Lingua: Inglese
Editore: Harlequin Mills & Boon, Limited, 2012
ISBN 10: 0263891801 ISBN 13: 9780263891805
Da: Better World Books Ltd, Dunfermline, Regno Unito
EUR 6,20
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloCondizione: Good. Former library copy. Pages intact with minimal writing/highlighting. The binding may be loose and creased. Dust jackets/supplements are not included. Includes library markings. Stock photo provided. Product includes identifying sticker. Better World Books: Buy Books. Do Good.
Da: Randall's Books, Cathedral City, CA, U.S.A.
Soft cover. Condizione: Very Good. Abbeville Press, New York, 1981. Softcover, 127 pp. Large format. With large color illustrations of the 19th & early 20th century American sculpture collection in Brookgreen Gardens, near Murrells Inlet, South Carolina. Works by Paul Manship, Gaston Lachaise, Augustus Saint-Gaudens, Anna Hyatt Huntington, Grace Vanderbilt Whitney, Daniel Chester French and many others. Very good condition with light edge wear and slight toning of spine and reaar panel. **Heavy or oversize Item. An extra shipping charge may apply.**.
Editore: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, N.Y., 1983
Da: M H Harrington, Boston, MA, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condizione: Fine. Hardcover book, 5.5" x 9", covers have light wear with sunning, no dust wrapper, text is fine; 194 pp, black-and-white illustrations throughout. Book.
Lingua: Inglese
Editore: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1975, 1974
ISBN 10: 0870990918 ISBN 13: 9780870990915
Hardcover. Condizione: Fine. Condizione sovraccoperta: Very Good. Hbk, small 4to, 144pp, profusely illustr throughout, light soiling to dj, otherwise near fine, unclipped and now in protective sleeve, fine gray-green cloth and internally a fine, clean, tight and unmarked text, as new.
Editore: Burt Franklin, New York, 1963
Da: Barter Books Ltd, Alnwick, NORTH, Regno Unito
Membro dell'associazione: IOBA
Mappa Prima edizione
EUR 27,59
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloCondizione: Very Good. First Edition. VG : in very good condition without dust jacket. Some pencil annotation to text. 280mm x 180mm (11" x 7"). 128pp + plates. 40 plates. Burt Franklin Biography and Reference Series No. 42. Burgundy/gilt hardback cloth cover.
Lingua: Inglese
Editore: Metropolitan Museum Of Art, 1975
ISBN 10: 0870990918 ISBN 13: 9780870990915
Da: Anybook.com, Lincoln, Regno Unito
EUR 43,88
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloCondizione: Fair. This is an ex-library book and may have the usual library/used-book markings inside.This book has hardback covers. In fair condition, suitable as a study copy. Please note the Image in this listing is a stock photo and may not match the covers of the actual item,800grams, ISBN:0870990918.
Editore: New York. The Metropolitan Museum of Art. 1971., 1971
Da: Worpsweder Antiquariat, Worpswede, Germania
EUR 25,00
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrello752 black & white illustration. Cloth. Dustwrapper. Unnumbered pages. 4to. Dustwrapper little rubbed & little scratched, else good.
EUR 80,00
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloCouverture rigide. Condizione: Très bon. Edition originale. dans son emboitage rare.
Editore: The International News Company, New York, 1926
Da: RareNonFiction, IOBA, Ladysmith, BC, Canada
Membro dell'associazione: IOBA
Prima edizione
EUR 267,01
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloSingle Issue Magazine. Condizione: Very Good. Abbey, S.; Bird, L. Pern; Prater, Ernest; Gillett, F.; Sindall, A.; Carruthers, G.P.; Holloway, Cyril; Potts, Leonard; Soper, G.; Woodville, R. Caton; Prater, Ernest (illustratore). First Edition. Generously illustrated with black and white photos and illustrations. Features: Car No. 13 - A routine train trip enmeshes F. A. Malcomson aboard Car No. 13 of the "Californian Limited" at Los Angeles; My Mad Mate - The reason why young Harry Neild's hair was white; Among the Amazons - A wonderfully photo-illustrated account of the Wai-woi, a little-known tribe of Indians; My Buffalo - How a hunter's first shoot was nearly his last in the Himalayan foothills northeast of Ghaggar; A "New Chum" in New Zealand - Part I - Jottings from a recently emigrated young farmer who took the plunge and began farming ; The Mozampur Dacoity - A curious robbery in India; Behind the Himalayas - Part II of II - A wonderfully photo-illustrated account of an exploration to the upper reaches of the Brahmaputra River; The Cannon Idol of Batavia in the Dutch East Indies; A Duck-Shooting Adventure - Using ice-scooters to hunt ducks on the Great South Bay of Long Island; The Black Hand - A recent adventure in Kuling, China, which is currently experiencing a wave of serious brazen crime; Two Girls in a Typhoon - The trying experience of two young ladies aboard a tramp steamer from Hong Kong to British North Borneo; A Matter of Promotion - The story of a long, hard chase , in the depths of winter, of two half-breed outlaws by a constable of the Royal North-West Mounted Police at Saddle Lake, Saskatchewan; Through the Inner Deserts of Arabia - Part I - The exciting adventures of the Countess Malmignati, the first European woman to penetrate the little-known Inner Deserts of Arabia - this part describing her time in Damascus before the journey - with photos; Letters; The Phantom Tiger - Jean M.F. Dubois, a former planter in Lokop Province, Sumatra, explains what happened when he pursued a tiger which had caused a local reign of terror - with photo. 84 pages plus 16 pages of nostalgic ads. Average wear and soiling to back cover, otherwise clean and unmarked with light wear. A quality copy of this fascinating vintage issue.
Editore: The Social Credit Secretariat, 1938
Da: blograrebooks, Oswestry, SHROP, Regno Unito
Rivista / Giornale Prima edizione
EUR 567,50
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloSoft cover. Condizione: Very Good. No Jacket. 1st Edition. THE SOCIAL CREDITER - Volume 1 - Number 1 Saturday 17th September 1938 - Volume 6 - Number 26 Saturday September 10th 1941. 156 Issues in total. A rare chance to purchase the early issues of The Social Crediter. A wealth of Social Credit material, conspiracy related writing. P.E.P. Planning, Communism, the war effort. Approx 14pp. per issue. Generally good-very good, most issues with rusty staples, staple rust staining.
Editore: Hound & Horn Incorporated, 1934
Da: Lost Horizon Bookstore, Santa Barbara, CA, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Softcover. Condizione: Very good. 28 issues, complete- Vol 1, No. 1, September 1927- Vol. VII, No. 4, July/ September 1934. Each issue approx 9 x 6" and vary in length, from 75pp.- 175pp. plus ads. Included is a copy of THE HOUND AND THE HORN LETTERS, edited by Mitzi Berger Hamovitch and a paperbound copy of Leonard Greenbaum's Phd. dissertation, THE HOUND & HORN: Episodes in American Literary History, 1927-1932 (which was later published under the same title). Also there is a letter from A. Hyatt Mayor to Greenbaum in 1963, which is both critical and clarifying regarding Greenbaum's thesis. Contributors included: E.E. Cummings, Wallace Stephens, John Dos Pasos, William Carlos Williams, Louis Zukofsky and many others. Issues from 1927-29 have a Rockwell Kent design on cover; 1930-31, covers were designed by W.A. Dwiggins, incorporating a Kent masthead. In 1932 the magazine got a bold new face with a modern art deco design by an unknown designer, returning to a more plain cover for the last issues in 1933-34. One of the 1932 issues has a torn corner, otherwise all issues are in about very good condition, with some fading and light wear to spines, clean nice interiors. The Hound & Horn was a literary quarterly founded by Harvard students Lincoln Kirstein and Varian Fry in 1927. Modeled on T. S. Eliot's The Criterion, it was intended to focus on student life at Harvard and work submitted by its students and alumni. The publication later broadened in scope to include modern writers. The title of the magazine was taken from Ezra Pound's poem "The White Stag": "Tis the white stag, Fame, we're a hunting, bid the world's hounds come to horn." R. P. Blackmur served as the magazine's first managing editor from 1928 to 1930, when the magazine moved its headquarters to New York. Hound & Horn ceased publication in 1934.
Condizione: Good. Comprising twenty-eight issues, a complete run, in original wrappers. Wrappers generally VG, roughly half of the issues have darkened and worn spines, a dozen are soiled to one degree or another, two are stamped, and one is stained. All interiors near fine. The Hound and Horn began in 1927 as an ambitious undertaking of Lincoln Kirsten and Varian Fry, two Harvard University undergrads. They created a handsome, intelligent magazine, which drew primarily on the talents of precocious Harvard students, Cambridge dons, and Harvard alum. At the start of its third year, it dropped its parochial subtitle, "A Harvard Miscellany," and remade itself as a national literary quarterly, with the assistance of R. P. Blackmur and Bernard Bandler II, who joined the editorial staff. Other editors included A. Hyatt Major (1931-32), Allan Tate (1932-34), and Yvors Winter (1932-34). As William McPheron has said, from that point on, The Hound and Horn "evolved?into an increasingly important voice on cultural matters, its pages both featuring and brilliantly analyzing modernist developments in the literary, visual, and performing arts." (Chielens, American Literary Magazines, p. 142). With the end of The Dial in July 1929, Hound and Horn assumed the premier place in American literary criticism. Throughout its run, although it attempted to remain independent of ideology, it featured articles that advocated a Marxist approach to literature, the new humanism, the New Criticism of Blackmur, and later the Agrarianism of Tate. It was an enthusiastic promoter of modernist art, featuring reproductions of work by Brancusi and Picasso. Besides the editors, other contributors included Ezra Pound, Katherine Anne Porter, E.E. Cummings, Marianne Moore, Wallace Stevens, William Carlos Williams, and photographs by Harry Crosby and Walker Evans. The penultimate issue was a brilliant collection of essays devoted entirely to the works of Harvard graduate Henry James. The Hound and Horn was one of the most important literary magazines of the 20th century.