1 033 résultats
2000037091New York: Random House 2000. 4th Printing. x 338p. stiff wrappers. Random House unknown books
200651012New York: Alfred A. Knopf 2006. First Edition. Octavo. Paper-covered boards in dust jacket; 318pp. Mild foxing to top edge of textblock and interior of jacket else a tight clean unmarked copy. Trivial external wear to jacket showing some age toning to interior flaps of jacket. Very Good. Alfred A. Knopf unknown books
2006157038New York: Alfred A. Knopf 2006. First edition. Hardcover. First printing. Another memoir from Gopnik. A near fine copy in a very near fine dust jacket. Signed and warmly inscribed by Gopnik on the title page: "For Victoria- A wonderful hour that felt like home. Adam G. A nice association copy as the recipient was a long time interviewer for NPR and had her own show on WFMT in Chicago. Alfred A. Knopf unknown books
2001169262New York: Hard Press Editions 2001. Paperback. VG. White wraps with black lettering color-illustrated tissue dust jacket. 42 pp. Color illustrations. Catalog of an exhibition held at Lori Bookstein Fine Art New York Feb. 8-Mar. 24 2001. Hard Press Editions paperback books
2364London: Robert A. Thompson & Co. 1905. An octavo 254 pages bound in original three-quarter vellum over scarlet cloth. Lovely gilt spine ornaments of a stylized flower motif as well as leather spine label with gilt titles. Top edge gilt. A stunning example of a gift book from the Arts and Crafts period of design. hardcover books
3387London: Samuel Mullen. Sixth Edition. Hardcover. Very Good-. No DJ as Issued. Minor shelf wear small split in hinge near heel else tight bright and unmarred. Full brown leather five raised bands brown leather label gilt lettering gilt and in blind decorative elements marbled endpages and all text block edges. Small 12mo. 325pp. <br/><br/>Absolutely lovely binding. A very handsome copy of this collection of prose. Samuel Mullen hardcover books
1913038210New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons 1913. Arranged by Douglas Sladen with three sketches of Gordon drawn by himself and other illustrations. xxxii 320p. b/w illus. original blue cloth a.e.g. bit of light scattered foxing. G. P. Putnam's Sons unknown books
1906262519London: Gowans 1906. hardcover. very good. 2 volumes 144 144 pages. Colored pictorial title page slim 16mo 3/4 back morocco gilt top. London: Gowans 1906. Very good .<br/><br/> Gowans unknown books
WELLER9781984878106New. New book. unknown books
2021Embry 196574Viking 2021. First edition first printing. Fine in fine dust jacket in mylar cover. Viking, 2021. First edition, first printing. unknown books
1942WRCLIT57436Derby: Edited and Published by Kenneth Hopkins 1942. Small folio broadside 31.2 x 20cm. Printed on recto only. First edition published as the second of the GRASSHOPPER BROADSHEETS. Old folds from having been mailed otherwise very good. Edited and Published by Kenneth Hopkins unknown books
200552516Edinburgh: Canongate 2005. First edition. 57 pp. Very near fine in illustrated wrappers. Cover art by Gray. Edinburgh: Canongate unknown books
19874598New York: Harry N. Abrams 1987. First Edition. Hardcover. Very Good Fine but for marginalia in Fine DJ. Ownership signature at front pastedown sporadic underlining and marginalia in the hand of J. Sadler else tight and bright. DJ bright and clean. Grey cloth boards silver gilt lettering. 8vo. 400pp. Illus. color and b/w plates. List of Exhibitions. Bibliography. Index. Several bits of laid in related ephemera. <br/><br/>From the library of noted architect and writer on architecture J. Sadler. Sadler was prone to marginalia and laying in clippings and ephemera related to a given bookÂ’s subject. The presence of marginal notes or marks will be noted above and are absent if not so noted. Harry N. Abrams hardcover books
199314127Detroit: Surreal Underground Entertainment 1993. First edition. Paperback. Near Fine. 4to. Volume 1 Numbers 2 3 and 4 of this magazine devoted to the arts. Edited by Leslie Green. All in near fine condition. <br/><br/> Surreal Underground Entertainment paperback books
1976148007Santee: The Blueboy Library 1976. Paperback. 184p.ads very good first edition PBO in original camp pictorial wraps. Gay pulp fiction. Blueboy Library 80017. Gay's Anatomy! Is there a doctor in the House The Blueboy Library paperback books
197721825Santee CA: The Blueboy Library 1977. Paperback. 183p. very good first edition PBO in original camp pictorial wraps. Gay pulp fiction. Blueboy Library 80047. "IRS undecover agent Greig Hallman and US Department of Justice agent Rick Unforth in an action thriller." Gunn page 153. IRS intelligence agent finds evidence linking the CIA to the Mob. The Blueboy Library paperback books
197721836Santee CA: The Blueboy Library 1977. Paperback. 183p. lightly-worn first edition PBO in original camp pictorial wraps. Gay pulp fiction. Blueboy Library 80071. A gay "Caine Mutiny Court-Marshall! The Blueboy Library paperback books
1622222961622. 143 x 97 mm. wide margins.<br/><br/>Slightly worn; edges browned. In very good condition overall. Possibly after the same painting on which the woodcut portrait in his Compendium Musicae of 1632 is based. <br/><br/>Gumpelzhaimer spent most of his active life in Augsburg where he was Kantor and Präzeptor at the school and church of St. Anna from 1581 until his death. "Gumpelzhaimer was probably best known to German musicians of and after his time through his Compendium musicae. The richness of musical activity of St Anna is indicated not only by Gumpelzhaimer's music but also by the extensive holdings of the church library during his 44 years there. A handwritten inventory was started by Gumpelzhaimer in 1620 and continued by Faust in 1625. This list includes in addition to many printed collections several large manuscript books of polyphonic music in score notation. Two of these books have survived one begun in 1599 and the other completed in 1624. They were copied out mostly by Gumpelzhaimer and contain compositions by many prominent musicians of the time." William E. Hettrick in Grove Music Online. unknown books
WRCLIT77774Washington 1 December no year. Two pages in ink on two conjugate quarto sheets of ruled paper. With a number of deletions and insertions. Old folds from mailing small marginal nick very good. To W.T. Robinson who was apparently assisting Gurowski in some capacity with the publication of his writings. Gurowski begins by saying he is ". certain the book will be better as you anticipate and . that your kind cooperation will not hurt it ." and then clarifies his intention in the manuscript explaining: ". where I mentioned the battles of Ligny & Waterloo my meaning is Thiers the historian says that etc. the correction made in the proof sheet points that I was misunderstood. I restored in the proof-sheet the name of Thiers & these lines are to explain the meaning." Gurowski is not pleased with "the Commonwealth . containing the advertisement . The title is not such as I wish" and writes out his preferred version "Diary / from March 4th 1861 to Nov 12 1862 / by / Adam Gurowski" which he hopes can be inserted "provided it is not too late." In the concluding paragraphs Gurowski provides further instructions arising from the translation of his book from manuscript into proof-sheets. Count Adam Gurowski 1805- 1866; Polish-born American author. In 1825 in Warsaw ". he became identified with those opposed to Russian influence and was in consequence several times imprisoned. He was active in organizing the November Uprising of 1830 in which he afterward took part. On its suppression Adam lost the greater part of his estates and escaped to France where he lived for several years . He was also a member of the national Polish committee in Paris and became conspicuous in political and literary circles. The remainder of his estates had in the meantime been confiscated and he himself condemned to death . In 1849 he went to the United States where he engaged in literary pursuits and became deeply interested in American politics. He wrote articles for the AMERICAN CYCLOPAEDIA and worked on the editorial staff of the New York TRIBUNE. During the Crimean War he sided with Russia and his editorials and pamphlets were an effective influence on American public opinion in favor of Russia. He was strongly opposed to slavery . From 1861 to 1863 he was translator in the State Department in Washington D.C. being acquainted with eight languages. In 1862 he published the first volume of his three- volume Diary. It included three categories of men: Praise Half and Half and Blame. President Abraham Lincoln merited the Praise column as did Edwin M. Stanton and poet Walt Whitman but otherwise Gurowski was highly critical of officials in the Lincoln administration. William O'Connor who translated some of the count's papers into English described him as 'a madman with lucid intervals' . Whitman considered the tempestuous count a friend and attended his funeral. 'His funeral was simple but very impressive -- all the big radicals were there' Whitman wrote." - Wikipedia. unknown books
WRCLIT77773Washington 17 November no year. Two pages on two panels of a folded quarto lettersheet. In ink with several insertions and revisions. Old folds from having been mailed otherwise near fine. To an unidentified "Dear Sir" but perhaps W. T. Robinson who was assisting Gurowski with the publication of his writings: "To shorten the time I make the following suggestion which I request you to kindly communicate to Mr. Robinson & to the Printer-Stereotyper. It is to put at once in type the whole written part of the manuscript & to forward to me the proofsheets before the other part is finished . If Mr Robinson goes on with reviewing the printed mss. do suggest to him to throw out every word which in his judgement unnecessarily amplifies a sentence; & to make the whole intelligible . I forwarded to the editor of the Commonwealth a letter for his paper. If he publishes it then be so kind to repeat to him my request to expunge therefrom the name of Mr Opdyke." Count Adam Gurowski 1805-1866; Polish-born American author. In 1825 in Warsaw ". he became identified with those opposed to Russian influence and was in consequence several times imprisoned. He was active in organizing the November Uprising of 1830 in which he afterward took part. On its suppression Adam lost the greater part of his estates and escaped to France where he lived for several years . He was also a member of the national Polish committee in Paris and became conspicuous in political and literary circles. The remainder of his estates had in the meantime been confiscated and he himself condemned to death . In 1849 he went to the United States where he engaged in literary pursuits and became deeply interested in American politics. He wrote articles for the AMERICAN CYCLOPAEDIA and worked on the editorial staff of the New York TRIBUNE. During the Crimean War he sided with Russia and his editorials and pamphlets were an effective influence on American public opinion in favor of Russia. He was strongly opposed to slavery . From 1861 to 1863 he was translator in the State Department in Washington D.C. being acquainted with eight languages. In 1862 he published the first volume of his three- volume Diary. It included three categories of men: Praise Half and Half and Blame. President Abraham Lincoln merited the Praise column as did Edwin M. Stanton and poet Walt Whitman but otherwise Gurowski was highly critical of officials in the Lincoln administration. William O'Connor who translated some of the count's papers into English described him as 'a madman with lucid intervals' . Whitman considered the tempestuous count a friend and attended his funeral. 'His funeral was simple but very impressive -- all the big radicals were there' Whitman wrote ." - Wikipedia. unknown books
2007Embry 154373U. of Tennessee Press 2007. First edition first printing. Fine in fine dust jacket in mylar cover. Inscribed and signed by Cary Wolfson editor and publisher of Blues Access probable and signed by Harlem bluesman Sterling Magee clear. U. of Tennessee Press, 2007. First edition, first printing. unknown books
201730253Brooklyn: Ugly Duckling Presse 2017. First edition. Paperback. Near Fine. Sold here together are ten issues of 6 x 6 a poetry magazine published by Ugly Duckling Presse. Published between 2009 and 2017. All in near fine condition. Ugly Duckling Presse paperback books
1853290112Tours: Ad Mame et Cie Imprimeurs - libraires 1853. First Edition. Pictorial Boards. Good binding. A juvenile work about fishermen illustrated by Victor Adam a 19c Parisian painter and lithographer. With seven unnumbered hand colored lithographic plates of the original eight. A few extruding signatures; surface loss to the front endpaper and recto of the frontispiece likely removing a previous owner's name. Joints cracked but holding well with surface loss to the edges of the boards rear board and the spine. Pictorial paper boards. XII 180 pp. Good binding. Ad Mame et Cie, Imprimeurs - libraires unknown books
200549952New York: Rizzoli 2005. First edition. Hardcover. Very good/Very good. The Story of AmericaÕs Preeminent Interior Designer. New York: Rizzoli 2005. First edition. Inscribed and signed by the subject Albert Hadley. Numerous full color photographs. 272 pp. Hardcover. Large 4to. Black paper covered boards. Head heel and corners very lightly rubbed. Else a very nice copy in like dustjacket. Very good/Very good. Rizzoli hardcover books
1987011570Paris: France Loisirs 1987. First Edition Thus. Cloth. Octavo 7¾" - 9¾" tall. French text. 8vo. 221pp. French translation of "Northlight." Bound in red boards with illustrated dust jacket closed tear on rear panel. Signed by the author on ffep. Very Good/Very Good. France Loisirs unknown books