638 résultats
1557046552Venice: J. Strada 1557. First Edition. Hardcover Quarter Leather. Very Good Condition. 19th century leather backed boards front hinge cracked corners worn remains of library spine label binding sound overall. Private library plate on pastedown minor scattered foxing index leaf foxed and with a stain in the bottom margin; overall quite clean internally. Printed in red and black with engraved emblems throughout. 12 228pp index blanks intact. Adams P 195. Size: Folio. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: 1-2 kilos. Category: History; Antiquarian & Rare. Inventory No: 046552. J. Strada hardcover books
19274222Southern U.S. 1927. Small ledger bound in pebbled leather over card measuring 7.5 x 4.5 inches. With events taking place across Tennessee Virginia Washington DC North Carolina and other Southern states this journal is comprised of 118 handwritten pages unfolding across a decade. The ledger was clearly a plaything of Ethel and her siblings in earlier years as they have left childish handwriting and notes dated 1911 to the pastedowns and endpapers. However the main content unfolds from 1916-1927 as Ethel claims the book for her diary and leaves us an account of how a girl moved from her teenage years and into womanhood while the world radically changed around her.<br/><br/>Ethel's tone in her opening entry is a reminder that teenage angst and ennui are not new inventions. "April 25 1916. I write this on a Wednesday. Nothing happened. Same old thing school school school." Despite feeling the sameness of her days it doesn't take long for Ethel to open up about the variety of experiences and feelings that really do shape her time. Revivals and Red Cross meetings take up multiple evenings after school; and she loves to read as an escape novels include escapist and sensational romances like George Barr's Nedra 1905 though she describes it as "same old life reading." By 1918 she also starts attending Patriotic Meetings as she reports "Germany's advancing" a concise announcement that is surrounded by news of boys she knows joining their companies and a string of weddings in advance. Global realities hit on the same week she begins school again in September for her observation "first week of school Don't think the lessons will be very hard" is immediately followed by reports of larger hardships a month later: "All the schools are closed on account of the flu. Several people have died with it. Duey Hines was buried yesterday she died in Richmond.in a hospital.Marton Sneed was buried yesterday.he died in Charlotte of Flu." Ultimately the flu grips her in a way the war cannot. "Friday 22 November 1918 Celebrated Armistice.School was opened after five weeks. We went to school for three weeks then it was closed again. December 3 1918. Tuesday all five of us down with the flu." Her December 5 entry is a string of named of friends who died of flu or are badly ailing and she does not write again until the new year.<br/><br/>The entries of 1919 reflect a new level of maturity in Ethel's hand and her voice; as a young woman she now has more freedom and more mobility and she seems rejuvenated by drives and visits with friends new dresses and fashions picnics and shows. Several nearby locations have moving picture shows which seem to replace the Revivals in her heart and her schedule. As she and her friends prepare for commencement in June she reports getting class rings and regalia and a spate of friends' weddings. And then. "January 6 1920. School turned out for the flu Tuesday. A good many cases in town. Uncle Tom sick for two weeks. The flu is awfully bad the people are opening an emergency hospital in our Sunday school." Amidst the tragedy and seeking scapegoats the town erupts in racial violence. "March 8 1920. Arnold's store burned down.negro boy killed last night." In the years the follow Ethel reports courtships getting a job and becoming a modern working woman. She reflects very little on how she was able to gain this freedom but clearly enjoys building a life of her own. <br/><br/>A research rich diary with opportunities for studying the transmission of the 1918 flu and its various spikes the role of troops moving through communities in spreading disease the historical relationship between pandemic and education the role of suffrage in expanding women's education employment travel opportunities and genealogy. unknown books
199522154New Haven: Yale University Press. Fine in Fine dust jacket. 1995. Hardcover. 0300055293 . First printing. Fine in a fine dust jacket. . Yale University Press hardcover books
1791045038Paris: Buisson 1791. First Edition. Hardcover Full Leather. Very Good Condition. 2 volumes bound in one in contemporary mottled calf; worn leather chipped at the head of the spine scattered mild foxing small stain to first title. Complete with the half titles reuniting the two parts of Paine's treatise on democracy and revolution that were published a year apart. There are two editions dated May 1791 on the title page with no clear priority between them. The first part was translated from the original English edition that was almost immediately edited and softened. Paine was a star in France an enlightenment philosopher of the first order and a frequent guest along with the likes of Franklin Jefferson and Adam Smith at the salon at the Hôtel de la Monnaie. "The government tried to suppress it but it circulated more briskly.Rights of Man can be seen for what it is: the textbook of radical thought and the clearest of all expositions of the basic principles of democracy." Printing and the Mind of Man xii 227pp; iv 16 224pp. Howe P-31 and 32 The English ed. PMM 241 the English ed. Size: Octavo 8vo. Previous owner's book-plate inside front cover. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: Under 1 kilo. Category: Philosophy; History. Inventory No: 045038. <br/><br/> Buisson hardcover books
1536044194Cologne: Eucharii 1536. Hardcover Full Leather. Very Good Condition. Full contemporary elaborately stamped calf over wood boards depicting the muses worn scattered worn holes remains of clasps boards expertly reattached but cords broken; attractive decorative endpapers. An attractively printed and bound copy of Orosius's influential work on the history of the pagan peoples. Early color to the title vignette and some of the historiated initials. Some early notes and underlining in red and black scattered discolortation title a little soiled and with an old signature. lxviii 567pp. Scarce imprint just 3 in Worldcat. Not in Adams. Size: Octavo 8vo. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: Under 1 kilo. Category: History; Antiquarian & Rare. Inventory No: 044194. <br/><br/> Eucharii hardcover books
194043184New York: American Labor Education Service 1940. First Edition. Quarto bifolium 25x20cm. fold at top edge; illustration to upper panel signed in image "Ed. Lossus" text printed from typescript. Faint fold lines most notable to rear cover rust stain from previously removed paperclip at top edge some light dust-soil else Very Good and sound. Agenda for the first of a short-lived annual series of Midwest Conferences held by the ALES throughout World War II. The Conference included a series of discussion panels "Can Labor Hold Its Own"; "Techniques in Workers' Education"; and an exhibition of materials for workers' classes. Upper cover adorned with a rather lovely vignette of a cloud-topped industrial skyline a hand holding up a torch in the fore-ground. Unfortunately the torch's flame is obscuring the "GE" in the title's "KNOWLEDGE." Not catalogued in OCLC either under "Knowledge" or "Knowled" as of December 2018. American Labor Education Service unknown books
1992181592Piscataway NJ: OSAALE 1992. Tabloid-format newspaper published by the South African Trotskyist group WOSA; 8 p. very good. Largest article is an essay by Neville Alexander head of WOSA criticizing South Africa's response to the Salman Rushdie fatwa: "Censorship as intellectual terrorism: White spots in Black South African history or The Worm Inside the Liberation Struggle. OSAALE unknown books
200228075Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. Near Fine in Fine dust jacket. 2002. Hardcover. 0803235682 . First edition. Remainder mark on bottom edge else fine in a fine dust jacket. . University of Nebraska Press hardcover books
1966257945Sacramento: California State Department of Education 1966. vi 42p. 8.5x11 inches foreword introduction appendixes illustrated with tables figures charts and maps a few underlines in one list at rear else very good report booklet in stapled blue wraps. California State Department of Education unknown books
195839975Washington: GPO 1958. First Edition. Small 12mo 14.5cm.; publisher's pictorial staplebound self-wrappers; 31pp.; illus. Wrappers a bit toned long closed tear to rear cover affecting text without loss of meaning. Good and sound. GPO unknown books
16846Photograph Album Women Scrapbook from female athlete and popular student at Oberlin College with over 200 silver gelatin print photographs and 190 pieces of ephemera from 1933-1937. Includes photos and memorabilia from Princeton Yale West Point and Northwestern University. Photographs in various sizes mostly 3 x 4.5 in. Original black boards. 10.5 x 15.5 in. Seal for Oberlin College in gilt center front cover. Spaces for handwritten entries on: Faculty and Student Autographs Class Officer Curriculum Publications Athletics Songs and Cheers Clubs and Societies Social Whirl Dramatics Musicales Junior Week Events Senior Week Events Personals and Miscellaneous. Scrapbook belonging to active student Janice Carkin who graduate from Oberlin College in 1937. Notice from a local press announcing her graduation and field of study. "Miss Carkin majored in physical education. She will join the faculty of the University of Vermont in September."Photos of Oberlin Campus Views with Warner Conservatory The "Arb" arboretum First Church Keep Cottage Crane Swimming Pool Gibson's "a favorite hangout" and Opening at Hanna Camp. Many images of her life with female friends at Oberlin. There are many snapshots all around Keep Cottage recording the dormitory rooms and lives of students. She has photos of "My Room No. 27" at Keep Cottage with images of fellow students in their rooms doing their hair lounging around together and studying. Photos of girls sunning on the lawn wearing their bathing suits. "Keep backyard--any nice afternoon". A later year Room 18 shows a large Yale placard on the wall. Many photos show women pursuing outdoor activity such as bicycling and swimming. "Jan and I took a hike one day in October." "Good old Ohio landscape!" under a photo of a bare farm field. 5 programs for Oberlin commencement week including the baccalaureate sermon Senior breakfast and Opening exercises. Photos of graduation day. "And then came graduation -- and we're really seniors!!" Wearing cap and gowns. Images of ceremony and afterwards with friends. "Farewell Oberlin!" "After commencement a perfect week on Lake Erie". <br/><br/>Carkin was an outstanding student at Oberlin as a newspaper clipping lists Janice Carkin as a student nominated to be listed in the national Who's Who book of notable college students. 1936 National Oberlin Mock Convention for the Republicn Presidential Nomination. Comes with registration card fro Janice Carkin as a member of the Tennessee delegation. Many interesting invitations for parties and programs including a 3-d color cutout of a woman in a rickshaw cart holding a tiny paper umbrella that opens up; dance cards filled with names of suitors. 12 programs for theater and musical productions including "Electra" by Sophocles Gilbert & Sullivan's "The Sorcerer" and "Tristan and Isolde" at the Metropolitan Opera House in New York. <br/>4 copies of Oberlin Review from 1937. 2 issues of "The Elephant" Oberlin College Republican newspaper from 1936. 5 clippings and programs on an international educational initiative in Shansi Province of China. "Oberlin-in-Shansi is pioneering with its two departments the Agricultural and Industrial through one of which the students must pass." Member of Oberlin's YWCA with programs for numerous services and events. Sports memorabilia from time as student athlete and enthusiastic supporter of women's sports. Student Activity Fee Book years 1933-1934 and 1935-36; these booklets could be used to gain entry to football baseball and basketball games Track meets and Glee club concerts. Newspaper clipping that identifies Carkin as the Captain of the West Point Women's Field Hockey team. Note to Janice reads: "A great game is all anyone can ask & I know we'll have it". Program for 1937 Winter Sports Banquet. Also many photos showing their enthusiasm for the athletic rivalry between Princeton and Yale. Photos attending the Yale-Princeton game from numerous years in which the young women wear either Yale Bulldogs on their sweaters or Princeton Tigers. Memorabilia from other schools such as Princeton and Yale school fight cheers West Point and Naval Academy. Purple pennant for Northwestern University. Western Union telegraph to album owner. "Will be cheering for Yale. Congratulations Best Wishes Success Love Mother and Dad." Many more pieces of ephemera include press clippings of teachers and administrators invitations and a homemade valentine. Full of interesting content on the life of a popular female student at Oberlin College. Some wrinkling on pages with bulkier items pasted in. Good to very good condition. unknown books
1793046905Dublin: W. McKenzie 1793. Early Edition. Hardcover Half Leather. Very Good Condition. 2 volumes in half green calf over marbled boards. Scattered foxing some browning in upper margin - quite clean overall. 292pp; 419pp Size: Octavo 8vo. 2-volume set complete. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: Under 1 kilo. Category: History; Inventory No: 046905. W. McKenzie hardcover books
19681022.1New York: Public Education Authority 1968. Hardbound. VG. Cloth with mounted color cover. 70 pp. 4 color 107 bw repros. This cooperative concurrent exhibition was put together by three galleries each of which concentrated on a certain aspect of American Art from the specified period. Knoedler put the Figure section together which includes a two-page essay by Richard McLanathan and includes 1 color and 25 reproductions. They also put together the Still Life section with a two-page essay by William Gerdts followed by 1 color and 20 bw reproductions. Hirschl & Adler Galleries put Genre together with a two-page essay by Francis Grubar followed by 1 color and 29 bw reproductions. Paul Rosenberg put the Landscape section together with a two-page essay by Barbara Novak O'Doherty followed by 1 color and 32 bw repros. An important exhibition with many landmark works included and an overall superb survey. Public Education Authority unknown books
19681022New York: Public Education Authority 1968. Softcover. VG. Color wraps. 70 pp. 4 color 107 bw repros. This cooperative concurrent exhibition was put together by three galleries each of which concentrated on a certain aspect of American Art from the specified period. Knoedler put the Figure section together which includes a two-page essay by Richard McLanathan and includes 1 color and 25 reproductions. They also put together the Still Life section with a two-page essay by William Gerdts followed by 1 color and 20 bw reproductions. Hirschl & Adler Galleries put Genre together with a two-page essay by Francis Grubar followed by 1 color and 29 bw reproductions. Paul Rosenberg put the Landscape section together with a two-page essay by Barbara Novak O'Doherty followed by 1 color and 32 bw repros. An important exhibition with many landmark works included and an overall superb survey. Public Education Authority unknown books
15151NIGHTINGALE Florence. Collection of 32 pieces celebrating the first 50 years of nursing education which made nursing into the first respected medical profession for women. This collection includes a First Edition of Nightingale's influential guide Notes on Nursing 1859 and a handwritten Nightingale letter with wonderful content on her training school and hospital followed by many more tactile and visual pieces from the period ranging from approximately 1880-1930 when women entered the first official nursing programs to obtain theoretical education on disease prevention and antisepsis practical training in patient-centered care and certification and accolades for their excellent work. <br/><br/>While nursing was initially considered a volunteer service the founding of the Nightingale School of Nursing in 1862 caused rapid changes developing nursing into a true medical profession. Programs opened worldwide basing their training on the "Nightingale Principles" that emphasized patient-centered care through systemic cleanliness and stemming of infection in hospitals. The first time these important ideas were placed in print was in Nightingale's 1859 Notes on Nursing¸ a guide to patient care within the hospital and community which has remained relevant to the present day. A First Edition of Nightingale's Notes on Nursing published before even her training hospital was founded is included with this collection. A wonderful early letter on St. Thomas Hospital the site of Nightingale's first training school which she wrote in 1864 shortly after its founding is included here are well. In this letter Nightingale laments that "poor St. Thomas is in such a "fix & has so many bad friends that he ought to keep all his good ones." She is no doubt referring to the back-handed business deal that led to the hospital's moved to an abandoned music hall with sub-par hygiene for nine years starting shortly after her training program had found its home there. She discusses the immediate effects on her own students "I should never have placed my Probationers at St. Thomas but that Mr Whitfield & Mrs Wardroper were there.and when St Thomas' with its ample income has not contributed one farthing to but has profited by the Services of my Training School." Nightingale herself championed the creation of a new building and helped design it for modern standards of safety and hygiene. Among the first programs to model itself after Nightingale's example wertr the Spelman Nursing Program founded in 1886 and the Johns Hopkins School of Nursing in 1889. In order to distinguish nurses' uniforms from those of servants the programs instructed nurses to wear pocketed aprons for carrying tools and the schools provided ruffled caps that were easy for patients to identify in hospital hallways. An early vintage cap from circa 1880 is included in this collection.<br/><br/>By the turn of the century nursing education had aligned with university criteria and rigorous training became mandatory. In 1902 the U.S. and New Zealand initiated standard requirements for registered nurses to pass medical examinations; and by 1909 the University of Minnesota was the first to award a bachelor's degree in nursing. In 1919 the U.K. passed the Nursing Act requiring all nurses to join a registry; and in 1923 Yale University School of Nursing became the first autonomous college in the field. Such programs required women to take 2-3 years of medical coursework and pass certification exams. As is evident by this collection's handwritten nursing class notebook these women gained intensive knowledge about anatomy nutrition and disease. The notes in this collection include anatomical drawings as well as detailed information on "the practice of hygiene important in care of patient.how to prevent infection.uses to body of food and amount of food needed by individual patient" based on condition and diagnosis. It comes with a very rare 1911 "The Trained Nurse" booklet which contains educational matter on sexual and dental hygiene for patients to lower the risk of infection as well as information about a nurse's commitment to her training program. OCLC Worldcat lists no other known copies.<br/><br/>After completing classes nursing students apprenticed in their program's hospital until graduation. Instructors and administrators continued to value the use of uniforms and they made the clothing more functional for women whose daily tasks ranged from explaining doctors' diagnoses and treatments during consultations to the dressing of wounds. While uniforms evolved to become more streamlined they still bore visual signs of a student's experience and accomplishments. The nursing cap continued to be the most recognizable sign of entrance to the profession and getting her cap was a formal right of passage to a young nurse. Women only obtained the cap during a ceremony in which nurses from the program pinned the caps to the new nurses' heads. As students rose through the ranks and ultimately graduated they would receive a nursing lapel pin showing their entrance into a specialized field. This collection includes each of these important pieces: a white vintage nursing cap and lapel pin. In addition it contains a handwritten journal with beautiful colored handdrawn illustrations poems and diary entries by a nurse during her hospital training.<br/><br/>The women who graduated from nursing programs had met the mandatory benchmarks; indeed these women also often exceeded requirements and won honors for their work. Celebrating these landmark accomplishments this collection includes a set of 5 turn of the century graduation invitations an early commencement booklet with individual nursing graduation photos 3 early diplomas for women graduating from nursing programs 8 class photos and 7 individual female graduate portraits. The photos visually document the collective changes that these nurses' uniforms underwent across the decades as well as the women's pride in obtaining their degree. The collection also contains a "Champion of Head Nurses" trophy awarded to a young nurse for her leadership within her new hospital.<br/><br/>As this collection shows these women's educations led them to become proud and dedicated professionals excited to apply their knowledge in ways that made a difference. University of Pennsylvania "American Nursing" p. 1-11. "A Nurse's World" p.1. Heineman "Timelines in American Women's History" p. 219. unknown books
17150Handwritten Nursing notebook from student in Jennie Edmundson Memorial Hospital in Council Bluffs IA. Entries dates from 1917-1919. The Binder consist of 218 handwritten pages by nursing student Tamar "Betty" Andersen. This handwritten nursing school notebook includes anatomical drawings and detailed information on "the practice of hygiene important in care of patient.how to prevent infection. amount of food needed by individual patient" based on diagnosis. Original black and red cloth boards. 2-ring binder. 10 x 9 in. Some pages loose or removed from binder. Comes with 2 anatomical studies of a human with numerous labeled body parts such a femoral artery anterior tibial temporal lobe dorsal plexus auxiliary vein etc. Three loose sheets with notes on obstetrics and medicine from Jennie Edmundson Memorial Hospital in Council Bluffs IA. Filled with handwritten entries on numerous medical and scientific topic including: Hygiene Chemistry Air Quality and Water Cleanliness Wounds Dietetics Post-Operative Care Childbirth Muscular Spinal Disease Diseases of Children and Diseases of the Joints among others. Most entries include the name of the Physician leading the course along with the lecture date. In addition to notes there is also 1 quiz on Bacteriology and 1 graded exam. Two handwritten tables: 1 organizes different parts of body including Dorsal cavity ventral cavity thoracic cavity buscal cavity nasal cavity and pelvic cavity; second table organizes different body areas and the body secretions and enzymes active in those areas. <br/><br/>Quiz on Bacteriology: "Bacteria are the smallest living forms of plant life. The three important groups of Bacteria are the cocci bacilli spirilli.Pathogenic is disease producing bacteria.The bacteria that cause pneumonia are the pneumococcus pneunommia-diplococcus and sometime streptococcus.Antitoxins are little anti-bodies in bacteria or in the blood which try to over power the toxins and does overpower them." Definitions for various types of specific wounds and important symptoms: "pain hemorrhage swelling discoloration." Post Operative Care section deals with how to treat ailments such as hemorrhages and other common post-surgery complications. "Post-operative care.Acute dilation of stomach may follow any operation regardless of what kind. A.D. of stomach is filling of stomach with gas 4 or 5 times its normal size.Patient should have no water. Nothing by mouth." On "Common Shock": "Certain number of cases is nothing more than a hemorrhage. Sometimes due to rapid operation or lying on large artery." Regarding Hemorrhages "Treatment. Morphine. This shock is greater in goitre cases. One of the treatment of hemorrhage or cerebral disturbances or bleeding is prostosysis by fisher sol. or normal salts." Notes on diabetes: "Symptoms of Diabetes. 1. Excessive thirst. 2. Abnormally large appetite. 3. Craving for sweets & starches. 4. Los of weight. 5. Sugar found in urine." Notes on Kidney disease: "Nephritis - disease of kidneys.Diet more valuable than medicine in nephritis. Relieve chronic nephritis and cure acute. Heavy nitrogenous food restricted. " Eye anatomy and health: "Central artery - furnishes blood supply to retina lids and body ridge for protection." Tuberculosis: "will follow whooping cough or measles.Temp. irregular lack of appetite headache pupils dilated persistent diarrhea.Treatment is Rest sunshine plenty of fresh air and good feeding. Absolute rest while carrying temp. most tubercular patients are nervous." On Childbirth: "Baby drops. Pain all but stops. Baby's head presses down sometimes 2 weeks or a month ahead. It obliterates cervix. About every 15 min. there is a uterus contraction." On skull fractures: "Unconsciousness following a fracture of a skull may not appear for 2 or 3 days after the fracture.Hemorrhage pressure & bone. Pressure may cause paralysis of a foot or leg on opposite side." Disease of the joints: "Any joint inflammation is arthritis.heat applied to these diseases is of great benefit. Massage is beneficial." Long final section deals with the history and benefits of massage therapy on various body parts and detailed instruction for massaging specific body parts including: liver intestines and breasts for lactation treatment: "Massage is the manual treatment of disease.the Greeks & Hindu used it". <br/><br/>Extensive notes on patients' diet food hygiene and nutritional quality of fats and animal proteins. "Dietetics is science which teaches the correct feeding of any individual in health and disease." "Fundamental Rules. 1. Nurse should known food harmful in certain disease condition. Do not depend on appetite of patient as guide for food." Study guide for Nutrition Health quiz with practice questions: "Uses of mineral salts in body.Name a condition of disease due to lack of mineral salts.Could body subsist on concentrated food alone Tell why." Dietary notes for those afflicted with Anemia Tuberculosis Liver Disturbance and Rheumation. "Diet in Disease of Stomach and Intestines.Diet rules. Food well masticated patient eat slowly. Regular hours for meals. Avoid extreme of hot or cold. Rest after meals if possible. Fluids after meals not with it; avoid constipation." Medicinal properties of different kinds of water including mineral water: "Mineral water should not be used for general use unless ordered by doctor. Strong alkali water irritates digestive tract." Also notes of the effects of coffee and tea: "Coffee-stimulating property-caffeine.effects of coffee. Acts on muscular and nervous system. Relieves fatigue. Mild laxative. Stimulates gastric digestion. Used in excess causes extreme nervousness." This period was a time of great demand for trained medical nurses as World War I was raging in Europe. Between 1917 and 1919 over 22000 professionally-trained female nurses were recruited by the American Red Cross to serve in the U.S. Army. While this notebook comes from a student at the time who does not appear to have served in W.W.I she was surely motivated by the patriotic urge to educate and train herself in case she needed to join the war effort. First pages detached or partially detached. In good condition. unknown books
1665045383Madrid: Pablo de Val 1665. First Edition. Hardcover Vellum. Good Condition. Full contemporary vellum with remains of ties endpapers replaced title penned to spine and old pen notation to top page edge text block loose from binding title with old ink annotations and a large repair to the right edge - it is repaired by pasting an old original drawing of a villa to the verso small tear to first page of dedication with an old repair. Foxing mostly minor browning some worming in the margins with old paper repairs touching a letter or two in the bottom margin and touching the gloss in a few spots in the inner gutter but minor and contained overall one old marginal note mostly clean. 32 372pp. Nuñez de Castro was the official chronicler of Philip IV of Spain the second to last of the Castilian kings. Size: Quarto 4to. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: 1-2 kilos. Category: History; Antiquarian & Rare. Inventory No: 045383. <br/><br/> Pablo de Val hardcover books
199130401NY: HarperCollins. Near Fine in Near Fine dust jacket. 1991. Hardcover. 0060244054 . Illustrated by Felicia Bond. First printing. About fine in like dust jacket. . HarperCollins hardcover books
1868CAT000125Paris: E. Dentu 1868. First Edition. Hardcover rebound in cloth. Very Good. Rebound in modern blue cloth original wraps bound in but worn and chipped with tape repairs. Otherwise only scattered foxing and a few inexpertly opened pages. Vicaire 623. xxiv 435pp.<br/><br/>Covers from Ancient Greece through the Middle Ages and through the Early Modern period up to Napoleon and the present day. Size: 8vo. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: Under 1 kilo. Category: Cooking Wine & Dining; History. Inventory No: CAT000125. E. Dentu hardcover books
1095Steinbeck John. New York University Division of General Education. BOOK ADVERTISING. Materials handbook for the Seminar on Book Advertising Spring Semester 1947. Tabloid size newsprint pages stapled including advertising rates for various American newspapers and examples of book advertisements. Nice full page ad for CANNERY ROW. Fine condition. <br/><br/> unknown books
194749829New York 1947. Paperback. Good. 15p. Original wrapper. 15cm. Small tear in back-cover corner repaired with glued paper. Crease in front cover. "Special Notice" laid in. Urged support of the Austin-Mahoney Bill to outlaw discrimination in public and private education in New York. <br/><br/> paperback books
1941182797New York: Pandick Press 1941. 132p. wraps name on front cover hidden by a rectangle of rubbed graphite title penciled on spine tear to bottom of spine panel. Report on Young Communist League activities at local schools complaining that students had set up a "perjury mill" to mislead investigators. Discusses various student front groups and their work in opposition to US involvement in the war during the USSR's detente with Germany followed by immediate reversal after the invasion of the Soviet Union. Pandick Press unknown books
185485072New York: Wm. G. Bryant & Co 1854. Paperback. Good. illustrations 150 21 47 100 2p. Original flexible dark cloth binding. 23 cm. Cover worn along joints and edges. Mostly moderate foxing throughout. <br/><br/> Wm. G. Bryant & Co paperback books
186385073New York: C.S. Westcott & Co. Printers 1863. Hardcover. Fair. illustrations folding chart/map 204p. Original cloth covered boards. 23cm. Front cover almost entirely detached. Several pieces of cover cloth gone. Extremities worn. Chartmap split apart along a couple of folds. Chart/map is of parcels of land conveyed to or purchased by the Board of Education. <br/><br/> C.S. Westcott & Co., Printers hardcover books
186085096New York: Joseph Russell Printer 1860. Hardcover. Good. illustrations 117 42 126 4 93p. Original thin flexible cloth-covered boards. 23cm. Cover edges and ends of backstrip chipped and worn. Covers discolored along fore-edge. Hinges cracked. <br/><br/> Joseph Russell, Printer hardcover books