Lingua: Inglese
Editore: Inver Press, Larne, 1931
Da: Dublin Bookbrowsers, Dublin, NONE, Irlanda
EUR 25,00
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloEphemera. Condizione: Poor. Externally poor/staple rust/but internally despite some damp stains. Fair. Scarce.
Lingua: Inglese
Editore: Faber & Faber, London, 1932
Da: George Ong Books, New York, NY, U.S.A.
Rivista / Giornale
Soft cover. Condizione: Good. Pp. x, 375-580, 8vo, tan wrapper with yapp edges, textblock edges untrimmed, a few pages unopened. A literary quarterly edited by T. S. Eliot during its entire run from October 1922 until it ceased publication in January 1939 ("Perhaps one of the most influential critical reviews of its day," Miller-Price 45). Includes a short story by Aiken, poems by Donaghy, and a poem by Fletcher. Also with book reviews by H. M. Tomlinson, John Hayward, Robert Sencourt, Stephen Spender, and others. A good copy overall; contents fine other than some foxing at textblock foredge, wrapper with a few foxing spots, its yapp edges a little frayed as usual, with some short closed tears.
Lingua: Inglese
Editore: Orwell Press, Dublin,Ireland, 1939
Da: Kelleher Rare Books, Naas, IE, Irlanda
Prima edizione
EUR 40,00
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloSoft cover. Condizione: Very Good. 1st Edition. First Edition, First Print. pp. 23. Blue printed wrappers. First Edition, one of 300 copies being Number Six of the Tower Press Booklets. Wear and loss to top of spine to front and rear of wrapper which overhangs the book, internally clean.
Editore: Dublin: The Cuala Press, 1926, 1926
Da: Peter Harrington. ABA/ ILAB., London, Regno Unito
Prima edizione
EUR 596,29
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloFirst edition, one of 100 copies of Donaghy's first collection, privately printed for the author. His poetry, "demonstrated a predilection for nature themes and echoed the northern landscape of his youth" (DIB). He later featured regularly in the Irish Times, published several collections, and was praised by Samuel Beckett in the 1934 essay "Recent Irish Poetry". The Cuala Press was one half of Cuala Industries, a co-operative business run by Elizabeth and Lily Yeats. Cuala Industries was founded with the aim of reviving the craft of book printing in Ireland and "to give work to Irish girls" (McMurtrie, p. 472). In 1925, it moved to a premises in Dublin which allowed extra space to take on privately printed editions such as this. The press's "clearly legible, slender volumes with their distinctive paper labels may be seen as the sole survivors of the handcrafted ideal established in 1900 by Walker and T. J. Cobden-Sanderson's Doves Press" (ODNB). This copy is from the library of Louis Claude Purser (1854-1932), brother of the artist Sarah Purser. A fellow classics student with Oscar Wilde at school, Purser was appointed professor of Latin at Trinity College, Dublin, and later served as president of the Royal Irish Academy. Elizabeth Yeats was his closest female friend. Douglas McMurtrie, The Book: The Story of Printing and Bookmaking, 1943. Octavo. Title page vignette designed by Jack Yeats, colophon printed in red. Original quarter linen, paper label to spine printed in black, blue paper boards, front cover lettered in black, blue endpapers, edges untrimmed. Spine label chipped, affecting a couple of letters, board edges toned, contents clean: a very good copy.