71 407 résultats
1947R320158958Fournier-Valdès. 1947. In-12. Broché. Etat d'usage, Couv. légèrement passée, Dos satisfaisant, Quelques rousseurs. 176 pages - papier jauni - quelques figures en noir et blanc hors texte.. . . . Classification Dewey : 900-GEOGRAPHIE, HISTOIRE, SCIENCES AUXILIAIRES DE L'HISTOIRE
3240Paris, Editions Médicis, 1939, broché, 14x19,5 cm, 213 pages.
M3631Paris Ed Médicis 1939,in8 br 213pp. Langue: Français
19479996689Fournier Valdés 1947, In Fournier Valdés 1947, In-8 broché de 176 pages. Non coupé, parfait état.
81913Paris, Editions Médicis, 1939. 14 x 20, 213 pp., broché, bon état (couverture défraîchie).
19470001916BRITISH MANDATED 'PALESTINE' ISRAEL THE HOLY LAND. Good. 1947. On offer is a super original 1947 manuscript diary handwritten by Maurice we believe Smith a British soldier later an Officer in British Mandated 'Palestine' beginning February 28th when Maurice leaves the transit camp in Dover for the journey to Palestine via Toulon and Port Said. Writing approximately 130 pages somewhat sporadically Maurice seems to have spells when he writes diary entries every day stops and then resumes writing again. Most of his entries are long with plenty of detail giving an insight into his character his duties and the reality of conflict. At first he seems interested only in sleeping eating drinking and watching films but he is promoted to officer rank and seems to take army life more seriously. Many entries include operational and technical details. He was based in or worked in many locations including: Hebron Arathanya Transjordan Saraband Kantara Jaffa Rehoveth and Lydda. Here are some snippets and notes: "From what I saw of it it was a nice place Dover but I may be wrong; Had a lecture on "Walking out" in which we were told about French girls and wines; Better food. That's the main thing and my reason for volunteering for this job serving in the officers and civilians lounge on board The Empire Battleaxe to Port Said; We were troubled by the wogs a lot though as they were following us all over the place trying to sell their goods; I was able to smoke like a chimney as I had received my free issue; At a dance There were only 2 girls there and everyone was fighting for them; Went to Saraband as an escort with the water wagon; Provided a cordon for the 68th Rifles who are going to search an Arab settlement west of Rehoveth; The duty on the docks is OK but the food the cook dishes up is something awful; Bit of a flap on at Haifa. Illegal immigrant ship; We have started on a new type of operation clearing mines from the railway line between Petal Tigus and Lydda; An Arab has thrown a bomb through another Arabs shop window; About 10.30 Sten Gun fire was heard later found out it was a party returning from the pictures and had run towards the sentry and no messing he opened up. I bet they won't rush a sentry again." The page per day hardback diary measures 8 x 5 inches and overall is G.; Manuscript; 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF ISRAEL THE HOLY LAND BRITISH MANDATED PALESTINE BRITISH ARMY HISTORY POST WORLD WAR II FOUNDING OF ISRAEL TRANSJORDAN HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT AUTOGRAPHED AUTHORS MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH KEEPSAKE WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL PERSONAL HISTORY ARCHIVE DIARY DIARIES 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
19592965New York 1959. Fine/4-mil clear mylar envelope. This is an ORIGINAL letter dated 2/20/1959 from Maurice Chevalier to agent Paul Kohner. The letter is on the stationary of The Waldorf Astoria Hotel in New York City and is entirely handwritten in ink and signed by Maurice Chevalier. The letter measures 7 1/4" x 10 1/2". In the letter Chevalier says that he saw "The Pleasure of His Company" play the night before and ".feel it would be an ideal vehicle for a picture to come." Chevalier notes that he would have to be a bit thinner and look a bit younger ".but that should not be so difficult." In a postscript Chevalier notes that he will be on the cover of Newsweek and states "If we could do in '59 the Negulesco and the Tashlin stories - it would be just heaven". In fact "The Pleasure of His Company" movie was made in 1961 with Fred Astaire in the leading part. In Fine condition and now in a clear 4mil mylar protective envelope. unknown
1995RO20137072HERAULT. 1995. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 116 pages. Quelques cartes en noir et blanc, hors texte.. . . . Classification Dewey : 840.091-XX ème siècle
19621389371962. Original photograph from the 1962 Nobel Prize Ceremony signed by Francis Crick James Watson and Maurice Wilkins jointly awarded the 1962 Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine as well as Max Ferdinand Perutz and John Kendrew jointly awarded the 1962 Nobel Prize in Chemistry. Also captured in the photograph is John Steinbeck who was awarded the 1962 Nobel Prize in Literature. In fine condition. The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1962 was awarded jointly to Francis Harry Compton Crick James Dewey Watson and Maurice Hugh Frederick Wilkins "for their discoveries concerning the molecular structure of nucleic acids and its significance for information transfer in living material." In 1968 Watson published The Double Helix: A Personal Account of the Discovery of the Structure of DNA his account of his codiscovery along with Francis Crick of the structure of DNA. To preserve the "real" story for the world James Watson attempted to record his first impressions as soon after the events of 1951-1953 as possible with all their unpleasant realities and "spirit of adventure" intact. "He has described admirably how it feels to have that frightening and beautiful experience of making a great scientific discovery" Richard Feynman winner of the 1965 Nobel Prize for Physics. unknown
1973175914New Orleans LA: New Orleans Museum of Art 1973. First edition. Softcover. Exhibition catalog for a group show that ran May 12 through June 17 1973. Selected by Maurice Tuchman and with brief text by director E. John Bullard. Includes illustrations of works by Richard Childers Geoge Beasley Robert Wade Jim Sohr Hugh Gibbons John Lehman Richard L. Cook Robert J. Berguson Walter H. Stevens Pat Colville Robert Gordy James Burke James Allumbaugh James R. Templer and numerous others. An about very good copy in stapled wrappers with bumping to the bottom left corner of the pages throughout. New Orleans Museum of Art unknown books
197955478London: Royal Yachting Association and the Royal Ocean Racing Club 1979. Small folio pp. 76; text printed in double column; tables charts illustrations in the text; some soiling and wear; good and sound in original pictorial wrappers. The results of the official inquiry into the deadliest ocean race on record. A worse-than-expected storm on the third day of the race wreaked havoc on over 303 yachts that started the biennial race resulting in 19 fatalities 15 yachtsmen and four spectators. Emergency services naval forces and civilian vessels from around the west side of the English Channel were summoned to aid what became the largest ever rescue operation in peace-time. The race was won by Ted Turner in his yacht Tenacious. <br/><br/> Royal Yachting Association and the Royal Ocean Racing Club unknown books
19264la Nef, N° 54, mai-juin 1974. Un fascicule in-8°, broché.
200172137Port Louis 2001. Paperback. Very Good. 2 vols. 120 191p. plus separately-numbered appendices at end of both volumes. Wrapper. 30cm. Vol. I subtitled "Phase 1 -- Small establishments and itinerant units;" Vol. II subtitled "Phase 2 -- Large Establishments." <br/><br/> paperback books
17-5091New York NY: Hammer Galleries 1990. 4to. 24 pp. Softcovers. Very Good. Color Plates. New York, NY: Hammer Galleries, 1990. paperback
A clean, unmarked book with a tight binding. Wear and spots on cover. 7 7/8"w x 11 1/2"h.
197225117New York: Harry N. Abrams Inc 1972. Hardcover. VG May have ex-library bookplates otherwise clean. Oatmeal cloth. 430 pp. Numerous bw & color plates. With translation by Robert E. Wolf. This comprehensive volume traces all the movements in 19th-century sculpture form neoclassicism to funerary art and everything in between. With chapters on the pre-raphaelites Rodin and his disciples animal sculpture the eve of the twentieth-century and more. Harry N. Abrams, Inc hardcover books
H7720Both letters mottled and waterstained but fairly legible and appear to be fairly stiff replies to requests. To Haldane a geneticist he opens with 'I don't at all like this --- to be art.' and to Goldstein he is interested in participating in the discussion that Goldstein proposes for a club date but the three points that Goldstein invites his comments 'have nothing whatever to do with a discussion of my writings.'. unknown
GF230294 pages in12 - bon état -
1975R130000177MUSIDISC. 1975. In-12. Broché. Etat d'usage, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. Couverture légèrement passée. Photo : NISAK.. . . . Classification : 410-33 Tours
R130006008"LA VOIX DE SON MAITRE. non daté. In-12. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. Pochette en couleurs, ""le meilleur de moi-même"". Plus de 2 heures de musiques.. . . . Classification : 410-33 Tours"
R130005173PATHE. non daté. In-12. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. Pochette en couleurs, grande photo à l'intérieur de la pochette.. . . . Classification : 410-33 Tours
H2842Paris 1899. 8vo. 5 S.und 1 Postkarte gutes Exemplar. Text: französisch: Gomont: Museed´histoire naturelle botanique. Paris. unknown
AMA-721 p. in 8°, 6 août 1917 (une note au crayon indique "erreur de date c'est du 6 septembre) – 17 mai 1918. 1/2 p. in 4°, sur papier à en-tête du 100 bd Maillot à Neuilly.
18483Collaborateur de la revue l’Oeuf dur.1 lettre (2 p.) à en-tête de l’Oeuf dur, 14 mars 1922 : Il le remercie de l’envoi d’Intentions et de la publication de son poème dans le n° 3. [Intentions mars 1922 : Sphinx double]. Il voudrait lui parler de ce n°. “J’aime beaucoup les Gestes de Paul Fierens et la classique pureté (Ronsard, Malherbe et Baudelaire) de l’En Arles d’Alibert (ce dernier goût me vaudrait je crois une dispute à l’Oeuf Dur). Le Romains n’est pas mauvais et le Jouhandeau me plait infiniment. J’ai vu enfin dans votre Salomé que vous aimiez non seulement Wilde mais encore plus (?) Villiers de l’Isle-Adam, et voilà une nouvelle rencontre”.1 lettre (2 p.) à en-tête de l’Oeuf dur, 28 mars 1922 : Il est sensible aux critiques de la presse que P-A. May lui a fait parvenir (Jamati) et apprécie Lucia van Dooren et Assez de chants glacés de Martin du Gard “qui est très supérieur à tout ce que je connaisssais de lui.”1 carte recto verso, 4 mai 1922 : il doit aller à St Gervais tout le mois de mai en raison de sa santé et lui envoie 3 contes inédits refusés par les Ecrits N. et la N.R.F., il serait heureux de les voir publiés.3 poèmes manuscrits (7 pages, la dernière signée), Trois contes : Conte ennuyeux, Conte d’Outremer, Conte comique, paraitront dans Intentions n° 1, janvier 1922 et dans Intentions n° 3, mars 1922 : Sphinx double de Maurice David.
207993 pages in-4. Paris, le 9 juin et 30 août 1946 à en-tête du journal “Combat” + le double d’une lettre “circulaire” de Scut.Env. cons.Intéressante correspondance. L’auteur de l’Histoire du surréalisme prépare cette fois une anthologie de la poésie surréaliste de 1924 à 1940 et voudrait aussi, “réparer à cette occasion l’injustice commise à l’égard des surréalistes belges” qui en étaient absents. “Il faudrait donc d’abord de votre part un choix de sept à huit poèmes environ (ou textes), accompagnés d’une photographie de vous, d’une notice biographique sommaire, et d’une notice bibliographique.” Scut. est aussi chargé d’en faire part à ses amis de Belgique pour leur demander la même chose...“J’ai été bien heureux de vous voir cher Scutenaire, et de vous dire combien m’avaient plus vos Inscriptions. Et il lui recopie in extenso quelques élogieuses lignes qu’il a consacré à son ouvrage (pour la Revue Internationale, janvier 1946) et qui se terminent : “Avec des hommes comme Scutenaire il est encore permis d’espérer...”