Editore: Eyre & Spottiswoode, London, UK, 1933
Da: Ryde Bookshop Ltd, Isle of Wight, Regno Unito
Prima edizione
EUR 7,22
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloHardcover. Condizione: Very Good. 1st Edition. Clean and tightly bound cloth boards a little faded on the spine. Twelve trials are covered here, including; The Trial of Leopold and Loeb, The Salem Witchcraft Trials, The End of the Jesse James Gang, The Trial of President Lincoln's Assassins, etc.
Editore: Mills & Boons Limited, 1927
Da: Chapter 1, Johannesburg, GAU, Sudafrica
EUR 8,12
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloHardcover. Condizione: Very Good. No Jacket. From the collection of Karl Kohler, with his signatures. Heavy book may require extra postage unless posted within South Africa. Frontispiece, Winston Churchill. With 11 illustrations. There is gilt on the spine and the front of the book. The boards are a little shelf rubbed. The text within the book is bright and clear. The binding is strong and the book charming. In lovely condition for the age of the book. (1927) GK. Our orders are shipped using tracked courier delivery services.
Editore: Mills & Boon, Limited, London, 1927
Da: Churchill Book Collector ABAA/ILAB/IOBA, San Diego, CA, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Hardcover. First edition, second printing. This is the first edition, second printing, of this early biography of Winston S. Churchill, quite scarce thus in the dust jacket. This second printing (erroneously designated "Second Edition" on the title page) was issued in the same year as the first and, apart from the notation on the title page, is identical to the first printing. The dust jacket is entirely identical to that of the first printing.Condition is very good plus in a good dust jacket. The navy cloth binding is immaculately clean, strikingly bright, square, and tight, with sharp corners. Apart from trivial hints of shelf wear to extremities, the only exterior flaw that prevents our grading this copy as near fine is a small indentation and abrasion to the cloth at the lower left of the spine. The contents are bright and clean with a crisp, unread feel. The sole previous ownership mark is a name inked on the upper front pastedown. Spotting appears confined to the top edge of the text block, which also shows a little shelf dust. The dust jacket shows shallow losses to the extremities, appreciably only at the spine ends and corners. The lower front flap fold is split and the jacket shows general light soiling, the spine lightly toned and scuffed. The jacket is protected beneath a clear, removable, archival cover.This early biography of Winston S. Churchill concludes during his service as Chancellor of the Exchequer. It provides an interesting view of Churchill in mid-career, more than a decade before he became Britain's wartime prime minister. "Certainly no Party of which he is a member - be it a political Party or a dinner-party - ever lacks the spur of his stimulating personality. Age, if he ever grows old - which seems extremely doubtful - must mellow him. He no longer takes himself with such preternatural seriousness as in earlier years, but he is taken far more seriously by the world." Published in late September 1927, the book was popular enough for this "second edition" the same year (really a second printing of the first edition), a third revised edition by a new publisher (Newnes) in 1936, and a fourth revised edition issued by yet a different publisher (Hutchinson) in 1940. It is quite interesting that the Churchill of 1927 drew this biographical attention with his "wilderness years" of the 1930s, two premierships, and the better part of four decades of his life still ahead of him. Clearly Churchill was aware of the book: He wrote to the author on Chartwell stationery dated 29 September 1927 (one day before publication of the book): "Although I would rather that nothing of this kind had been published, yet I should like to recognise the great consideration and courtesy with which you have treated me, and to thank you for all the friendly things you say". The book's author, Carl Eric Bechhofer Roberts (1894-1949), published under the pseudonym "Ephesian" and his name was not disclosed in print until the 1936 edition. Roberts was an author, barrister, and journalist who served with the 9th Lancers during the First World War and as Private Secretary to Churchill's great friend, Lord Birkenhead, from 1924-1930.Reference: Zoller A11.a.
Editore: Mills & Boon, Limited, London, 1927
Da: Churchill Book Collector ABAA/ILAB/IOBA, San Diego, CA, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Hardcover. First edition, first printing. This is the first edition, first printing, quite scarce thus in the dust jacket. This early biography of Winston S. Churchill concludes during his service as Chancellor of the Exchequer. It provides an interesting view of Churchill in mid-career, more than a decade before he became Britain's wartime prime minister.Condition is very good in a very good plus dust jacket. The navy cloth binding is tight and bright with sharp corners, vivid gilt, sharp corners, and only minor scuffs and blemishes and a slight forward lean. The contents are bright with no spotting and no previous ownership marks. The chief defect of this copy is absence of the blank preliminary preceding the half-title, and offsetting to the half-title recto from the pastedown glue. The dust jacket is quite elusive thus, entirely complete. The jacket shows mild wear to extremities, light, uniform toning to the spine, and small stain to the left of the price on the lower spine. The dust jacket is protected beneath a clear, removable, archival cover."Certainly no Party of which he is a member - be it a political Party or a dinner-party - ever lacks the spur of his stimulating personality. Age, if he ever grows old - which seems extremely doubtful - must mellow him. He no longer takes himself with such preternatural seriousness as in earlier years, but he is taken far more seriously by the world." Published in late September 1927, the book was popular enough for a second edition the same year (really a second printing of the first edition), a third revised edition by a new publisher (Newnes) in 1936, and a fourth revised edition issued by yet a different publisher (Hutchinson) in 1940. It is quite interesting that the Churchill of 1927 drew this biographical attention with his "wilderness years" of the 1930s, two premierships, and the better part of four decades of his life still ahead of him. Clearly Churchill was aware of the book. He wrote to the author on Chartwell stationery dated 29 September 1927 (one day before publication of the book): "Although I would rather that nothing of this kind had been published, yet I should like to recognise the great consideration and courtesy with which you have treated me, and to thank you for all the friendly things you say". The book's author, Carl Eric Bechhofer Roberts (1894-1949), published under the pseudonym "Ephesian" and his name was not disclosed in print until the 1936 edition. Roberts was an author, barrister, and journalist who served with the 9th Lancers during the First World War and as Private Secretary to Churchill's great friend, Lord Birkenhead, from 1924-1930.Reference: Zoller A11.a.