665 résultats
195421940Paris, Le Club Français de Livre, 1954, in-8°., Relié, 259 pages. Bon état. Exemplaire 1/ 10000
195474312Paris, Le Club Français de Livre, 1954, in-8°., pleine toile éditeur, 259 pages. Bon état. Exemplaire 1/ 10000.
195582138Paris, Le Club du Meilleur Livre, 1954 -1955, in-8, cartonnage éditeur toilé, sous rodhoïd,, 206p., 199p. Un des 8800 ex. h.-c. Maquette de Mitschké et Bernard Grün. Bon état.
200346505Hamburg, Dölling & Galitz, 2003. X, 532 S. Mit Abb. 30 cm. OKart.
Book is in excellent condition with foxing to endpapers as the only blemish. Binding is solid and square, covers have sharp corners, exterior shows no blemishes, text/interior is clean and free of marking of any kind. Dust jacket has edge wear, small tears. Basis of book is "Jay," who works in London's Piccadilly as a prostitute, and reports on the tricks, hustlers, money, Don Juans, Galahads, prigs, hypocrites, perverts, sadists, dirty basement clubs, squalid lodgings, ponce, homosexual offences, and other details of the trade.
10166Paris, s.d. (1848 portée sur le dos). In/16 reliure demi-chagrin rouge, dos à nerfs à titre doré, 160 pages. Auréole claire sur la base de l’ensemble de l’ouvrage.
10166Paris s.d. 1848 portée sur le dos. In/16 reliure demi-chagrin rouge dos à nerfs à titre doré 160 pages. Auréole claire sur la base de lensemble de louvrage. Publication prudemment anonyme mais pleins dhumour. Plus quune biographie il sagit dune critique quelques fois savoureuse du positionnement politique de chaque représentant classé par départements - un exemple : Ferouillat complètement inconnu nomination inexplicable et qui paraît être leffet dun malentendu. ou encore :abbé Fayet : . Nous ne demandons pas à monseigneur lévêque dOrléans dêtre libéral et républicain nous le prions seulement dêtre un peu chrétien. unknown
A list of Honorary Members, Life Members and Members of the Savage Club with dates of joining. Don't bother looking for any women in the list, there aren't any. In 1951 the club was to be found at 1 Carlton House Terrace. 62 pages. Wear to base of spine. Browning to covers diminishing towards centre.
195381816Paris, Le Club du Meilleur Livre, 1953, in-8, cartonnage éditeur, d'après la maquette de Jacques Darche, 382p. Bon état. Tirage numéroté.
195482151Paris, Le Club du Meilleur Livre, 1954, in-8, cartonnage éditeur, sous rodhoïd, 137 & 406pp. Edition limitée à 5000 ex. & 5500 ex. Bon état. Maquettes d'Emmanuel Méric et Jeannine Fricker.
195482160Paris, Le Club du Meilleur LIvre, 1954, in-8, cartonnage éditeur, sous rodhoïd, 357p. Un des 5000 ex. h.c numérotés. Maquette de Massin. Bon état.
19631761Paris, Le club français du livre , 1963, in-8 carré, cartonnage éditeur sous rodhoïd, 261 pages. Jaquette toilée éditeur. Bon état.
196370786Paris, Le club français du livre , 1963, in-8 carré, cartonnage éditeur sans rodhoïd, 261 pages. Jaquette toilée éditeur. Bon état.
19508171Le club français du livre 1950 418 pages in8. 1950. Reliure editeur cartonnée. 418 pages. En septembre Mrs. Aldwinkle accueille dans son palais italien dominant le port de Vezza un cercle de célébrités et d'intellectuels britanniques. Aldous Huxley dépeint avec ironie et humour les relations les obsessions et les conversations oisives de ces personnages lors de ce séjour dans une satire corrosive des milieux artistiques et intellectuels
196680238Paris, Club Français du Livre. Coll. Privilège 20, 1966, 85x115mm, reliure souple éditeur, 148p. Très bon état. Maquette de Jacques Daniel.
195474751Paris, Le Club du Meilleur Livre. Coll. Les quatre saisons. , 1954, in-8 carré, Cartonnage éditeur, 336 pages. Edition limitée à 4500 ex. numérotés. Bon état. Maquette : Bernard Grün.
19361317506Tuscaloosa: Weatherford Printing Company 1936. Hardcover. Octavo; G/no DJ; Hardcover w/out DJ; Spine black without print; Boards in black cloth with silver print slight warping wear to corners and spine caps mild bump to bottom edge; Text block has impress and stain from metal paperclip to front endpaper and initial pages mild peripheral tanning to endpapers else clean and tight; 312 pages illustrated b&w. 1317506. FP New Rockville Stock. Weatherford Printing Company hardcover books
1996LFA-126721275Un ouvrage de 106 pages, format 145 x 215 mm, illustré, broché couverture couleurs, publié en 1996, Editions Tradiffusion, bon état
195218471Paris, Le Club Français du Livre, 1952, in-8 carré, Relié, 189 pages. Bon état. Illustrations Jacques Darche.
195370865Paris, Club Français du Livre, 1953, in-8, pleine toile éditeur, 208 pages. Maquette de Jacques Daniel. Tirage numéroté. Dos légèrement insolé sinon bon état.
1527844897.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1905008595San Francisco: The Club Woman's Guild 1905 Paper. Near Fine. Soft cover. Tall quarto. 14x8 inches. 16pp. Publisher's tan pictorial wrappers printed in black with photographic portrait on cover by J. C. Rasmussen. List of all San Francisco clubs on inner cover. Short closed cut to upper edge of leaves. "Marked Copy" stamped in red at top of front cover. Two minor markings within text. Light vertical crease at center of leaves. A near fine copy. First edition. Volume 3 Number 7. Very scarce! Published monthly Club Life was the official organ of the California Federation of Women's Clubs and the International Sunshine Society. We suspect that most all copies of this periodical were destroyed in the 1906 San Francisco earthquake and fire. Original subscription order form laid in. At the time of this writing OCLC locates only 4 odd issues of this periodical. . The Club Woman's Guild paperback
26384Oxford. Between 1910 and 1914. 10 printed items. In aged and worn condition with seven items showing evidence of removal from an album and three items still attached to separated leaves from it. Comprising three card menus five seating plans a list of 'Resident Members' and a newspaper cutting. The Oxford New Tory Club was a university club to promote and discuss Tory principles founded in 1861. Its records are in the Bodleian Library. ONE to THREE: menus for the years 1912 1913 and 1914. Each a bifolium on card of 3pp. 12mo. The first two 1912 and 1913 are to 'The Annual Dinner of the Canning and Chatham Clubs at the Randolph Hotel Oxford and the third for 'the Canning Chatham and New Tory Clubs at the New Masonic Buildings Oxford Saturday June 6th 1914. Toasts involve Lord Robert Cecil Harry Chaplin Lord Balfour of Burleigh Viscount Woolmer. The seating plans are from 1910 1911 3 1913 and 1914. FOUR to EIGHT: Five seating plans 1910-1914. All 1p. 8vo. Item Four tipped-in onto card is headed 'Oxford Canning and Chatham Clubs Dinner Masonic Buildings High Street Oxford Friday June 17th 1910.' Guests include Sir Henry Bliss Lord Selborne and J. St Loe Strachey. Item Five is headed 'The New Tory Club Dinner Friday March 17th 1911.' W. G. Ormesby-Gore F. E. Smith Viscount Woolmer. Item Six: 'Jubilee Dinner of the Oxford Canning Club Randolph Hotel May 31st 1911' Lord Hugh Cecil; Lord Lamington Lord Curzon of Kedleston. Item Seven: 'Oxford Canning and Chatham Clubs Dinner Randolph Hotel Oxford Friday June 13th 1913.' Lord Salisbury Rev. R. A. Knox Hon. Henry Lygon. Item Eight: 'Oxford Canning Chatham and New Tory Clubs Dinner New Masonic Buildings Saturday June 6th 1914.' Count Potocki Viscount Cranborne. NINE: List headed 'Oxford Canning Club. Founded 9th of December 1861. "Sceptra fide frenis plebs eget ara metu." Resident Members Summer Term 1910.' 1p. 8vo. Margins trimmed at head and foot. Laid down on card. List in two columns cinluding officers and 'Committee of Selection' including R. A. Knox. TEN: Newspaper cutting titled 'Oxford New Tory Club. The Annual Dinner. Mr. F. E. Smith K.C. M.P. and the Unionist Party.' In three columns totalling 75 cm. laid down on card headed in manuscript: '1st Dinner given at the N.T. Club 1911'. Sub-heading's read 'Mr. Smith's Speech' 'Truncated and Inferior Constitution' and 'A United Party'. Oxford. Between 1910 and 1914. unknown
19629929Berkeley CA: Tamalpais Press 1962. Unbound. Very Good binding. Bifolium 8-1/2" x 4-1/2." Limited edition one of 100 copies. Trivial edgewear and quite minor toning. A nearly fine copy. <br /> <br /> A wonderful excerpt from Head's Proteus Redivivus or the Art of Wheedling 1679 in which Head describes the increasingly lucrative business of bookbinding and how its craftsmen slowly yielded to the wealth and ease of bookselling letting their tools rust in their leisure and wealth. As a bookseller and former bookbinder I can't help but wonder what I've done wrong. Regardless a wonderful keepsake beautifully printed by Duncan Olmsted and Roger Levenson. Tamalpais Press unknown
81167St. Louis: Ozark M.C. 1927-1942. A rich archive of original source documents for one of the earliest motorcycle clubs in the Midwest with clear precursors to the "Outlaw" clubs of the post-WW2 era. Includes minute books for the Club's primary years of activity; founding documents including draft Constitution and By-Laws; membership rolls; correspondence; printed and promotional ephemera and photographs complete inventory in note below. Condition generally Good or better with expected aging to some documents and a few in fragile condition. The archive has been removed from the decomposing ring binders in which it was originally housed and organized into manila file-folders respecting where possible the as-found order of contents. The original binders have been retained and are included with the archive. The entirety comprises sixteen file folders housed in two hinged Hollinger boxes occupying about half a linear foot.<br /> <br /> <br /> INVENTORY:<br /> <br /> BOX 1: <br /> <br /> Folder 1. By-Laws and Constitution. Ten items including five drafts in mimeograph with extensive holograph edits; one apparently final draft in typescript on lined paper; related documents including roster of charter members with addresses; suggestions for effective Presidency; directory of other regional motorcycle clubs. <br /> <br /> Folder 2. Minutes June 15 1928 - October 18th 1929. Continuous; 32 leaves used plus 12 blank<br /> <br /> Folder 3. Minutes Jan 8 1937 - December 24th 1937. 24 leaves fully used recto & verso<br /> <br /> Folder 4. Minutes Jan 7 1938 - December 30th 1938. 21 leaves fully used recto & verso<br /> <br /> Folder 5. Minutes Jan 6 1939 - March 1 1940. 26 leaves most used recto & verso plus about 20 blank leaves as found. Entry for March 1 1949 is annotated possibly at a later date: "This is last meeting." <br /> <br /> Folder 6. Membership Forms 1935 - 1939. 33 numbered completed forms plus two unnumbered completed in holograph with name date of application record of membership vote and signatures. This presumably comprises a complete list of all Club members from 1935-1939.<br /> <br /> Folder 7. Miscellaneous correpondence 1930 - 1942. Twelve pieces on various subjects including political statements apparently by Michael Verderber not related to Club activities. Envelopes laid in as found. <br /> <br /> Folder 8. Printed and promotional items. Six pieces produced by the Club and by others. <br /> <br /> Folder 9. Midwest Motorcycle Association. Two pieces documenting an attempt by Ozark M.C. members to start a rival association to the American Motorcycle Association. <br /> <br /> Folder 10. Races Meets and Competitions 1932 - 1939. Sixteen pieces including correspondence race forms sanctioning certificates and related materials relating to competitions and Club meets. <br /> <br /> Folder 11. American Motorcycle Association 1930 - 1941. Eight items including correspondence bulletins and blank forms from the American Motorcycle Association the main sanctioning body for motorcycle clubs across the U.S. <br /> <br /> Folder 12. Ephemera including event tickets pit passes business cards club receipt book for 1936. Nine unique items some present in multiples. <br /> <br /> Folder 13. Photographs. Thirty-nine vintage silver-gelatin photographs most measuring 3" x 5" or the reverse; a few smaller; also twenty-three original negatives some but not all replicating the prints above. <br /> <br /> Folder 14. Photographs. Three larger format vintage silver-gelatin photographs two measuring ca. 8" x 10"; the third 5" x 7" on card mount this image fully cracked through image at lower third; verso of board held together with masking tape. <br /> <br /> Folder 15. Michael Verderber personal. Two items relating to 1943 registration certificate for Verderber's Indian Model "4" motorcycle.<br /> <br /> Folder 16. Fragments and extraneous envelopes as found. <br /> <br /> BOX 2: Remnants of 3 original binders from which the archive was removed. <br /> <br /> -------------------------------------<br /> <br /> The original Ozark Motorcycle Club was founded in 1927 by a group of twenty St. Louis cycling enthusiasts including Mike Verderber who appears to have been the original keeper of these documents Louis Ahrens first President Fred Tremozini Vice President Hank Eiler and sixteen others. It is unclear when the group began holding formal meetings; extant minutes for this iteration of the club begin with June 15 1928 and end without warning or explanation on Oct 18 1929 leaving about twenty blank leaves in the minute book. As this last recorded meeting was held just six days before the stock market crash the cause for this cessation of club activities may be conjectured. We can find no public mention of the Club in its pre-Depression phase; the minute book included here would appear to be the only record of its existence. <br /> <br /> The Club was reconstituted on August 16 1935 in the depths of the Great Depression by Verderber and about twenty others. Included here are multiple drafts both in manuscript and mimeograph for the new Club's Constitution and By-Laws which specify that members shall be "White Male Riders and Owners of Motorcycles" emphasis in the original but "may bring their wives or such persons as they see fit to club-affairs." The earliest minutes appear to be missing but the archive's record of meetings is complete from January 1937 to March 1 1940 which appears to have been the Club's last official meeting so marked in the minute book though other evidence included in the archive suggests that the club persisted for at least a few more years perhaps more as a social group than a functioning organization. For the first two years meetings focus mostly on club events including meets tours and rallies. The availability of beer at meetings is a topic that arises with some frequency as does the matter of the American Motorcycle Association for which at least a few members express strong antipathies see our note regarding Outlaw motorcycle clubs below; at one point it appears that a club faction even attempts to launch their own regional association the Midwest Motorcycle Association to challenge the AMA's supremacy in the promotion of meets "gypsy tours" and hill climb events. Eventually the Ozark M.C. appears to have made the decision to affiliate with the A.M.A. though we mysteriouly do not find any vote for this decision in the meeting minutes just correspondence from the AMA sanctioning club events but it clearly cost the club some members: by 1938 membership had dwindled from 22 riders to no more than a dozen. In later years beginning especially around mid-1939 meetings address with increasing urgency the Club's dwindling membership and futile attempts to collect dues from the many members in arears. By early 1940 it seems the eight remaining members can agree on very little; the minutes grow sparse and by March of that year the Club appears defunct. <br /> <br /> This winding narrative is supported by the archive's many other documents including correspondence which includes several lengthy letters from club president Verderber to prominent public figures including Franklin Delano Roosevelt publicity materials and especially photographs which are remarkable: all are vernacular nearly all captioned with names and dates taken during biker events throughout the midwest evoking the rough-and-tumble nature of early cycling events and the decidedly proletarian milieu in which they took place. "Outlaw" culture was still a few years away from being fully articulated by clubs such as The Outlaws The Boozefighters The Bandidos and others; but its roots are most definitely to be found among these risk-taking beer-drinking blue-collar riders of the Great Depression.<br /> <br /> The roots of Outlaw motorcycling in America have been widely documented typically traced to the years directly after the Second World War when returnig G.I.'s out of work and deprived of the close bonds they'd formed in battle found an outlet in the rough and occasionally dangerous world of open-road cycling. "Outlaw" Clubs - those that refused to affiliate with the American Motorcycle Association a commercial trade organization founded in 1924 - developed a mostly undeserved reputation for antisocial and sometimes violent behavior cemented in the public imagination by the 1953 Marlon Brando film The Wild One and its many imitators. But as is clear from the evidence in this archive an independent and contrarian spirit prevailed even in the pre-War years and we suspect it was members of Depression-era clubs such as this one who were most active in forming the post-war Outlaw clubs. In fact Verderber in one telling line from a long letter to his girlfriend included here describes himself as an "outlaw" rider - then thinking better of it crosses the word out and replaces it with "independent." By war's end such reticence would be a thing of the past; independent bikers would begin wearing the "outlaw" label proudly and defiantly. And though the use of the term "outlaw" before the war is hardly unnown - the Outlaws M.C. of Chicago were using it as early as 1935 - documentation of these pre-War motorcycle clubs is nearly non-existent making the current archive an invaluable resource for both the study of working-class culture in the midwest and one of the earliest instantiations of a uniquely American subculture. unknown