASCAL / Michel SOHIER / Dirk Verhaegen / Francesc Vidal.- Le huitième n° est tiré à 200 ex. : Ramon Alejandro, Arden-Quin, Octavio Blasi, Louis Bouchard, H. Braun-Vega, Peter Downsbrough, Joachin Ferrer, Ruth Francken, Shirley Jaffe, Fernand Leduc, Jonier Marin, Gregory Masurovsky, Ricardo Mosner, Jean Noël, Antoni Segui, Charles Semser, Hugh Weiss, Zuka.- Le neuvième n° est tiré à 200 ex., celui-ci le n° 87 : Véronique Bigo, Florent Chopin, Chema Cobo, Patrice Delva, Gérard Duchêne, Esther Ferrer, Joël Hubaut, Pascale Lefebvre, Claide pasquer, Rémy Pénard, Philippe Richard, Gérard Serée, Wim Smits, Nancy Sulmont, Léonid Tishkov, Antonio Tocornal, Mateo Vinas-Martin.- /// On joint cinq sérigraphies insérées dans une carte double (24,2 x 16,2 cm), dont l'une, dessinée par Philippe Richard, est écrite par Alain Buyse pour une bonne année 1995.- Superbe état pour les neuf revues sous coffrets, rare.
1920140946793Pasadena CA: Upton Sinclair 1920. First edition. Near Fine. First edition copy #389 of a limited issue of 500 copies signed by Eugene Debs on limitation mounted on rear paste down. ii 99 3 7 ads pp. Bound in publisher's cloth with gilt lettering. Near Fine hinge starting at front rear upper corner bumped sharper blind and gilt stamping than often found; a much nicer copy that as normally found. A rare signature from former Wobbly and Socialist Party candidate Eugene Victor Debs while in Atlanta Penitentiary published by The Jungle author and activist Upton Sinclair. Upton Sinclair unknown
1920140945098Pasadena: Upton Sinclair 1920. First Edition. Near Fine. First edition copy #20 of a limited issue of 500 copies signed by Eugene Debs on limitation mounted on rear paste down. Purple cloth with gilt lettering. Near Fine with oxidation to gilt stamping with some rubbing to lettering on the spine slight lean to binding toning and faint foxing to endsheets; a much nicer copy that as normally found. A rare signature from former Wobbly and Socialist Party candidate Eugene Victor Debs while in Atlanta Penitentiary published by The Jungle author and activist Upton Sinclair. Upton Sinclair unknown
192046734Pasadena: Upton Sinclair 1920. Two octavo volumes 18.75cm; maroon cloth with titles stamped in gilt on spine and front cover; ii9911pp. The first copy is inscribed by Eugene Debs to American film actress screenwriter and editor Helen Louise Gardner on the front endpaper: "To Helen L. Gardner / With love and greetings and with deep appreciation for her beautiful character her lofty spirit her rare vision courage understanding and her high ideals and noble aspirations - Eugene V. Debs / Terre Haute Indiana / December 1924." Gentle sunning to spine oxidation to gilt with moderate scattered soil to covers light wear to extremities and heavier wear with resulting board exposure to upper right corner of front cover; mild offset to endpapers from binders glue; Good. Housed in a clamshell case. <br /> <br /> The second copy is inscribed to Gardner by Ruth Le Prade opposite the title page: "To Helen Gardner - with cordial greetings / Ruth Le Prade." Spine-sunned cloth edge-worn and lightly soiled with oxidation to gilt a few small stains to front cover some erosion to cloth toward lower spine and mild offset to endpapers from binders glue; Good. Poems honoring socialist leader Eugene Debs by a variety of radical 20th century poets including Witter Bynner Max Eastman Charlotte Perkins Gilman Carl Sandburg Siegfried Sassoon Horace Traubel and Israel Zangwill many others. Sinclair contributed the foreword along with letters from H.G. Wells and George Bernard Shaw who states: "Clearly the White House is the only safe place for an honest man like Debs". An interesting pair of copies inscribed to Gardner 1884-1968 acclaimed stage actress and the first actress to form her own production company. <br /> <br /> Moved by his circumstances and deeply influenced by his speeches she visited him in prison in 1920 bringing him an autographed photo and beginning a correspondence that would last through the mid-1920's. In a December 21 1920 letter she writes: "Let me tell you that I was surprised to find my emotional self somewhat unaffected while I listened to you talk. I know the reason now. It is the same with you as it was with Epictetus prison walls cannot confine the spirit -- the mind is ever free. So in a way I did not feel your plight as keenly as I would that of another who had little vision little intelligence little understanding about his body being so small a part of the real him that his confinement was of the physical order only." While the "special edition" of 500 with signed bookplate by Debs appears with some frequency inscribed copies of Debs and the Poets are genuinely uncommon. Upton Sinclair unknown
192046734Pasadena: Upton Sinclair 1920. Two octavo volumes 18.75cm; maroon cloth with titles stamped in gilt on spine and front cover; ii9911pp. The first copy is inscribed by Eugene Debs to American film actress screenwriter and editor Helen Louise Gardner on the front endpaper: "To Helen L. Gardner / With love and greetings and with deep appreciation for her beautiful character her lofty spirit her rare vision courage understanding and her high ideals and noble aspirations - Eugene V. Debs / Terre Haute Indiana / December 1924." Gentle sunning to spine oxidation to gilt with moderate scattered soil to covers light wear to extremities and heavier wear with resulting board exposure to upper right corner of front cover; mild offset to endpapers from binders glue; Good. Housed in a clamshell case. <br/><br/>The second copy is inscribed to Gardner by Ruth Le Prade opposite the title page: "To Helen Gardner - with cordial greetings / Ruth Le Prade." Spine-sunned cloth edge-worn and lightly soiled with oxidation to gilt a few small stains to front cover some erosion to cloth toward lower spine and mild offset to endpapers from binders glue; Good. Poems honoring socialist leader Eugene Debs by a variety of radical 20th century poets including Witter Bynner Max Eastman Charlotte Perkins Gilman Carl Sandburg Siegfried Sassoon Horace Traubel and Israel Zangwill many others. Sinclair contributed the foreword along with letters from H.G. Wells and George Bernard Shaw who states: "Clearly the White House is the only safe place for an honest man like Debs". An interesting pair of copies inscribed to Gardner 1884-1968 acclaimed stage actress and the first actress to form her own production company. <br/><br/>Moved by his circumstances and deeply influenced by his speeches she visited him in prison in 1920 bringing him an autographed photo and beginning a correspondence that would last through the mid-1920's. In a December 21 1920 letter she writes: "Let me tell you that I was surprised to find my emotional self somewhat unaffected while I listened to you talk. I know the reason now. It is the same with you as it was with Epictetus prison walls cannot confine the spirit -- the mind is ever free. So in a way I did not feel your plight as keenly as I would that of another who had little vision little intelligence little understanding about his body being so small a part of the real him that his confinement was of the physical order only." While the "special edition" of 500 with signed bookplate by Debs appears with some frequency inscribed copies of Debs and the Poets are genuinely uncommon. Upton Sinclair unknown books
301531No date but circa 1925-1930. Consisting of a title-page with integral original pen ink and wash image of the ass in a lion's skin with his master 13 original pen ink and wash drawings with associated typescript text. Without drawings for fables numbered III VII & XI. Large 4to. Laid into paper over boards portfolio with color facsimile of the title-page. With original wrapper with notes "Aesop Fables/ Illustrated/ by/ Ruth Sandys/ 5. Hogarth Road S.W.5.:. Consisting of a title-page with integral original pen ink and wash image of the ass in a lion's skin with his master 13 original pen ink and wash drawings with associated typescript text. Without drawings for fables numbered III VII & XI. Large 4to. Maquette for an unpublished illustrated edition of Aesop's Fables by artist Ruth Sandys.<br/>Ruth Sandys 1880-1941 had five close relations who were artists who lived by their work and are still collected - her father Frederick Sandys Pre-Raphaelite described by Dante Gabriel Rossetti as "The greatest living draughtsman" her sisters' father in law Walter Crane her aunt Emma Sandys Pre-Raphaelite her grandfather Anthony Sandys Norwich School of Artists and her sister Winifred Sandys RA miniaturist and portraitist see Delaware Art Museum. unknown books
151267New York: New York University Law Review 1992. Original November 1992 offprint of the New York University Law Review containing David L. Shapiro’s Continuity and Change in Statutory Interpretation. Octavo original publisher's wrappers volume 67 number 5. Accompanied by a typed letter on Harvard Law School stationary laid in inscribed and signed by David L. Shapiro to Ruth Bader Ginsburg. The letter reads in full "For Ruth - Although this is printed in an issue dated late 1992 it just appeared. I hope it will be of interest to you. With warmest regards to you and Marty. David." From the library of American lawyer and jurist Ruth Bader Ginsburg. Ruth Bader Ginsburg served as an associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States from 1993 until her death in 2020 and was responsible for some of the most eventful legal decisions of the past half-century. Nominated by President Bill Clinton in 1993 to replace retiring justice Byron White Ginsburg became the first Jewish woman and the second woman to serve on the Court after Sandra Day O’Connor. Ginsburg spent much of her legal career as an advocate for gender equality and women’s rights winning many arguments before the Supreme Court. During her tenure as associate justice of the Supreme Court Ginsburg received attention for her fiery and passionate dissents that reflected liberal views of the law. She was popularly dubbed “the Notorious R.B.G.†a moniker she later embraced. She authored several important majority opinions related to gender discrimination voting rights and affirmative action in cases such as United States v. Virginia 1996 which struck down the Virginia Military Institute’s male-only admissions policy as violating the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment Olmstead v. L.C. 1999 in which the Court ruled that mental illness is a form of disability covered under the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 and Friends of the Earth Inc. v. Laidlaw Environmental Services Inc. 2000 in which the Court held that residents have standing to seek fines for an industrial polluter that affected their interests and that is able to continue doing so. In fine condition with light paperclip impressions to the front panel. Housed in a custom half morocco clamshell box by the Harcourt Bindery. David L. Shapiro 1932–2023 was a distinguished Harvard Law School professor and a leading authority on federal courts and civil procedure widely regarded as an influential figure in modern federal courts jurisprudence. Over a career spanning several decades at Harvard Shapiro shaped scholarly and judicial understanding of jurisdiction judicial review and the institutional role of federal courts within the constitutional system. Ruth Bader Ginsburg remembered him in his Harvard Law Review In Memoriam issue "Among members of the legal academy David L. Shapiro impressed me as the very best the most devoted to his teaching and writing the least self-regarding. He was ever mindful of the importance of facts and of the law's impact on the people law exists or should exist to serve. And I will miss our correspondence about the Court's jurisprudence his applause for some of our decisions his worries about others. But I count it my good fortune to have known David L. Shapiro a man as kind and caring as he was brilliant." New York University Law Review unknown
1922151941Chicago: The Reilly & Lee Co 1922. First edition of the second Oz book written by Ruth Plumly Thompson after Baum's death and the 26th Oz book overall. First printing with the elephant on the half-title and page 299 captioned "Princess Dorothy." Quarto original dark blue-green publisher's cloth with large pictorial paper onlay to the front panel the publisher's spine imprint with the "standard" ampersand illustrated endpapers printed in black all edges stained yellow illustrated with 12 full-color plates coated on one side only and numerous illustrations throughout by John R. Neill. Bienvenue and Schmidt pp. 103-104; Hanff & Greene XVI. Near fine in the rare first issue dust jacket with with titles listed through "15 Kabumpo in Oz" on the rear flap. The dust jacket is in good condition. Rare in the original dust jacket. In Kabumpo in Oz Ruth Plumly Thompson continues and expands the imaginative world established by L. Frank Baum while introducing a more comic and energetic narrative style. Published in 1922 as the twenty-sixth book in the official Oz series and Thompson’s second contribution to the canon the novel follows the adventures of Prince Pompadore and the Elegant Elephant Kabumpo as they undertake a quest across Oz and its neighboring kingdoms. Thompson preserves many of Baum’s central themes including friendship transformation and the restoration of rightful social order while placing greater emphasis on humor wordplay and fast-paced adventure. The character of Kabumpo whose wit and vanity distinguish him from Baum’s earlier companions reflects Thompson’s tendency to create more eccentric and theatrical personalities within the Oz universe. At the same time the novel maintains the utopian and escapist qualities that defined the original series reinforcing the enduring appeal of Oz within early twentieth-century children’s fantasy literature. The Reilly & Lee Co hardcover
19250001039Changsha China. Good. 1925. On offer is a very interesting pair 2 of manuscript diaries handwritten by Mildred Ruth Mills wife of Edmund. Our writer appears to be a wealthy American woman in Changsha China in 1925 and then a decade later is 1936. Historians and collectors of Chinese political and historical ephemera will recognize that Mrs. Mills was well suited to observe the birth pangs of the Nationalist movement. In fact she is in China at a tinder box time with Sun-Yat-Sen dying in Peking in March of 1925 and the ascendance of Chiang Kai-shek as his successor. She travels to other locations in eastern China throughout the year and there is an entry later in the year stating that they re-locate to Wuhu China. While half of January is used for recording which letters were "received" and "sent" there are over 325 entries for the rest of the year. Here are some snippets: "had chinese lesson today as usual". 3/6-"met the chinese interpreter and agent they were very nice." 5/3 "we put up a lunch and went to yola sou. Took boy with us had chair coolies. Went way up to top where we could see all of Changsha and vicinity. Was a wonderful view. Went in several temples". At some point her husband an employee of Standard Oil Co. of NY has to travel "up country" for a couple of weeks and she is making local/social trips by boat: "went to Island at four Mrs. Corbett has birthday party for Mollie.5/17 "Raining very hard today. Came over in boat with B.A. Men. Looks like a bad day for my tea." "weather was terrible and river bad". A few days later on 5/26 "River was bad last night. Could not cross so stayed all night with Peggy". Also references to "Mei Foo" which may be a bus in China. 6/1 "We are planning to go to Hankou on Mei Foo not sure yet." Many entries regarding political unrest: 6/1 "Today chinese have big parade against Japan and foreigners" on 6/5 "came back and had our dinner on the British gun boat 'Crickett' .city under strict law". On 6/7 "Things worse in the city" and on 6/12 she writes; "Foreigners killed in Hankou. Mr. Hobart was here expects things will be worse". On the lighter side back on 2/18 is a popular movie reference-"Sorry E. her husband Ed missed the picture last night 'Hunchback of Notre Dame'. I've seen it but wanted him to see it also". A subject that shows up in many entries is relations with the "help".2/9-."cook has asked for a raise to $18.00 we gave him $16.00 for now." 5/8 "had an argument with boy today so he left. Am without a boy now and Awah is still sick". 5/19 "Came home and found servants all gone have to fine them dollar each". 8/19 "one of the servants evidently stole Miss Norelico's money. Had exciting time the sisters had police in but could not find who took it". Again more boat traveling; "went to SOCONY place to wait for boat". 8/21 "Arrived Hankow about two o'clock . Capt Hoey met Mrs. Dressel. Came to Mr. Nichols house. Mrs. N is still away". 10/30 she writes "received telegram today saying we are transferred to Wuhu as soon as we are able to travel". 11/25 "Reached Hankow this morning went to office first with Ed waited in Mr. Porterfield's office. Went to Mrs. Bakes with her porter". New Year's Eve: "Finally decided not to go as chinese to costume party. Dressed up as small girl." There is also a receipt from a confectioners store with a Tientsin printed but "Changsha" written in the blank 4//11/25 I checked the date and author must have picked up some sweets to take on the way to "Mrs. Hobart's 'skiaki' party"$3.40 worth. The cover of the 1925 5&1/2" x 7&1/4" diary is quite worn there is splitting at front/back endpapers exposing weave but both boards holding well and overall G. The 1936 book is a 5 x 4 inches 'Lest We Forget' diary with her name embossed in gilt and it is VG.; Manuscript; 12mo - over 6¾" - 7¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF CHINA REPUBLICAN CHINA OIL COMPANIES OIL EXPLORATION NATIONALISM WARLORDS CHINESE RACE RELATIONS AMERICANA SUN YAT-SEN CHIANG KAI-SHEK HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH DIARY JOURNAL LOG KEEPSAKE WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS DIARIES JOURNALS LOGS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL PERSONAL HISTORY . hardcover
19300012003New York St. Paul Minnesota Singapore Shanghai China. Good with no dust jacket. 1930-1931. Hardcover. On offer is the two-year diary of Ruth Mui-Kang Pau of Foochow China who spent 13 years in the United States completing her education in St. Paul Minnesota and New York City. During that time she also met and married her beau Dr. Jiu-Ching Hsia before returning to China to start their adult lives. Ruth kept this diary during the first two years of married life during which time the couple visited Singapore and settled in Shanghai. To learn more about Ruth and her husband Dr. Jiu-Ching J. C. Hsia and their tragic love story please see BIO NOTES below. The diary begins on January 1 1930 with Ruth and her husband in Singapore visiting her parents: Singapore early A. M. Very sick Taxied to fathers. Hard time to find place. Tears in fathers eyes all day. Saw mother in back room In bed all day. Called Dr. Hotel in P. M. Later in January Ruth and J. C. Board a boat to Shanghai China. They are hosted by a Dr. Wu and his wife. Dr. Wu sees patients in the front of the house while they live in the back. Ruth tours Shanghai with Mrs. Wu and other women. J. C. Gets acclimatized to his new job and they go house hunting. Ruth does a nice job describing her first weeks in Shanghai: Peking Rd. - dirty with furniture stores on both sides shops so small and packed full. Furniture and no one to work in P. M. We went to Ave. Joffre Huaihai Rd to look for cloth to make me a warm Chinese dress. No success January 27 1930. By spring of 1930 J. C. Is thriving in his new job as Shanghai Sales Manager of American Aluminum Ltd: $650 worth of foil! Hes taking orders quite often now. Am very glad for him. He has persistence. Went to have Typhoid shot - 2nd one May 17 1930Ruth consistently records J. Cs sales proudly throughout 1930 and often notes how much money he makes as well as the amount of aluminum he sells. Sadly the heart condition that would ultimately kill Ruth is already causing issues: .I became sick after they left. May be from working in hot kitchen. After lying down for 20 min my heart was still beating 120. J. C. Carried me upstairs! . May 18 1930. Ruth and J. C. Struggle with a problem many adult children who are educated abroad face: their parents asking for money. As Ruth and J. C. Are just starting out this is a challenge for them: .Letter fr. Spore still asking for money and said we must do it rt. Away. Made me sore. Father thinks we have the money and are just keeping it. Told J. C. To explain to Mr. Lee our condition and that I was trying to find work etc. May 26 1930. The requests for money are compounded by relatives coming to stay with the newlyweds such as J. C. s uncle who stays for months and causes Ruth much financial stress. In July of 1930 Ruth writes that their bank suddenly closed - fortunately they did not have much money deposited - averting catastrophe for the family. Ruth works for the Wu familys restaurant until she gets a job teaching which is her chosen field. She and J. C. Both work and Ruth does the majority of the homemaking. In February of 1931 Ruth tells her diary she is pregnant. She is high-risk due to her pre-existing heart condition. Ruth spends most of 1931 feeling awful and her physician is not comfortable with her pregnancy or the thought of her labouring: April 13 1931 - Cold almost done. To sch. Again after vacation. Made appt. With Dr. Arllerton for 5: 30 J. C. Could go with me. Saw her. Tall grey haired woman. Not friendly. Well let you go on with this pregnancy. shed affect you. We can terminate it at any time. Youll need artificial help in delivery. Not wise for me thru labor. Heart bad. Muscles of head strong. April 13 1931. Early pregnancy is tough on Ruth. Her Memoranda for April 1931 reads in part: Heart very bad. Extra beats. Sometimes missed a beat or two. Even J. C. Cd sic hear my heart beat when lying beside me in bed. Ruth continues working at the school as long as possible but finds it challenging. She always keeps up with the news of the day and notes : .Have to work now because I have to head home so often finding it hard to breathe. Usually I do nothing during 1st part of A. M. Paper today says Thomas Edison died yest. sic! J. C. Brot sic home package fr. Sarah- blankets etc. He also had $5.32 worth of paper brushes etc. For this classmate of his who wrote him a long time ago that it was his duty to support the family! J. C. Sent $ in May October 19 1931. Ruths final entry is on October 22 1931. Her son John I-Sheng Hsia would be born four days later on October 26. We know that Ruth dies of her heart condition in March 1936. Ruths diary is a treasure. It is a treat to follow a young couple with such a rich Chinese-American history See BIO NOTES BELOW and experience the first two years of their newlywed life. Ruth and J. C. s story is one of enduring love hard work hope and perseverance. A must-have for anyone who studies the experience of international students moving back to their country of origin after graduation as well as a deep look into the life of a woman with chronic illness who fights for a normal life against all odds. Ruth does not write every day but when she does write it is in a tiny but legible hand and very descriptive. Ruth keeps this diary from Jan. 1 1930 through Oct. 22 1931. The 5-year diary measures 5.5"x4.5" has 365 pages plus memoranda sections and is about 25% complete. The cover is a soft leather and is intact with some signs of wear present. Pages have some age toning present. There is a clasp which has been opened and no key. The spine is in fine condition though the pages are pulling away from the spine but still intact. Overall G. BIO NOTES ON RUTH M. PAU & DR. JIU CHING J. C. HSIA: Ruth Mui-Kang Pau 1901-1936 was born in Foochow China 1901 and later lived in Singapore with her family. In 1916 she traveled to the United States with her teacher Dr. Ruth E. Atkins under whom she had studied at the Suydam School for Girls at Malacca in the Straits Settlement China. Ruth and Dr. Atkins traveled on the SS Nipon Maru from Nagasaki Japan. They arrived at a port in San Francisco California and made their way to Dr. Atkins home in St. Paul Minnesota and lived with Dr. Atkins. Ruth completed St. Cloud Teachers College in 1923 a Bachelor of Science from the University of Minnesota in 1927 and a Master of Arts in Education and Psychology from New York University in 1929. While in graduate school Ruth met her future husband Dr. Jui Ching J. C. Hsia. Dr Hsia was also born in China. He came to New York for graduate school and completed his doctorate degree in education at Columbia University. On August 29 1929 Ruth and Jiu Ching married in St. Paul Minnesota. Dr. Hsia had an exciting job offer as the Shanghai Sales Manager of American Aluminum Ltd. Following their wedding Ruth and J. C. Honeymooned in the United States and set sail for Asia in October 1929. They would first stop in Singapore to spend time with Ruths parents before heading to their final destination in China. In 1931 Ruth gave birth to a son named John I-Sheng Hsia. Sadly Ruth suffered from a heart condition and passed away on March 6 1936 before John I-Shengs fifth birthday. Ultimately both John I-Sheng and his father returned to the USA with the support of Dr. Atkins. John I-Sheng would become an engineer graduating from MIT and would marry Constance Ross Turner a Harvard graduate and architectural designer. Ruth would have been so very proud. ; Manuscripts; 24mo 5" - 6" tall; 365 pages; Signed by Author . hardcover
1965mon0000031248MacMillan 1965 1965-01-01. Paperback. Good. in x in x in. 7th printing 1971 MacMillan 1965 paperback
1965mon0000132374MacMillan 1965 1965T. paperback. Very Good. in x in x in. Former owner's name on front endpaper. Light shelf wear. Else clean and tight. MacMillan 1965 paperback
198691286Univ of Pennsylvania Pr. New. 1986. Hardcover. 0812280040 . FREE UPGRADE to Courier/Priority Shipping Upon Request - IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - FLAWLESS COPY BRAND NEW PRISTINE NEVER OPENED -- -360 pages. From a review in Library Journal: "Well-known in Philadelphia as a teacher artist and arts administrator Benton Murdoch Spruance gained national renown primarily through his lithographs. Stylistically inspired by artists as diverse as Rembrandt Goya the Cubists and the regionalists his work has geometric and expressionist tendencies that give his images universal overtones. His themes reflect his interest in the common man religion and death the love of family and friends. Fine's well-written introduction gives a brief critical overview. The catalogue raisonne contains the 555 prints of Spruance's oeuvre in various states and editions when these could be identified." Catalogue Raisonne Catalog Raisonné Complete Works Life and Work Raisonnee Univ of Pennsylvania Pr hardcover
178318New York: The Viking Press 1972. Tracy and Hepburn's most enduring screwball First edition inscribed by Kanin on the front free endpaper "14.iv.88 For Clive Hirschhorn: with every good wish: Garson Kanin NYC" and signed on the same page by the film's star Katharine Hepburn. Written as a Tracy-Hepburn vehicle Adam's Rib 1949 is the couple's sixth film together. They star as Adam and Amanda Bonner two married lawyers who find themselves on opposing sides of an attempted murder case in court. Clive Hirschhorn b. 1940 was the film and theatre critic for the Sunday Express for over three decades; his 1988 ownership inscription is on the front pastedown. Octavo. With 8 photographic plates. Original brown cloth spine and front cover lettered in bronze and gilt. With dust jacket. Foot of spine lightly sunned a little foxing to top edge; jacket unclipped lightly rubbed and creased at extremities short closed tear to head of front panel: a very good copy in very good jacket. hardcover
200087178YUP. New. 2000. Hardcover. 0300081618 . FREE UPGRADE to Courier/Priority Shipping Upon Request - IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - FLAWLESS COPY BRAND NEW PRISTINE NEVER OPENED -- 312 pages; 226 illustrations in black and white. Catalogue Raisonne Catalog Raisonné Complete Works Life and Work Raisonnee YUP hardcover
10885Stillwater ME: Nancy Ruth Leavitt 2018. 14-1/2" x 10-7/8." Numbered 1 of 2 variants and signed by Leavitt. A full cloth box with recessed manuscript paper label on the front; the box opens into a diptych with batik fabric as a background to both sides. Recessed into the right side is Leavitt's hand-lettered rendering of Dickinson's poem on handmade paper by New England papermaker Katie MacGregor. Opposite is a collage of hand-cut paper layered into blossoms feathery leaves and stems sewn in silk—all of which is in white. Bright and unworn. <br /> <br /> Quite a remarkable presentation of the beloved Dickinson poem. A supremely gifted lettering artist Leavitt's manuscript version of the poem done in white gouache on MacGregor's green paper gives Dickinson's words a lightness that is echoed across the diptych with the white dimensional blossoms on the rich green blue and pink fabric with verdant shapes of flowers and foliage. The hand-cut blossoms with their ethereal stems seem to float on the backdrop. It is a beautiful celebration of that quality that Pandora managed to keep in her box. It seems fitting that Leavitt and Dickinson's "hope" is also held in this box. Nancy Ruth Leavitt unknown