23 949 résultats
1914140941682New York: The Macmillan Company 1914. First Edition. Near Fine/Near Fine. First edition first printing. Bound in publisher's orange heavily stamped in blue white and gilt. Near Fine with light rubbing to spine ends else very sharp in a Near Fine dust jacket with soiling and edge wear with chipping along the top edge. Scarce in the original dust jacket. A novel based partially on the author's 1912 trip around Cape Horn on the Dirigo. The Macmillan Company unknown
1907884432New York:: Macmillan 1907. First Trade Edition PRESENTATION COPY INSCRIBED BY LONDON on the front free endpaper: " Dear Joe Wharton: In remembrance of all your patient kindness which at last resulted in the two splendid deer-heads that now adorn my walls. Sincerely yours Jack London Glen Ellen Calif. Feb. 28 1913. Original pictorial woven tan cloth with red lettering 242pp ads. Small photo of London pasted to frontispiece recto. Small tear to leading edge of that page some very light soiling. A wonderful book with a terrific London autograph. By the Author. First Edition Presentation Copy. Original Cloth. Near Fine. 8vo. Macmillan, Paperback
1913140948794New York: Published for the Review of Reviews Company by the Macmillan Company 1913. Reprint. Near Fine. Authorized Edition fourth printing. Presentation copy signed by Jack London on the front free endpaper and inscribed to his physician Dr. A.R. Goodman the latter's bookplate to front pastedown: "Dear Doctor Goodman: - You are billed to pull our latch string share our blankets & straddle our horses here in the Valley of the Moon ---- don't forget that is a date. July 10 1914."<br /> <br /> <p>xii 242 pp. Bound in publisher's bead-grain blue cloth stamped in blind and lettered in gilt top edge gilt. Near Fine with light rubbing to extremities; hinges just starting. Cloth and gilt bright.<br /> <br /> <p>A crisp inscribed copy of an early reprint of Jack London's prehistoric adventure novel. The Review of Reviews was a reform magazine sister to the progressive British periodical of the same name and a natural choice to publish affordable editions of books by the socialist champion. That champion took a warm interest in the Mexican Revolution and traveled to Mexico in 1914 as a war correspondent for Collier's. Charmian London wrote in her 1921 biography of her husband that he was stricken with dysentery in Vera Cruz and was treated by Dr. Goodman the resident American physician.<br /> <br /> <p>This book was one of a set he presented to Goodman in gratitude. London was famously hospitable and his inscription extends a warm invitation to visit his ranch in Sonoma Valley fictionalized as "The Valley of the Moon" in his 1913 novel by that name. Published for the Review of Reviews Company by the Macmillan Company unknown
1913140948791New York: Published for the Review of Reviews Company by the Macmillan Company 1913. Reprint. Near Fine. Authorized Edition fourth printing. Presentation copy signed by Jack London on the front free endpaper and inscribed to his physician Dr. A.R. Goodman the latter's bookplate to front pastedown: "Dear Doctor Goodman: - Some day when next we meet I am going to tell you a very shameless thing of which I was guilty when I lay on my back in Vera Cruz. Glen Ellen Calif. July 10 1914."<br /> <br /> <p>vi 265 pp. Bound in publisher's bead-grain blue cloth stamped in blind and lettered in gilt top edge gilt. Near Fine with slight lean to spine and bowing to rear board light rubbing to extremities and light toning to contents; cloth and gilt bright.<br /> <br /> <p>A crisp inscribed copy of an early reprint of Jack London's collection of short stories set in Alaska. The Review of Reviews was a reform magazine sister to the progressive British periodical of the same name and a natural choice to publish affordable editions of books by the socialist champion. That champion took a warm interest in the Mexican Revolution and traveled to Mexico in 1914 as a war correspondent for Collier's. Charmian London wrote in her 1921 biography of her husband that he was stricken with dysentery in Vera Cruz and was treated by Dr. Goodman the resident American physician. This book was one of a set London sent to the doctor after returning to California. Each book had a different inscription and this one sparks the imagination. Published for the Review of Reviews Company by the Macmillan Company unknown
Librairie J. Terquem, 1928. In-folio en feuilles à feuilles sous portefeuille illustré à lacets. 41 pages pour le texte de Pierre Mac Orlan. Texte en français avec traduction anglaise. Lettrines rouges, dessins en bandeaux et dans le texte + 21 eaux fortes de Chas Laborde sous serpentes en deux états, couleurs et noir et blanc. Tirage limité à 121 exemplaires, celui-ci un des 100 exemplaires sur Vélin de Rives à la forme et portant le N° 22. Quelques rousseurs pales, infimes frottements au portefeuille. On joint : 16 eaux-fortes de Chas Laborde tirées de Rues et Visages de Berlin, 1925 : Piscine (en deux états couleurs - noir et blanc). Naturisme en noir et blanc. La Plage (en deux états couleurs - noir et blanc). Scène de rue, en couleurs. Autre Scène de rue ( 2 en couleurs dont une sur japon). "Boulevards" en couleurs sur vergé d'arches. "Unter den Linden". "Sous les tilleuls" en couleurs sur vergé d'arches . "Opernhaus"-"L'entracte" en couleurs. Fanfare (2 en couleurs dont une sur japon). "La courbette" en couleurs. Scène de danse au cabaret en noir et blanc sur vergé d'arches. Autre Scène de rue en couleurs sur vergé d'arches. Totalisant ainsi 58 eaux fortes de Chas Laborde. Bel ensemble, peu courant et en bon état.
1933185321London: Ernest Benn Limited; Librairie Hachette Paris 1933. Containing Harry Beck's original map of the London Underground First edition first state of Harry Beck's map of the London Underground tipped in as issued. Copies of the pamphlet were also issued standalone in January 1933. The Short Guide to London was first published in 1924 but this the third edition was the first to include Beck's groundbreaking map of the London Underground published by Waterlow and Sons. This map had reconceptualized the network for millions of people: "Rather than emphasising distance and geographical accuracy like other maps Beck based his on the circuit diagrams he drew for his day job; stripping the sprawling Tube network down to a neat diagram of coloured criss-crossing lines" Transport for London. The copy in this volume is in the first state showing the Piccadilly Line under construction between Cockfosters and Enfield West now Oakwood. The first Blue Guide was released in 1918 by James and Findlay Muirhead beginning a series that would last for over 100 years. The Muirheads already had experience in publishing travel guides as the English-language editors for Baedeker and had acquired the rights to John Murray's Handbooks in 1915. They soon came to rival the Baedecker series itself with one reviewer writing of the 1920 England guide: "The verdict is if you can have both books in your library do so; but if you can have but one take the Blue Guide. This will probably permanently displace Baedecker as regards England" Hopkins p. 153. Small octavo. Folding colour map frontispiece and 6 brown street maps 2 double-page colour tube map maps in text. Original blue cloth spine lettered in gilt lettered or map endpapers top edge blue red and blue bookmarkers. Purple ink stamp of Angus and Robertson Ltd. Sydney and old price in pencil on front free endpaper. London Underground map foxed in places. Somewhat worn folding map foxed and sometime repaired on verso with tape small split along fold line red bookmarker detached: a very good copy. A. A. Hopkins "Review: The Blue Guides Versus Baedeker" Geographical Review vol. 11 no. 1 1921; Transport for London "Harry Beck's Tube map". hardcover
1903174889New York: MacMillan Company 1903. First Edition; First Printing. Hardcover. Very Good in boards. Bookplate on front pastedown. Rubbing along panel edges. Corners lightly bumped. Light staining on spine. Light foxing on FEP. Front hinge starting. Illustrations by Philip R. Goodwin and Charles Livingston Bull. MacMillan Company hardcover
1903210786New York: MacMillan Company 1903. First Edition; First Printing. Hardcover. Very Good in boards. Owner bookplate on front pastedown. Both hinges starting. Rubbing along panel edges. Slight lean to spine. Illustrations by Philip R. Goodwin and Charles Livingston Bull. MacMillan Company hardcover
1914023570New York: The Macmillan Company 1914. First Edition . Decorated Blue Cloth. Fine/Dustjacket. Frontispiece. Vi 378 Pp 7 Pp Ads At Rear. First Printing One Of 3948 Copies Blue Cloth White Lettering Gilt Design. An Unusually Bright Unworn Unrubbed Book Entirely Original Without Any Restoration. With The Rae Dust Jacket Which Has Undergone Professional Restoration Including Replacement Of Bottom Half Of Spine Panel And A Large Chip At The Bottom Of The Rear Panel Also Reattachment Of Chip At Top Of Spine Reattachment Of Split Along Rear Spine Edge And Repair Of Minor Edge Chips; The White Surface Has Been Retouched Leaving The Original Lettering; The Publisher's Name Has Been Added At Bottom Of Spine When The Bottom Was Replaced. <br/> <br/> The Macmillan Company hardcover
5326London William Little 1843 i.e. 1842. 1st Edition . Hardcover. . ~ ~ NOTE: THE PRICE OF THIS BOOK IS CURRENTLY REDUCED! ~ ~ . The paper's first 34 issues bound in one volume. Imperial folio. Paginated consecutively. Pp. vi 554. Illustrated throughout. HARDCOVER bound in the original publisher's half calf and marbled boards spine decorated lettered and dated in gilt sides gilt ruled; binding rubbed & chafed in places worn in places restored in places withal a good binding; few closed tears without loss at bottom of leaves. In a very good condition. Overall a well preserved tightly bound clean presentable copy. ~ FIRST EDITION. The paper's first issue first complete volume first complete year. Published as a volume with Title Preface and Index in 7 January 1843. Rare survivor a landmark in the history of journalism. The Illustrated London News was the world's first illustrated weekly newspaper. The first issue 16 pages with 32 woodcuts appeared on Saturday 14 May 1842 marking a revolution in journalism and news reporting. Completely exceeding the publishers' expectations it had to be reprinted several times that day; the issue went through five reprints and sold 26000 copies; the present issue is of the fourth printing. Issues 4-8; 10-16; 18-20; 24; 27; 28; 30; 34 are first reprint; issue no. 2 is 3rd reprint; no. 9 is 2nd reprint. Five issues later it was time for jubilation: "Probably in the whole annals of Newspaper History the triumphant success of 'The Illustrated London News' is without a parallel; it has received from the public a welcome warmer and wider than we could anticipated even in the buoyant enthusiasm of our first ambition. From the length and breadth of the Empire we have received the most flattering testimonials." The present volume contains all first 34 issues and a Supplement. Each issue is stamped at bottom with the legendary red Tax Stamp. Also present is Issue no. 15 a rare collectible in itself which appeared with the erroneous header "No. 10 July 16" instead of "No. 15 August 20". It is neatly corrected here by contemporary hand. Y-1 <br/> <br/> London, William Little, 1843 (i.e. 1842). hardcover
31811London 12.jpg up to London 23.jpg and London 9.jpg London 27.jpg 28.jpg and 29.jpg including large format images of Windsor Castle and the carriage entrance at St James's where Albert Victor kept his carriage which Gull used as well. Also 1 cabinet photo of Windsor London 10.jpg a carte de visite of Westminster Abbey London 8.jpg and ten later printings probably the early to middle of the last century of early images of London from the late nineteenth century London 1.jpg to London 7.jpg London 11.jpg London 24.jpg and London 25.jpg. The images show scenes in various parts of London. Particularly interesting are the two images of St James's because of their connection with Albert Victor and Gull and there is an image of the Burlington Restaurant with the name Blanchard about the door which was one of Gull's favourite haunts. Other images show The Royal Exchange Regent Street the Hotel Metropole The Treasury Whitehall the New Foreign Office the Post Office Greenwich Hospital Westminster Bridge Windsor Castle Holburn Viaduct Buckingham Palace and the Albert Memorial. I would have to negotiate a price for these photos if you were interested and I am sure I could get a much better deal if you took them all. Thre are a total of 28 pieces and the original 1880's one are really hard to get particularly the large format. They are a very evocative lot. unknown
1st edition. Period boards. 8vo. 416 pages, 25 cm. In Yiddish. Issues 1-52. Title translates to Literary Suppliment to the Workers Friend. Arbeter Fraynd was a London-based weekly Yiddish radical paper founded in 1885 by socialist Morris Winchevsky. After the emigration of Saul Yanovsky to the United States in 1894, Woolf Wess became the editor in 1895. In 1898, Rudolf Rocker, a German non-Jewish anarchist who had immersed himself into the Yiddish radical culture of London's East End, became the editor of the paper. The paper was suppressed at numerous times by the British government (Wikipedia, 2018) . Prager p125. Also listed in John Pattens Yiddish Anarchist Bibliography Periodicals. SUBJECTS: Yiddish literature - England - Periodicals. OCLC lists 9 copies worldwide (OCLC: 174120785) . Binding repaired and spine rebacked. Paper brown but solid, occational margin wear, Overall good condition. Important. (YID-40-97)
1668002733Londini (Londres), Jacobum Allestry, 1668
1964011898Paris Le Club français du livre 1964 En feuilles, couverture muette.
1747046963London: H Slater 1747. Third Edition. Softcover. Very Good Condition. Original blue wraps corner of cover and title sliced with section of front wrap lacking; front hinge split browning at edges untrimmed spine degraded. A nice unsophisticated copy of the third edition. viii 95 1. List of books at end.<br/><br/>First published in 1699 as a Country Gentlemen's Vade Mecum it's a sort of satirical guide to avoiding vice while actually being a guide to finding it. Published in some profusion in the second half of the 18th century as Cheats of London Exposed but the early editions are all scarce. Warnings for expecting better conversation in London than in the country for tennis courts the theater trapping cock fights gambling guinea dropping prostitutes etc. Size: Octavo 8vo. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: Under 1 kilo. Category: Travel & Places; Erotica. Inventory No: 046963. H, Slater unknown
1747046963London: H Slater 1747. Third Edition. Softcover. Very Good Condition. Original blue wraps corner of cover and title sliced with section of front wrap lacking; front hinge split browning at edges untrimmed spine degraded. A nice unsophisticated copy of the third edition. viii 95 1. List of books at end.<br/><br/>First published in 1699 as a Country Gentlemen's Vade Mecum it's a sort of satirical guide to avoiding vice while actually being a guide to finding it. Published in some profusion in the second half of the 18th century as Cheats of London Exposed but the early editions are all scarce. Warnings for expecting better conversation in London than in the country for tennis courts the theater trapping cock fights gambling guinea dropping prostitutes etc. Size: Octavo 8vo. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: Under 1 kilo. Category: Travel & Places; Erotica. Inventory No: 046963. H, Slater unknown books
1905306044New York: Macmillan 1905. First edition second issue. With plate illustrations and decorations by Henry Hutt and T.C. Lawrence. 182 6 ads pp. 8vo. Original green-gray pictorial cloth decorated in white and brown and lettered in red and gilt t.e.g. illustrated endpapers. A few vignette illustrations colored in crayon crayon scribbles to gutter of pp 38-39 staple at bottom of ffep long closed tear to pp. 77-8 spine slightly darkened humorous contemporary ink inscription on front-free endpaper some rubbing and wear to extremities. First edition second issue. With plate illustrations and decorations by Henry Hutt and T.C. Lawrence. 182 6 ads pp. 8vo. Inscribed to London's close friend and early admirer Cloudesley Johns. First edition inscribed by London: "Dear Cloudesley - Who is ethically disinclined to my flimflamming a capitalist society out of a dollar and a half and who therefore as a good socialist must make explanation to another good socialist namely Jack London Glen Ellen July 17/05."<br/><br/>An excellent association copy of Jack London's boxing novel. According to London Cloudesley Johns was the first person who ever wrote him about his work offering praise of the stories "To the Man on Trail" and "The White Silence" in the January and February 1899 issues of the Overland. The resulting friendship lasted until London's death see The Book of Jack London 1899 p. 277ff. "If Jack had no mentor but himself Cloudesley had Jack London - a pugnacious mentor who seldom pulled his punches. Jack's advice was born of his own experience and to Johns as to many other aspiring writers he gave of it freely. They met on several occasions. During London's writing of The Sea Wolf in 1903 Johns came up to Piedmont and the two men sailed up to the mouth of the Sacramento River on Jack's sloop Spray. There they played chess swam shot ducks and mudhens fished talked and wrote. 'The more I see of Cloudesley the more I like him' Jack wrote. 'He is honest and loyal young and fresh understands the discipline of a boat and is a good cook to say nothing of being a good-natured and genial companion'" Walker and Reesman p. 15. BAL 11886; Woodbridge 36; Hartley 1240 Macmillan unknown books
190416006JNew York: Century Magazine January 1904. Original poster which is a handsome and complex image of a straining man on the disordered deck of a ship calling out to an unseen boat with the text: “Ahoy! Take me ashore! A thousand dollars if you take me ashore!†Underneath: “Jack London’s Great Novel. The Sea Wolf. Begins in the January Centuryâ€. Printed in deep rich reds greens and black & white a striking image 12†x 21â€. Small pinholes at top corners a couple tiny tears about fine. Scarce poster. Century Magazine unknown books
1903332305New York: Macmillan 1903. First. hardcover. near fine. Illustrated by Philip R. Goodwin & Charles Livingston Bull. 8vo vertically ribbed green cloth pictorially stamped in red white & black; gilt lettering; gilt top. N.Y.: Macmillan 1903. First Edition.<br/> <br/> First issue July 1903 ; 2 pages of ads. Near fine copy of this classic the corners lightly bumped.<br/> <br/> Macmillan unknown
1903332805New York: Macmillan 1903. First. hardcover. near fine. Illustrated by Philip R. Goodwin & Charles Livingston Bull. 8vo vertically ribbed green cloth pictorially stamped in red white & black; gilt lettering; gilt top. N.Y.: Macmillan 1903. First Edition.<br/> <br/> First issue July 1903 ; 2 pages of ads. With the Jean Hersholt bookplate & half green morocco slipcase. Very good copy of this classic some pages carelessly opened.<br/> <br/> Macmillan unknown
1902140949259New York: The Century Company 1902. First Edition. Near Fine. First edition first printing. vii 1 250 pp. Complete with 6 black and white plates including frontispiece. Bound in publisher's cream cloth with pictorial stamping in black orange and blue. Near Fine with light rubbing and soiling to covers light toning and occasional smudges to contents; binding a little over-opened at p. 149.<br /> <br /> <p>An uncommonly bright copy of Jack London's only juvenile novel issued in book form after its appearance in St. Nicholas magazine. The sea yarn for boys is based on London's own past as a teenaged oyster pirate on the sloop Razzle Dazzle and it is one of his scarcest books. The Century Company unknown
190416006JNew York: Century Magazine January 1904. Original poster which is a handsome and complex image of a straining man on the disordered deck of a ship calling out to an unseen boat with the text: “Ahoy! Take me ashore! A thousand dollars if you take me ashore!†Underneath: “Jack London’s Great Novel. The Sea Wolf. Begins in the January Centuryâ€. Printed in deep rich reds greens and black & white a striking image 12†x 21â€. Small pinholes at top corners a couple tiny tears about fine. Scarce poster. Century Magazine unknown
1965008279Horse Guards Whitehall: Headquarters London District 1965. First and only edition. This is a remarkably rich and extensive archive of official documents relating to preparation for the State Funeral of Sir Winston Churchill Saturday 30th January 1965. While we have handled numerous planning documents from the days leading up to Churchills elaborate State Funeral we have not previously encountered anything quite so extensive in the way of official planning documents. <br /> <br />All of the documents and mementos reside within an enormous canvas-bound two-ring binder comprising an incredibly detailed document Copy No. 323 of the indexed and tabbed "Special District Order By Major-General E. J. B. Nelson General Officer Commanding London District and Major-General Commanding The Household Brigade. This enormous document measures 13.5 x 8.75 inches is nearly 1.5 inches thick and features 16 separate purple-tabbed sections these sections teeming with details about every aspect of the public ceremonies and terminating in 15 maps. <br /> <br />The separate but related documents laid in are also extensive. These include: Amendments 2-5 to the Special District Order; the official and confidential list of Operation Hope Not Telephone Numbers; a confidential summary document for the Operation Hope Not; a State Funeral Warning Order and accompanying large folding tabular detail of "Troops Taking Part in the Procession". <br /> <br />An ink-stamp at the head of the Operation Hope Not Telephone Numbers document states HEADQUARTERS 19 INF BDE GP. Our presumption is that this indicates that this binder and the documents therein belonged to a senior military officer participating in the State Funeral. <br /> <br />Perhaps most poignant also laid in is an original black crepe sewn and lined arm band for participation in the State Funeral ceremonies ostensibly the one worn during the Funeral by the participating military officer to whom these documents belonged. <br /> <br />Of course the document is primary source history of one of the twentieth centurys most elaborate memorial services for one of its greatest public figures. Beyond historical significance the overall effect of this mammoth trove of documents is to convey by sheer volume of detail the mammoth organizational scope of official public mourning for Winston Churchill. <br /> <br />On Sunday 24 January 1965 Winston Churchill died at the age of 90. By the time of his death he had become a living national memorial" of the time he had lived and the Nation Empire and free world he had served. His death completed his transformation into a national icon. <br /> <br />The day after Churchill died on 25 January the Queen sent a message to Parliament announcing: "Confident in the support of Parliament for the due acknowledgement of our debt of gratitude and in thanksgiving for the life and example of a national hero" and concluded "I have directed that Sir Winston's body shall lie in State in Westminster Hall and that thereafter the funeral service shall be held in the Cathedral Church of St. Paul. This was in accord with longstanding plans; twelve years before in 1953 at the direction of Queen Elizabeth II planning for Churchills eventual state funeral had begun. The elaborate plans came to be called Operation Hope Not. <br /> <br />Churchill's full state funeral at the Cathedral of St. Paul in London was attended by the Queen herself other members of the royal family the Prime Minister Harold Wilson and representatives of 112 countries. Churchill was interred in St. Martins churchyard Bladon Oxfordshire. It was the first time in a century that a British monarch attended a commoners funeral. <br /> <br />The outpouring of national and international sorrow and regard - from friends and foes sympathizers and opponents alike - was both remarkable and effusive. Before the service in St. Pauls Cathedral Churchills coffin had passed through the countryside on a train. The Oxford don Dr. A. L. Rowse recorded The Western sky filled with the lurid glow of winter sunset; the sun setting on the British Empire. <br/><br/> Headquarters, London District unknown
1763401992London: William Johnston 1763. Third edition of vol. 1 first editions of vols. 2-6. Some foxing and browning generally a clean and handsome set/From the Collection of Allan B. Kirsner M.D. 6 volumes 8vo. Plates many folding. Modern half leather marbled boards untrimmed. A fine set of this important journal with ten notable contributions in the history of medicine:<br/><br/>HUNTER William 1718-1783. "The history of an aneurysm of the aorta with some remarks on aneurysms in general". Vol I pp. 323-357. First recorded case of arteriovenous aneurysm. Garrison-Morton-Norman 2974. <br/><br/>HUNTER William. "A singular case of the separation of the ossa pubis". Vol. II pp. 321-33 and 415-18. A case of osteomalacic pelvis was reported to Hunter by a country practitioner. Garrison-Morton-Norman 6254. <br/><br/>WHITE Charles 1728-1813. "An account of a new method of reducing shoulders without the use of an ambe which have been several months dislocated in cases where the common methods have proved inefficient". Vol II pp. 373-81. "White's method of reducing shoulder dislocations by means of suspending the patient from the affected arm. This method either reduced the dislocation entirely or moved the head of the humerus into a position where it could be reduced by traditional methods such as applying the surgeon's heel to the axilla" Garrison-Morton-Norman 4407. <br/><br/>BARD John 1716-1799. "A case of extra-uterine foetus". Vol II pp. 369-72. "This description of an abdominal pregnancy successfully operated on by Bard was 'the first scientific paper on a surgical subject to come from the North American Colonies' Earle. John Bard was the father of Samuel Bard" Garrison-Morton-Norman 6155. <br/><br/>HUNTER John. "Appendix to Lynn's The history of a fatal inversion of the uterus". Vol. IV pp. 400-09 and Vol. V pp. 388-93. First accurate description of retroversion of the uterus. Garrison-Morton-Norman 6020. <br/><br/>FOTHERGILL John 1712-1780. "Of a painful affection of the face". Vol. V pp. 129-42. Original description of facial neuralgia. Reprinted in Medical Classics 1940 5 100-06. Garrison-Morton-Norman 4516. <br/><br/>DOBSON Matthew 1731-1784. "Experiments and observations on the urine in a diabetes". Vol. V pp. 298-316. "Dobson proved that the sweetish taste of diabetic urine was produced by sugar an observation following on Willis's discovery of the sweetness of diabetic urine. He also discovered hyperglycemia" Garrison-Morton-Norman 3928. <br/><br/>FOTHERGILL John. "Remarks on that complaint commonly known under the name of the sick head-ach". Vol. VI pp. 103-37. First accurate description of migraine. Garrison-Morton-Norman 4517.<br/><br/>HUNTER William 1718-1783. "On the uncertainty of the signs of murder in the case of bastard children". Vol. VI pp. 266-90. "This essay on the signs of murder in illegitimate children is in Garrison's view the most important early contribution to forensic medicine by a British writer" Garrison-Morton-Norman 1732. <br/><br/> William Johnston hardcover books
1864ZB262863London Simpkin Marshall and Co. 1864-1941. volumes 1-177 partly bound continuous run ex library good PRICE IS FOR THE LOT. - If you are reading this this item is actually physically in our stock and ready for shipment once ordered. We are not bookjackers. Buyer is responsible for any additional duties taxes or fees required by recipient's country. Photos available upon request. London, Simpkin, Marshall, and Co. unknown