5 776 résultats
2003LFA-126745358Revue de 104 pages, format 210 x 295 mm, illustrée, brochée, bon état
FORT851652University of Calgary Press. Used - Very Good. Limited Edition 87/150 signed by Kathleen Snow John Snow and David Blackwood. Contains the book as well as a seperate hardcover sleeve containing 4 loose prints. Bound in green cloth quarter-bound in goatskin housed in beige cloth slipcase. University of Calgary Press hardcover
FORT851649University of Calgary Press. Used - Good. Limited Edition 87/150 signed by Kathleen Snow John Snow and David Blackwood. Contains the book as well as a seperate hardcover sleeve containing 4 loose prints. Bound in green cloth quarter-bound in goatskin housed in beige cloth slipcase. University of Calgary Press hardcover
194629173Chicago:: The Reilly and Lee Co. 1946. First edition. publisher's cloth with applied color illustration. Date stamp and inked numeral on verso of bookplate page; minor use to cloth at extremities; tight and sound. . 4to. Illustrated by Frank Kramer. The Reilly and Lee Co., hardcover
194929172Chicago:: The Reilly and Lee Co. 1949. First edition. publisher's cloth with applied color illustration in dust jacket. Small address sticker applied to "bookplate" page; a bright fine copy in a bright price-clipped jacket with some shallow chipping at the top of the spine and corners. . 4to. Illustrated by Frank Kramer. The Reilly and Lee Co., hardcover
194643073Chicago: Reilly & Lee c. 1946. Lg. 8vo. 242 2 pp. Frntsp. illust. title full page & text blk & wht illust. Beige cloth blk lettrng colour plate mntd frnt cvr mnr bumpng rubbng cryon drwings on a couple blank leaves at rear still a G- copy. First edition early printing w/ 32 pp. signatures. Reilly & Lee, hardcover
117927hachette 1875 - 1899 27 in-8 demi-chagrin Paris, Au siège social du Club Alpin Français, Librairie Hachette, 1875-1899, 27 volumes in-8 de 140x230 mm environ, environ 600 pages par volume, quelques gravures in-texte, nombreux hors-texte et planches dépliantes. Collationnés : quelques erreurs de placement des hors-textes mais il ne manque qu'une seule planche (Année 1874, manque une carte topographique du Mont Pelvoux), en revanche présence de figures, cartes et panoramas supplémentaires, non annoncés. Demi-chagrin aubergine, plats papier imitation chagrin assortis, dos à cinq nerfs portant titres et tomaisons dorées, gardes marbrées. Quelques marques sur le cuir, des frottements sur les dos et les plats, tranches piquées, un défaut d'impression p.68 de l'année 1899, un petit trou p.79 de la table, sinon intérieur propre, certains cahiers non coupés, bon état général, rare et bel ensemble. ATTENTION POUR EXPÉDITION : PLUS DE 35 kg.
201509760Paris, Editions du chene , 1994 ; in-4, 183 pp., cartonnage de l'éditeur. Avec jaquette.
201100174Grenoble , Glénat, 2002 ; in-4, 48 pp., cartonnage de l'éditeur. EO tome 4.
1977B5384S.l., Éditions de la Courtille, 1977 ; in-4, 255 pp., cartonnage d'éditeur imprimé. État neuf.
1882List3658Boston Massachusetts: W. A. Evans & Bro 1882. Folio illustrated wraps. Pages detached from each other small chip to corner images and music fine remains good to very good and quite attractive. Good to very good. A visually striking example of Oscar Wilde–related ephemera issued during the height of the writer’s American lecture tour of 1882. Though lacking a printed date the title strongly suggests publication in connection with Wilde’s appearance at the Boston Music Hall on January 31 1882 where he delivered his lecture “The English Renaissance†as part of his widely publicized tour across the United States. Contemporary accounts describe the event as a notable cultural moment including the presence of Harvard students dressed in exaggerated aesthetic costume who occupied the front rows of the hall reflecting both the fascination with and satirical reception of Wilde’s aesthetic persona.1<br /> <br /> The lithographic cover prominently depicts a figure carrying an oversized sunflower an image closely associated with Wilde and the broader Aesthetic Movement. Such illustrated sheet music functioned not only as musical publications but also as collectible artifacts capitalizing on the figure of Wilde. Over the course of several months he traveled widely across the United States and Canada delivering lectures on art decoration and cultural taste and quickly became a subject of both admiration and parody in the American press. Although he never returned for a comparable national tour Wilde maintained a lasting connection to American audiences. We know of a variant edition of the Evans imprint with a different illustration as well as a different version published in Boston by Ditson the same year. <br /> <br /> OCLC 500491189 specifying this edition with the large sunflower illustration locating five copies. <br /> <br /> 1 “Freshmen at Oscar Wilde’s Lecture†The Harvard Crimson February 1 1882. W. A. Evans & Bro unknown
1789197053Privately Printed 1789. 1789. First edition. Small 8vo. Old 3/4 calf over marbled boards upper cover and first signature detached. Bookplate of Oliver Pemberton. 146 pages. Privately printed in a small edition of 200 copies. Also includes essays on Shakespeare Dryden Chaucer and others. Coleridge 369. F. Hardcover. Privately Printed, 1789. hardcover
1866List806Washington: For the Author 1866. 8vo blue wraps 42 pp. Apparently a gift copy from Curtis. Near fine overall with minimal wear. Near Fine. A scarce survival from Lorenzo Snow’s trial in the U.S. Supreme Court for polygamy under the Edmunds Act where two of his three convictions were eventually overturned as the court determined that the offense was continuous and therefore only warranted a single conviction. George Ticknor Curtis defended Snow and published this edition of his speech himself. Curtis argued that Snow had lived continuously with one woman and defended his right to have multiple “wives†as a matter of religious freedom. This copy with “From the Author†on the top margin of the title wrap apparently presented as a gift from Curtis. For the Author unknown
202600497Paris, Guy tredaniel , 2015 ; in-4, 63 pp., cartonnage de l'éditeur. Sous boitage état neuf.
178974282London: Privately printed 1789. Large 8vo. 2 iii i 146 pp. Parchment paper spine over limp marbled-paper covered boards with paper title label to spine. Uncut edges. Extremities slightly bumped with very slight marking to binding. Author's name written in ink to title and foxing. Previous owner's small label to pastedown. Poets discussed include Chaucer Skelton Shakespeare Drummond Waller including a poem hitherto unprinted Dryden and Wycherley. Philip Neve was according to the Poetry Foundation a pamphleteer. This work was privately printed and Lowndes claims 200 copies were printed. Large paper copy. ESTC - T146382 . Very Good. Paper Covered Boards. 1789. Privately printed 1789 hardcover
194427553Boston:: The Yankee Publishing Company 1944. First Printing of the First US Edition. A Fine copy in a Near Fine unclipped dust jacket with light sunning to the spine. The author recounts the lives and adventures of known and lesser-known pirates. Ned Low who made cannibals of his prisoner the two women pirates who outfought the men the gentleman pirate who despoiled New Foundland the husband and wife pirates of Nova Scotia and many others. The Yankee Publishing Company, unknown
1974LFA-126725881Revue de 211 pages, format 160 x 240 mm, illustrée, brochée, Institut de Géographie Alpine, bon état
197488620Berkeley: Sand Dollar Books c. 1974-1983. First editions. Five issues all very near fine in stapled wrappers. Complete set of rare books catalogues issued by Sand Dollar each offering 649 to 1250 priced items. An excellent record of the contemporary small press scene. For the lot: Berkeley: Sand Dollar Books unknown
2081002108300459company unknown 1939.7 N.A. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of pages: 11 illustrations Size: 23x31cm company unknown 1939.7 paperback
195555725Erskine MN Warsaw NY & Wyoming NY: Erskine Manufacturing Valley Implement Inc. Clayton Carlson ca. 1955-1957. Oblong 4to. 37 leaves unnumbered. all mylar sleeves including 20 silver gelatin photographs sized 8 x 10 in. all preserved in mylar sleeves 1 w/ photographer’s studio stamp on verso 9 printed sales cards on thick paper stock blue lettering sized 8 x 10 in. 8 silver print reproductions of ALS & sales documents. Recent 3-ring binder lettering stamped on front cover NF. This counter display photo catalogue extolled the virtues and advantages of the Champion Berger Rotary Snow Plow developed and produced by Erskine Manufacturing of Minnesota. Founded in 1948 following World War II they were one of the first companies to pioneer and manufacture rotary snow blowers and plows for farm tractors and proved to be an immediate hit. These photos show the rear rotary snow plow fitted to all popular 25 horsepower or more tractors such as Farmall Allis Chalmers Case International Harvester and other tractors. They could be easily installed in minutes rather than hours for front snow plow implements were used with ease with any snow removal job avoided the common problems of more powerful front snow blowers such as bucking and breakage to both tractor & plow and could be easily controlled from the tractor seat. According to contemporary newspaper and trade magazine advertisements as well as the reproduced sales contracts in this group the cost typically ran from $ 300.00 to $ 325.00 for the Champion Berger and the testimonial letters to Valley Implement in upstate New York between Buffalo & Rochester rave about the performance. Carlson 1926-2019 first began as a photographer at 15 years of age and after photographing his first wedding in 1950 ran Carlson’s Studio for 40 years shooting across the surrounding Genesee Wyoming and Orleans Counties of New York. Erskine Manufacturing, Valley Implement, Inc., Clayton Carlson, unknown
1899350London: Ernest Nister 1899. Fair only with contents separated from stapled wrapper dustjacket with staining closed tear and significant separation and 1899 gift inscription. A scarce 8-page printing on cardstock of Massachusetts author Sophia P. Snow's poem which was first published in 1884 tells the story of two young children on Christmas Eve who had lost their mother and whose father had lost Christmas in his heart and which features Santa Claus.<br /> <br /> Of note this volume contains an early example of a dustjacket. Ernest Nister unknown
18153205London c1815. 130 by 97mm. 5 by 3.75 inches. Engraved caricature map mounted on card original full wash colour. This humorous map is part of the series of cartographic caricatures - including England and Wales as here Scotland and Ireland - which Robert Deighton first produced in the late eighteenth century. England and Wales are depicted as John Bull with full tankard of beer in hand and riding a monstrous fish. The map like much of Dighton's caricatures would be published as a print by Carrington Bowles fl.1752-1793. Carington Bowles worked initially with his father John Bowles before leaving to take over his uncle Thomas Bowles II's business circa 1762. Carington Bowles was one of the most active mapsellers and publishers of his day in London. His business was continued by his some Henry Carington Bowles who in partnership with Samuel Carver continued to publish maps and prints well into the nineteenth century. unknown
1865022472New York: Charles B. Richardson 1865. First Edition. Thick Octavo. Portrait frontispiece 473pp.verso blank 2pp. publisher's ads illustrated with 17 as called for engraved portraits with tissue guards. The author has presented what he believed were the most prominent Generals because including all of them would fill an encyclopedia. . Here he presents us with biographies of 18 Generals. A very good copy bound in publisher's brown embossed cloth rebacked with original spine laid down endpapers re-newed p. 402-403 have off-setting from a leaf laid in at some point. Howes-743. Charles B. Richardson unknown
185267084Liverpool: F.D. Richards 1852. Pamphlet. Very Good. 24pp. Octavo 22 cm; unsewn pamphlet. 'Dr. Richards' written in contemporary ink at the upper right corner on the cover. Minor smudging and bumping along the margins and edges a couple of small pinholes at left margin and some light staining and foxing throughout; still in very good condition. This is the first state of this work with the word "are" printed as the first word in the last paragraph of page iv. We located eight institutional holdings at the time of cataloguing. Uncommon. According to Crawley "the pamphlet opens with an exchange of correspondence between Willard Richards and Zerubbabel Snow an associate justice of Utah Territory with Snow's opinion that Brigham Young proceeded properly in taking the census and organizing the territorial legislature prior to the arrival of the territorial appointees - all reprinted from the Deseret News of November 29 1851. Next are the plea of George A. Smith in defense of Howard Egan at Egan's trial before Snow for the murder of James Monroe and Snow's charge to the jury. These are followed by the text of the act of organizing Utah Territory and the names of the territorial officers appointed by Millard Fillmore September 28 1850.<br /> <br /> The preface signed by Franklin D. Richards and dated March 12 1852 opens with the declaration: "The following compilation may be considered a complete refutation of the charges contained in the Report of the returned Judges for Utah against His Excellency Governor Brigham Young and the citizens of that Territory" - a reference to the tract 'Polygamy Revived in the West' which Lowe had used in his lecture. And in the next-to-last paragraph: "The Organic Act is also introduced that all who wish may know the foundation upon which the organization and government of the Territory of Utah rests.'" Crawley 679. Flake/Draper 7226. F.D. Richards unknown
1976LFA-126719143N° 71 (Janvier 1976) : 22 pages, format 150 x 210 mm, illustré, broché, bon état