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1974A45638aUsa: Bantam 1974. 1st Edition. Soft cover. Good. 0x0x0. Clean With No Remarks Or Highlights. 118 Pages With No Index. Paperback. Soft Cover. This Book Is Not Signed. First Edition Thus Bantam September 1974. In Good Condition.- Specializing in academic collectible and historically significant providing the utmost quality and customer service satisfaction. For any questions feel free to email us. Bantam paperback
2001Q-0141183713Penguin Books Limited UK 2001-08-30. Paperback. New. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Penguin Books, Limited (UK) paperback
0553229699.Gmass_market. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. unknown
1977G0553103806I4N00Bantam 1977. Paperback. Very Good. Disclaimer:A copy that has been read but remains in excellent condition. Pages are intact and are not marred by notes or highlighting but may contain a neat previous owner name. The spine remains undamaged. At ThriftBooks our motto is: Read More Spend Less.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed. Bantam paperback
1977G0553103806I3N00Bantam 1977. Paperback. Good. Pages can have notes/highlighting. Spine may show signs of wear. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More Spend Less.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed. Bantam paperback
19592iEi0055fNew York: Bantam Books Inc. 1959. Book. Like New. Mass Market Paperback. 12mo or 12° Duodecimo: 6¾" x 7¾" tall. 118 pp. A rare hard-to-find out-of-print true collectible gem! A wonderful copy! An excellent spotlessly clean copy! Clean fresh sharp tight essentially and virtually flawless copy with crisp pages clean text and very light shelf wear. Beautiful text. Previous owner's small note on first front-end page. Previous owner's light pen mark in margin of page 19. Bantam Books, Inc. Paperback
1994DADAX06718713901994-05-01. Reprint. paperback. New. 4.25x0.75x6.75. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. paperback
SLIVCN-9780241614686Penguin Books UK (2/2023)
195991896The Swallow press | Chicago 1959 | 13.5 x 21 cm | Broché
ORD-1734A.Colin. 1949. Gd in-8 br. XI (Introduction de Lucien Febvre) et 208pp.
10751In-8 - 3 ème année N° 4- Oct / Dec 1948
51-6227Big Sur Calif.: 1980. Smaller version of the poster with ink hand lettering beneath the image: Henry Miller/Memorial Library. 17 x 11inches. .Jerry Kamstra January 2 1935 – November 26 2019 was an American novelist poet artist and community organizer. Kamstra is best known for his novels Weed: Adventures Of A Dope Smuggler and The Frisco Kid. Kamstra was awarded a National Endowment for the Arts NEA Writers Grant in 1978 for his novel General Popo: A Novel of Mexico. He was a prominent artist denizen and “Beatnik†of San Francisco’s North Beach neighborhood in the late 1950s and early 1960s as chronicled in The Frisco Kid his novel of the Beat Generation. The novel has become a cult classic which literary critic and Kerouac biographer Gerald Nicosia claims is “a Beat masterpiece on par with On The Road.â€Early Life: Jerry Kamstra was born January 2 1935 in Riverside California. Kamstra’s father Richard “Dutch†Kamstra was a Dutch immigrant who made his living as a hard-rock miner spending 50 years working underground. Dutch learned to speak English by reading The Katzenjammer Kids comic strip arriving on a three-masted sailing ship in San Francisco in 1928 from Holland. Dutch became a member of the IWW International Workers of the World as a longshoreman. Dutch moved to southern California and among his first jobs down there was milking cows for author Edgar Rice Burroughs in Tarzana California. Kamstra’s mother Lexie Kamstra was the daughter of a fruit tramp Nettie Cody a distant relative of Buffalo Bill Cody. Jerry had three siblings – two brothers Richard Kamstra and Robert Kamstra; and one sister Bessie Kamstra. Big Sur, Calif.: 1980 unknown
51-6228Big Sur Calif.: 1980. Smaller version of the poster before the printed text beneath the image. 17 x 11inches.Jerry Kamstra January 2 1935 – November 26 2019 was an American novelist poet artist and community organizer. Kamstra is best known for his novels Weed: Adventures Of A Dope Smuggler and The Frisco Kid. Kamstra was awarded a National Endowment for the Arts NEA Writers Grant in 1978 for his novel General Popo: A Novel of Mexico. He was a prominent artist denizen and “Beatnik†of San Francisco’s North Beach neighborhood in the late 1950s and early 1960s as chronicled in The Frisco Kid his novel of the Beat Generation. The novel has become a cult classic which literary critic and Kerouac biographer Gerald Nicosia claims is “a Beat masterpiece on par with On The Road.â€Early Life: Jerry Kamstra was born January 2 1935 in Riverside California. Kamstra’s father Richard “Dutch†Kamstra was a Dutch immigrant who made his living as a hard-rock miner spending 50 years working underground. Dutch learned to speak English by reading The Katzenjammer Kids comic strip arriving on a three-masted sailing ship in San Francisco in 1928 from Holland. Dutch became a member of the IWW International Workers of the World as a longshoreman. Dutch moved to southern California and among his first jobs down there was milking cows for author Edgar Rice Burroughs in Tarzana California. Kamstra’s mother Lexie Kamstra was the daughter of a fruit tramp Nettie Cody a distant relative of Buffalo Bill Cody. Jerry had three siblings – two brothers Richard Kamstra and Robert Kamstra; and one sister Bessie Kamstra. Big Sur, Calif.: 1980 unknown
51-6225Big Sur Calif.: 1980. Original intaglio version of the poster. 23 x 16.5 inches. Large format version. fold marks.Jerry Kamstra January 2 1935 – November 26 2019 was an American novelist poet artist and community organizer. Kamstra is best known for his novels Weed: Adventures Of A Dope Smuggler and The Frisco Kid. Kamstra was awarded a National Endowment for the Arts NEA Writers Grant in 1978 for his novel General Popo: A Novel of Mexico. He was a prominent artist denizen and “Beatnik†of San Francisco’s North Beach neighborhood in the late 1950s and early 1960s as chronicled in The Frisco Kid his novel of the Beat Generation. The novel has become a cult classic which literary critic and Kerouac biographer Gerald Nicosia claims is “a Beat masterpiece on par with On The Road.â€Early Life: Jerry Kamstra was born January 2 1935 in Riverside California. Kamstra’s father Richard “Dutch†Kamstra was a Dutch immigrant who made his living as a hard-rock miner spending 50 years working underground. Dutch learned to speak English by reading The Katzenjammer Kids comic strip arriving on a three-masted sailing ship in San Francisco in 1928 from Holland. Dutch became a member of the IWW International Workers of the World as a longshoreman. Dutch moved to southern California and among his first jobs down there was milking cows for author Edgar Rice Burroughs in Tarzana California. Kamstra’s mother Lexie Kamstra was the daughter of a fruit tramp Nettie Cody a distant relative of Buffalo Bill Cody. Jerry had three siblings – two brothers Richard Kamstra and Robert Kamstra; and one sister Bessie Kamstra. Big Sur, Calif.: 1980 unknown
51-6229Big Sur Calif.: 1980. Smaller version of the poster wiith text about the two Henry's beneath the image. 15.5 x 11inches.Jerry Kamstra January 2 1935 – November 26 2019 was an American novelist poet artist and community organizer. Kamstra is best known for his novels Weed: Adventures Of A Dope Smuggler and The Frisco Kid. Kamstra was awarded a National Endowment for the Arts NEA Writers Grant in 1978 for his novel General Popo: A Novel of Mexico. He was a prominent artist denizen and “Beatnik†of San Francisco’s North Beach neighborhood in the late 1950s and early 1960s as chronicled in The Frisco Kid his novel of the Beat Generation. The novel has become a cult classic which literary critic and Kerouac biographer Gerald Nicosia claims is “a Beat masterpiece on par with On The Road.â€Early Life: Jerry Kamstra was born January 2 1935 in Riverside California. Kamstra’s father Richard “Dutch†Kamstra was a Dutch immigrant who made his living as a hard-rock miner spending 50 years working underground. Dutch learned to speak English by reading The Katzenjammer Kids comic strip arriving on a three-masted sailing ship in San Francisco in 1928 from Holland. Dutch became a member of the IWW International Workers of the World as a longshoreman. Dutch moved to southern California and among his first jobs down there was milking cows for author Edgar Rice Burroughs in Tarzana California. Kamstra’s mother Lexie Kamstra was the daughter of a fruit tramp Nettie Cody a distant relative of Buffalo Bill Cody. Jerry had three siblings – two brothers Richard Kamstra and Robert Kamstra; and one sister Bessie Kamstra. Big Sur, Calif.: 1980 unknown
51-6226Big Sur Calif.: 1980. Contemporary reproduction of the original intaglio version of the poster. 24 x 17 inches. Large format version. fold marks.Jerry Kamstra January 2 1935 – November 26 2019 was an American novelist poet artist and community organizer. Kamstra is best known for his novels Weed: Adventures Of A Dope Smuggler and The Frisco Kid. Kamstra was awarded a National Endowment for the Arts NEA Writers Grant in 1978 for his novel General Popo: A Novel of Mexico. He was a prominent artist denizen and “Beatnik†of San Francisco’s North Beach neighborhood in the late 1950s and early 1960s as chronicled in The Frisco Kid his novel of the Beat Generation. The novel has become a cult classic which literary critic and Kerouac biographer Gerald Nicosia claims is “a Beat masterpiece on par with On The Road.â€Early Life: Jerry Kamstra was born January 2 1935 in Riverside California. Kamstra’s father Richard “Dutch†Kamstra was a Dutch immigrant who made his living as a hard-rock miner spending 50 years working underground. Dutch learned to speak English by reading The Katzenjammer Kids comic strip arriving on a three-masted sailing ship in San Francisco in 1928 from Holland. Dutch became a member of the IWW International Workers of the World as a longshoreman. Dutch moved to southern California and among his first jobs down there was milking cows for author Edgar Rice Burroughs in Tarzana California. Kamstra’s mother Lexie Kamstra was the daughter of a fruit tramp Nettie Cody a distant relative of Buffalo Bill Cody. Jerry had three siblings – two brothers Richard Kamstra and Robert Kamstra; and one sister Bessie Kamstra. Big Sur, Calif.: 1980 unknown
19752325Chicago: Swallow Press 1975. First Edition First Printing. Hardcover. pp. xviii 270. Small 8vo. Quarter black cloth over bright paper boards white lettering to the spine and facsimile signature of Nin to the front board. Lightest shelfwear slight spine slant ffep has been neatly excised contents remain bright clean and unmarked with tight sound binding; very good in very good lightly rubbed price-clipped dustjacket now housed in protective mylar cover. Overall very good. <br/><br/>"In this book Anais Nin speaks with warmth and urgency on those themes which have always been clostest to her: relationship creativity the struggle for wholeness the unveiling of women the artist as magician women reconstructing the world moving from the dream outward and experiencing our lives to the fullest extent possible." Swallow Press hardcover
197552605Chicago: Swallow Press 1975. First printing. Very good plus in very good plus jacket. First edition of this collection of talks and other public events by Nin from 1966 through 1973. 8.25'' x 6.5''. Publisher's quarter black cloth over red boards. In original unclipped $10.00 photographic jacket designed by Linda Nowak. Red endpapers. xvii 270 pages. Edited and with an introduction by Evelyn J. Hinz. Mild foxing to book edges and verso of jacket. Offsetting to front endpapers. Touches of shelfwear overall. Slight lean. Else sound. Swallow Press unknown
197699751<p>Chicago IL: The Swallow Press Inc. 1976. 1976. Good. INSCRIBED AND SIGNED ANAIS NIN'S HUSBAND RUPERT POLE TO THE ARTIST RENATE DRUKS - Octavo 8-1/2 inches high by 5-1/2 inches wide. Softcover bound in black white & orange pictorial wrappers. The binding is rubbed with creasing to the rear cover & spine & to the bottom corner of the front cover. The left edge of the titling on the cover is slightly faded. xviii & 270 pages. The fore-edge is lightly soiled. Good.</p><p>Later printing.</p><p>Edited with an introduction by Evelyn J. Hinz.</p><p>Inscribed to artist Renate Druks on the half-title by Anais Nin's West Coast husband and literary executor Rupert Pole. Pole writes: "For Renate / in Memoriam Jan. 14 1977 / Rupert". Pole's inscription is dated the date that Nin died. He adds "Too Much" beneath the title "A Woman Speaks" followed by Aanais Nin's name.</p><p>Rupert Pole 1919-2006 was a 28 year old musician and actor when he met the 44 year old Anais Nin in 1947 after the Broadway run of "The Duchess of Malfi". Pole earned a degree in forestry and after joining the Forest Service moved to live with Anais Nin in a rustic cabin in the Sierra Madre. Pole was under the impression that Nin had divorced her first husband Hugh Parker Guilder when they were married in Arizona by a justice of the peace. For 11 years Anais Nin kept secret from Pole that she was still married to Guilder but concerned about legal & financial entanglements the couple annulled their marriage. Though she remained married to Guilder Nin spent her remaining years with Pole in a small house he had built in Los Angeles' Silver Lake neighborhood. The house was designed by Pole's half brother Frank Lloyd Wright's grandson Eric Lloyd Wright. Following Nin's death in 1977 Pole became literary executor of her estate responsible for supervising preparations of posthumous editions of her work. In that capacity he restored erotic content that had been toned down in earlier editions.</p><p>The recipient Viennese-born artist Renate Druks 1921-2007 was one of Anais Nin's closest friends. Renate was first introduced to Anais Nin by their mutual friend Paul Mathiesen. Druks and Mathiesen came up with the idea of the "Come as Your Madness" masquerade party to which Nin showed up in a skin-colored leotard with a birdcage encasing her head from which she drew out ticker-tape upon which she'd penned lines from her books. Kenneth Anger in attendance was inspired by the event to create his film "Inauguration of the Pleasuredome" which featured scenes with Nin Druks and Mathiessen. Anais Nin and Renate Druks remained close friends until Nin's death and the character of Renate in Nin's final novel "Collages" is based on her friend. Renate Druks held her first solo exhibition of her paintings at the Lane Galleries in 1957. Her Malibu home later became known as a salon for the avant garde which was often visited by the likes of Kenneth Anger Don Bachardy Christopher Isherwood James Bridges Henry MillerVirgil Thompson and Anais Nin among others. In her diaries Anais Nin wrote "Renate's gift is a heightened mood which communicates itself to others. She created in a state of natural intoxication".</p> Chicago, IL: The Swallow Press Inc., (1976). paperback
GOR001793459Paperback. Very Good. paperback
1969005479Editions Duculot broché Couverture Illustrée Gembloux 1969 194 pages en format grand -8 - nombreuses illustrations - Tome cinquante cinquième
2014500084863LES ESCALES 2014 230 pages 14x2 6x22 4cm. 2014. Broché. 230 pages.
19221207601922 Annales de la Société d'Histoire Naturelle de Toulon - Imprimerie d'Art, B. Bouchet - 1922, 1928 et 1931 - In-8, broché - 39 + 36 + 19 pages - Envoi de l'auteur (dédicace) en haut de la première page - Ouvrage composite regroupant 3 publications - Planches d'illustrations en N&B hors texte dans la première partie
49799735like new. unknown
THPU-68864Hardcover. NEW. US Standard Edition. We will ship same day or next day with trackable delivery method. Expedited Shipping Available. We don't entertain INTERNATIONAL orders ATM. 30-day money-back guarantee. hardcover