850 résultats
181229039London: Printed for Gale and Curtis 1812. 50pp disbound. Minor occasional soil Very Good.<br/><br/> The "commercial treaty with France arose out of the peace of 1783." London Merchant complains that no "fair degree of reciprocity between Great Britain and France was embraced by its stipulations." Post-Treaty events particularly those deriving from the French Revolution "have tended to estrange us further" from successful efforts "to restore the balance." He urges steps to maintain peace with France arguing that British naval superiority as well as the strength of British institutions will encourage trade and a peace advantageous to England. <br/>OCLC 31517031 3- Lib. Cong. U. Wales Cambridge U. as of 7/12. Printed for Gale and Curtis unknown books
180216304London: Vernor and Hood 1802. First edition. leather_bound. Contemporary tree calf rebacked. Very good/Near Fine. 128 and 219 pages. 21 x 13 cm. First title with five copper-plate engravings two folding.; second has two folding plates Divisions of the Linnaean System Characters of the Genera of British Plants English-Latin Dictionary of Botanical Terms and Index to the British Genera. First part carries month by month guide for the Farmer. Scattered light foxing generally bright. Vernor and Hood unknown books
189385519London: John Murray 1893. 3rd ed revised and for the most part re-written by Basil Hall Chamberlain. Hardcover. Good. frontis folding map 2 folding illustrations 16 maps 15 folding including a pocket map index x 459p. plus 1p. errata and 27p. advertisements. Burgundy cloth. 19cm. Moderate chipping at head of backstrip. Free endpapers replaced. Title-leaf missing a small blank piece along fore-edge. A few maps have edge-wear due to misfolding and a couple have minor splitting along folds. The pocket map appears to have been added to this 1893 printing of the Third Edition. <br/><br/> John Murray hardcover books
1746897361746. FE. ROYAL COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS LONDON. THE DISPENSATORY OF THE ROYAL COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS LONDON translated into English with remarks &c. By H. Pemberton M.D. London: Printed for T. Longman and T. Shewell .; and J. Nourse . 1746. First edition. x 419 1 pp. 8vo. old calf binding quite scuffed with upper board detached and shallow loss at heel and crown. Bookseller's label of A. E. Foote M.D. of Philadelphia and a nineteenth-century pharmacist's label for Samuel A. D. Sheppard & Company to front pastedown and an old shelf label on spine. Text leaves are age-toned and show light to moderate foxing/spotting throughout. The bottom blank third of the final leaf with the end of the index on the recto and errata on the verso is lacking but without loss of text. Ink and pencil notes on final pastedown. The London Dispensatory is preceded by 'A narrative of the proceedings of the committee appointed by the College of Physicians to revue their Pharmacopoeia' on pages 1-126. An acceptable reading copy offered as is. Wellcome IV p. 364. unknown books
1914017354New York: The Macmillan Co 1914. First Edition. Octavo. The "Sonoma Edition" was a collection of the best of London's novels all apparently using the first edition sheets bound in red cloth with a central gilt title "Sonoma Edition". 378pp. 8pp. ads at rear frontispiece tipped in. A very nice clean copy with slight fading and wear to spine. Beautiful Book Store label in back of book. The Jones Book Store 426-8 w. 6th Street Los Angeles. Unlike the rubber stamps with which he stamped the books in the store's early days his successors produced a beautiful label once the store relocated for the last time. The Macmillan Co unknown books
SKU1009647Macmillan. First Edition. Hardcover. Good/No Jacket. B005ZHBM82 March 1910 First Edition maroon cloth boards- rectangle gilt square with author and title- MacMillan on spine- some fading to color on spine but all writing easily legible- centimeter tear to top of spine fabric clean tight small letter "M" written on front blank page- no other marks or notes 4 pages of ads in back overall good condition: Prompt shipping and professional packing. Macmillan hardcover books
18905617London Paris & Melbourne: Cassell & Company Limited 1890. Four volumes. Royal octavos iv 380; iv 380; iv 380; iv 380 pages. Index. Sixteen chromolithograph plates one folding; numerous engravings in the text. A tipped-in printed slip in each volume states "This edition is specially prepared for subscription only is not obtainable through the general Booksellers." Very light foxing throughout; otherwise near fine in publisher's black- and gilt-decorated olive green cloth. Cassell & Company, Limited hardcover books
18306501London: Dobbs of London 1830. Single sheet of stiff card hand-cut oblong oval 11 x 14 cm. embossed with the publisher's name on the lower left. A superb late Georgian embossed paper pheasant with hand painted watercolor detailing. This beautiful embossed paper pheasant was produced plain in the 1820-30 period by Dobbs of London who were a firm of embossers print publishers and "ornamental stationers to the King". The Regency period saw the introduction of the technique of embossing and it quickly became a very popular form of decoration. Dobbs were known for their use of embossed paper/card designs used in face screens mourning cards writing papers visiting cards and envelopes adapted to all the purposes of fashionable correspondence drawing writing and wrapping papers etc. Painting and drawing were very popular pastimes in the late 18th and 19th centuries. The plain high relief/ embossed card was purchased from a stationer and the artist then set to work bringing the pheasant to life by the use of watercolor. Early dealer's pencil note. Hand-cut into an oval not effecting text or image. Very good. Dobbs of London unknown books
1852101421Folio 16" x 11 1/2" laminated mint green colored boards illustrated. Binding with some chips and wear at extremities small bookplate on front pastedown endpaper torn a couple of other pages with minor tears not collated but a couple of issues with a page missing generally the contents seem complete slight aging; otherwise very good. This is a collection of the Illustrated London News that was probably used to promote subscriptions. The date on the tile page indicates 1852 but the actual issues seem to run from December 7 1844 to July 5 1845. This volume contains about twenty issues during that period but does not include every issue. In some of these promotional collections some issues are reprinted but the reprints are from 1852. A couple of pages are missing but the issues seem mostly complete. This volume was put out about ten years after the Illustrated London News began publication in May 1842. It contains some very interesting news and illustrations including an illustration of an 'electric telegraph' in the April12 1845 issue a very young Queen Victoria and Prince Albert engraving at a costume ball in the June 7 1845 issue and a tennis match in the February 1 1845 issue. books
191010066New York: The Macmillan Company 1910. 1st. Decorative Cloth. Collectible; Very Good. A solid copy of the March 1910 1st edition. Tight and VG in its navy-blue cloth with bright lettering and design along the front panel and spine. 12mo 240 pgs. plus publisher's ads. Very light offsetting at the endpapers and pastedowns otherwise clean as could be. <br/><br/> The Macmillan Company hardcover books
1907WN57720New York: The Macmillan Company 1907. Gray cloth with gilt lettering and black decorations. TEG. Wear on all edges and some soiling of cloth. Some foxing on page edges but internally clean and good. Library stamp blacked out on title page and ghost of pocket removal at rear endpaper. Pl. at pg. 100 missing. London's tales of hoboing and life on the road. . First Edition. Cloth. Good/No Jacket. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. Ex-Library. The Macmillan Company Hardcover books
190722231New York: Macmillan 1907. First edition. Original brown cloth spine a bit dulled but a very good copy with all the lettering and decoration intact. BAL 11903. <br/><br/> Macmillan hardcover books
1910TB22451New York: Macmillan Company 1910. First Edition. First printing Very good- in blue cloth covered boards with white text on the spine and front board. The cloth at the head of the spine is worn and rubbed and beginning to fray. At the heel of the spine the cloth is rubbed and the text lettering on the spine remains only in fragments. The text on the front board is all intact. There is a prior owner's book plate on the front paste down and with the same owner's name in pencil together with a date of Oct. 1910 on the first free end page. Missing its very scarce dust jacket. 361 pages of text followed by eleven pages of ads by the publisher. An attractive first edition with "Macmillan" at the base of the spine and with one blank page at the end of the text and a blank leaf at the rear of the advertisements. BAL 11918; Sisson p. 48; Woodbridge 75 Macmillan Company hardcover books
1917137641917. New York: The Macmillan Company 1917. 8 pp undated ads. Original orange-brown cloth with dog silhouettes in black. First Edition of this posthumously-published book about a dog written by the author while stretched out on Waikiki Beach. In early 1915 Jack and Charmian left California for Hawaii plagued by financial problems he owned and owed mortgages on six houses for himself and for his dependents -- yet the financial problems were not so bad that the two of them couldn't have four or five servants in Honolulu. The only way out of the financial problems was through hackwork. He decided to set off for Hawaii with Charmian and to write two new dog stories. They had never failed him. The market would lap them up. The leisured life in Honolulu did not encourage him to write well and his two dog novels were no more than competent products for the market. JERRY OF THE ISLANDS was the worse with its hero a thoroughbred Irish terrier specially trained for n-word-chasing. Yet this hackwork did keep his head above water. Sinclair This is a very good-plus copy with very minor soil and rubbing; the front paste-down bears a "News Co." ink-stamp. Sisson & Martens p. 94; Blanck 11973. <br/><br/> hardcover books
1913136651913. Illustrated by H.T. Dunn. New York: The Century Co. 1913. Original very dark green cloth. First Edition first issue with only one blank leaf at the rear other than the endpaper. This was London's "confessional book" a fictional but quite autobiographical tale that Jack wrote to exorcise his shame -- which bore witness to the fear behind Jack's renewed and excessive drinking. The prohibitionists had cleverly used the universal terror of syphilis to urge the crusade against the saloon. Only after a man had too much to drink -- the propaganda said -- would he pick up a woman and a disease to blight the home. With his secret fears about contamination by disease or alcohol Jack provided in JOHN BARLEYCORN the best ammunition that the drys had ever been handed by a major writer. JOHN BARLEYCORN was sensational as the history of a man who drank too much yet who claimed to hold his liquor. Its author only hinted at the psychological and physical fears that made him a heavy drinker and while the book overstated the deprivation of his youth it understated the internal disturbances and agony in his kidneys which drove him to the stupor of the bottle. "The only trouble I may say about JOHN BARLEYCORN" he wrote in 1913 "is that. I did not dare put in the whole truth." The truths he omitted were. the connection between his drinking and early whoring on the waterfront his horror that Charmian's loss of her child might have resulted from a taint in his blood due to the mixed poison of alcohol and residual disease. Sinclair This is a near-fine copy a touch of natural bubbling of the cloth spine gilt less than bright. Sisson & Martens p. 72; Blanck 11946. unknown books
1917137651917. Mountfort. New York: The Macmillan Company 1917. 10 pp undated ads. Original red-brown cloth with dog silhouettes in black. First Edition of this posthumously-published book published about six months after JERRY OF THE ISLANDS. Though both books were written by Jack in Honolulu as cash-raising hackwork MICHAEL BROTHER OF JERRY was a better book. It argued that far worse than the Social Pit for men were the cages for trained dogs and circus animals. All the foul tricks of the trade were exposed. So effective was his indignation that hundreds of London clubs sprang up on the publication of the book dedicated to ending the trade in performing animals. Sinclair By the time Jack wrote this book in late 1915 on his and Charmian's second trip to Hawaii during 1915-1916 Jack was swilling so much fruit juice as it helped flush out the toxins his kidneys couldn't handle that he was becoming quite fat. He rarely stirred out of his kimono and his hammock. He felt too ill to walk more than a block and he preferred to take the chauffeur and the car for the shortest excursion. This is a near-fine copy very slightly rubbed at the extremities but the title page bears a blind-stamp and the paste-down an ink-stamp of an early Maine bookseller. Sisson & Martens p. 96; Blanck 11974. <br/><br/> hardcover books
190427590London: Heinemann 1904. First English edition. viii 246 2 blank pp. 1 vols. 8vo. Original brownish-red cloth stamped in black and gilt. Spine darkened preliminaries a little spotted otherwise very good. First English edition. viii 246 2 blank pp. 1 vols. 8vo. BAL records the London edition was advertised for 9 May 1904; the New York edition was advertised in mid-April. BAL 11878 note; Woodbridge 27 Heinemann unknown books
1904017738New York April: The Macmillan and Co 1904. First Edition. Octavo. 286pp. 2pp. ads at rear bound in blue cloth pictorially decorated depicting pine cones on a branch with a silver moon behind with background color of blue-green spine and top edge gilt. A very nice copy with off-setting to pg. 177 from news print some rubbing to corners and spine. The Macmillan and Co unknown books
1905135521905. With Illustrations and Decorations by Henry Hutt and T. C. Lawrence. New York: The Macmillan Company 1905. 6 pp undated ads. Original grey-green cloth pictorially decorated in white and brown. First Edition which consisted of 26420 copies. In this prizefighting tale Joe Fleming tries to convince his fiancée to accept his career by inviting her to watch him box a precursor to the "Rocky" movies: the fight blow-by-blow occupies almost the entire second half of the book. Jack had long cherished a cult of the perfect male body. He had pictures taken of himself in bathing costume flexing his muscles and shadowboxing. He took snapshots of George Sterling posing on the beach wearing nothing. Obsessive descriptions of male Anglo-Saxon strength grace and sexuality began to creep into his novels particularly THE GAME written in the summer of 1904. In that romance of prizefighting the hero expressed Jack's vanity about his own body -- his skin was fair as a woman's his face like a Greek cameo his stance a perfection of line and strength yet with a deep smooth chest and "muscles under their satin sheaths -- crypts of energy wherein lurked the chemistry of destruction." Sinclair This is a handsomely but oddly bound book with symbols of death and of fate on the binding on the endpapers and throughout the text. This copy has on the copyright page a hand-stamped two-line notice in type that is 3/32" tall some copies have it in smaller type and a few have no such notice -- precedence unknown though S&M speculates that copies with no stamp were first. This is a very good-plus copy with some rubbing at the extremities. Sisson & Martens p. 24; Blanck 11886. <br/><br/> hardcover books
1901017751New York: McClure Phillips & Co 1901. First Edition. Octavo. First printing. Author's second book 299pp. bound in blue cloth upper board lettered and decoratively tamped in gilt spine gilt some rubbing to covers small area on spine faded rear inner hinge cracking small bookseller ticket. BAL 11870. McClure, Phillips & Co unknown books
1907138701907. With a Dedicatory Poem by George Sterling. Collected by the Book Committee of the Spinners' Club. San Francisco and New York: Paul Elder and Company n.d.1907. Original coarse unbleached linen decorated in dark green with front cover applied illustration top page edges gilded. First Edition of this volume of stories by California writers illustrated by California artists designed by John Nash and printed at the Tomoye Press for Paul Elder of San Francisco. In addition to this tale by Jack London there are literary contributions by fifteen others about half of them women -- such as Gertrude Atherton Frank Norris Charles Warren Stoddard and Isobel Strong stepdaughter of R. Louis Stevenson. As for Jack London's contribution which had appeared in his CHILDREN OF THE FROST in 1902: "The League of Old Men" is one of the four pieces 'which are essential to the London vision of the Northwest' according to Calder-Marshall and London often said that it was his personal favourite. In it London gives a sensitive description of the white man's destruction of the lives of the Indians of the Yukon."Lundberg. In this book London's tale is accompanied by a color plate by Maynard Dixon. This copy is in the binding that is listed by Blanck "in probable order" second of four -- coarse unbleached linen stamped in dark green with top edges gilded. Condition is in a word fine very light rubbing to the front cover illustration. Blanck 11999. unknown books
1916137621916. New York: The Macmillan Company 1916. 6 pp undated ads. Original blue cloth pictorially decorated in black white and orange. First Edition of this tale about a love triangle on a large ranch. Though not published until the year of Jack's death he had written this during his bad year of 1913. He spent much of that year visiting a dentist finally having all of his upper teeth pulled to halt the pyorrhea raging in his gums; at about the same time his Wolf House burned down two weeks before its completion; and his kidney problems continued to worsen exacerbated by his drinking and his insistence upon eating raw fish and duck -- "Jack persisted in gobbling underdone flesh as if he were a wolf." The novel was meant to exalt the splendor of Wolf House and scientific farming and sex. "It is all sex from start to finish --" he wrote to the editor of Cosmopolitan "in which no sexual adventure is actually achieved or comes within a million miles of being achieved and in which nevertheless is all the guts of sex coupled with strength.". As in THE SEA-WOLF Jack split his own role between the two male protagonists the ranch owner Dick Forrest and the romantic adventurer Evan Graham. Forrest is Jack's ideal of the rich commercial rancher of the future the owner of 250000 acres worked on strict scientific principles. Evan Graham is another version of Dick Forrest but he has chosen to remain a writer and a wanderer -- the escapist ideal of Jack himself. Both men. compete for the love of Dick's wife Paula -- a vision of Charmian as the elegant hostess the athletic horsewoman and the Eternal Kid of Jack's fantasies. She kills herself to solve her dilemma the day before Dick has decided to do the same thing. The end of Paula is indeed sinister. Having shot herself she is revived by the use of a stimulant then given a large dose of morphine to allow her to slip away without pain. The closing lines suggest Jack's own reliance on drugs to kill the unceasing pain of his kidneys and his bladder. Sinclair This is a very good copy rear endpaper split some erosion of the black pigment minor natural wrinkling of the flat spine. Sisson & Martens p. 88; Blanck 11966. <br/><br/> hardcover books
1916WRCLIT38144New York: Macmillan 1916. Pictorial bright blue cloth. Frontis. First edition normal state of the copyright notice. Very slight bubbling to cloth along joints spine stamping a bit rubbed but otherwise a very good bright copy. BAL 11966. Macmillan hardcover books
191527598London: Mills & Boon 1915. First British edition. Color frontispiece. 1 vols. 8vo. Green cloth. Spine a little dulled else very good. First British edition. Color frontispiece. 1 vols. 8vo. BAL 11956 American ed. Mills & Boon unknown books
1913WRCLIT38154New York: Century 1913. Grey cloth lettered in gilt decorated in black. Frontis. First edition BAL's printing 1 presumed priority binding 1. A couple tiny spots to upper board corners slightly rubbed else very good and tight. BAL 11942. BLEILER p.126. SMITH L-454. Century hardcover books