Lingua: Inglese
Editore: Wiley-Blackwell August 1993, 1993
ISBN 10: 1881089207 ISBN 13: 9781881089209
Da: Dunaway Books, St. Louis, MO, U.S.A.
Paper Back. Condizione: Very Good. Remainder mark on bottom edge. No interior markings.
Lingua: Inglese
Editore: Brandywine Press, St. James, NY, 1994
ISBN 10: 1881089282 ISBN 13: 9781881089285
Da: Abacus Bookshop, Pittsford, NY, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
softcover. Condizione: Fine copy. 1st. 8vo, 303 pp.
Da: The Red Onion Bookshoppe, Hanover, IN, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Hardcover. Condizione: Very Good. Condizione sovraccoperta: Good-. First Edition. Dust jacket is worn, rubbed, soiled, and stained with closed tears. Book is lightly worn and rubbed.
Lingua: Inglese
Editore: Harpercollins / Callaway, New York, 1992
ISBN 10: 0060168951 ISBN 13: 9780060168957
Da: Abacus Bookshop, Pittsford, NY, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
hardcover. Condizione: Fine. Profusely illustrated (illustratore). 1st. 4to, 143 pp., Essays by Belinda Rathbone, Roger Shattuck and Elizabeth Hutton Turner. Fine copy in nearly fine dust jacket.
Da: Frank J. Raucci, Bookseller, Wallingford, CT, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Cloth Hardcover. Condizione: Fine. Condizione sovraccoperta: Fine. First Edition. A FINE, like-new, bright, clean, tight, collector-worthy copy sans flawa, "In 1918 Alfred Stieglitz, then a world-famous photographer and the champion of modern art in America, asked an art teacher from Texas named Georgia O'Keeffe to come and live for a year in New York. She agreed, and thus began one of the great artistic partnerships in American history. "Two Lives: Georgia O'Keeffe and Alfred Stieglitz" explores in pictures and in words the dialogue that inspired and united both artists." PROFUSELY ILLUSTRATED in full color and black-and-white photographic reproduction of the paintings of O'Keeffe and the photography of Stieglitz with accompanying descriptive captions. 143 pages. NOTE: Due to the large size and weight of the book additional shipping cost will be requested/required for OUT-OF-U.S. shipment in accordance with country of destination. GE1.
Lingua: Inglese
Editore: Callaway Editions, New York, 1992
ISBN 10: 0060168951 ISBN 13: 9780060168957
Da: Newbury Books, Atlanta, GA, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Hardcover. Condizione: Fine. Condizione sovraccoperta: Near Fine. 1st. dust jacket with tiny tear at head of spine. Dust jacket in clear protector. Published to accompany an exhibition at the Phillips Collection, Washington, DC, 12 December 1992 - 4 April 1993, the IBM Gallery of Science and Arts, New York, 27 April - 26 June, the Minneapolis Institute of Arts, 17 July - 12 September, and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Texas, 2 October - 5 December. Contains three essays: The Great American Thing by Roger Shattuck, Like Nature Itself by Belinda Rathbone, and "I Can't Sing so I Paint" by Elizabeth Hutton Turner. Each essay is accompanied by plates of photographs and paintings. 144pp 2.39lb 11.0x9.5x0.8in.
Lingua: Inglese
Editore: Harper Collins Publishers, New York, 1992
ISBN 10: 0060168951 ISBN 13: 9780060168957
Da: McBlain Books, ABAA, Hamden, CT, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Hardcover. Condizione: Fine. Condizione sovraccoperta: Fine. 1st ed. frontis, illustrations, photos, 143p. dj. 28cm.
Lingua: Inglese
Editore: Harper Collins (HarperCollins) Callaway Editions, New York, 1992
ISBN 10: 0060168951 ISBN 13: 9780060168957
Da: Purpora Books, Comox, BC, Canada
Prima edizione
EUR 13,48
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloHard Cover in Dust Jacket. Condizione: Fine. Condizione sovraccoperta: Near Fine Plus. First Edition. Large format: 9" x 10 3/4". Dust jacket has two very short tears top of rear panel, and a crease on the front panel at the bottom fore corner. Essays, paintings and photographs. 143 pages.
Editore: Brabdywine Press, 1993
Da: Route 3 Books, Sandstone, MN, U.S.A.
Soft cover. Condizione: Near Fine. Near fine copy with clean interior lightest of rubbing and a red star stamp on bottom of page block. A collection of writings by many involved in the Civil RIghts movement including Martin Luther King, Rosa Parks, WEB DuBois, James Farmer, Ella Baker, Anne Moody, Malcolm X. Stokely Carmichael, Huey Newton, Black Panthers, Bayard Rustin, Robert Moses and Fannie Lou Hamer among others. Subjects written about include nonviolence, power and integration.
Lingua: Inglese
Editore: Salem Press, 1966
Da: BookManBookWoman Books, Nashville, TN, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Hardcover. Condizione: Fine. Condizione sovraccoperta: Very Good+. 1st Edition. Book in excellent FINE condition.DJ complete with six very small chips (eighth of inch and less) at spine tips, corners and one half inch chip on rear panel. Spine strip faded. SIGNED by all three editors on FFEP, numbered,limited FIRST EDITION.Laid in is a printed signed note from editor Macauley addressed to "Mr.Lytle" (probably Andrew Lytle).Stories by Flannery O'Connor, Thomas Pynchon, Peter Taylor, Nadine Gordimer,Boris Pasternak, John Stewart Carter, J.F.Powers, Jessamyn West, Doris Lessing, Avram Davidson and others. Shelf.408 No foxing. Not a book club (BC)copy. No previous owner name, not ex library. PHOTOS POSTED WITH OUR BOOKS ARE STOCK AND DO NOT NECESSARILY REFLECT CONDITION OR EDITION OF BOOK OFFERED FOR SALE. WE DO NOT POST THE PHOTOS. Signed by Editors.
Da: Jen's Books, Douglas, WY, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Hardcover. Condizione: Near Fine. Condizione sovraccoperta: Near Fine. First Edition First Printing. As New Dj And Book, Cd Looks New And Tight In Its Holder, No Names Or Marks, Binding Is Square And Tight. no.
Editore: Simon & Schuster, New York, 1993
Prima edizione
Hardcover. Condizione: Fine. Condizione sovraccoperta: Near Fine. First Edition; First Printing. 4to 11" - 13" tall; 125 pages; Minor rubbing and soiling to the jacket. CD is present and in great condition.
Editore: Advocate Printers, Winnipeg
Da: Burton Lysecki Books, ABAC/ILAB, Winnipeg, MB, Canada
EUR 23,59
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrello[1948]. (Staplebound) Very good. 62pp. Owner stamp on the front cover. Contributors include A.A. Herriot (School Inspectors in the Early Days of Manitoba), Margaret A. MacLeod (Life in the Early West), Ross Mitchell (Early Doctors of Red River and Manitoba), Lillian Benyon Thomas (Some Manitoba Women Who Did First Things), E.K. Williams (Aspects of the Legal History of Manitoba). Locale: . Series: Manitoba Historical Society Series III 4. (Manitoba, Doctors, Education, Pioneer Women, Pioneers).
Editore: University of Regina, Regina
ISBN 10: 0889770425 ISBN 13: 9780889770423
Da: Burton Lysecki Books, ABAC/ILAB, Winnipeg, MB, Canada
EUR 25,96
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrello[0-88977-042-5] [1986]. (Trade paperback) Very good plus. 306pp. Notes. Contributors include F. Laurie Barron (Indian Agents and the North-West Rebellion), K.S. Coates (More Than a Matter of Blood: The Federal Government, the Churches and the Mixed Blood Populations of the Yukon and the MacKenzie River Valley, 1890-1950), Olive Patricia Dickason (Frontiers in Transition: Nova Scotia 1713-1763 Compared to the North-West 1869-1885), Paul Driben (The Rise and Fall of Louis Riel and the Metis Nation), Noel Dyck (An Opportunity Lost: The Initiative of the Reserve Agricultural Programme in the Prairie West), Thomas Flanagan (Louis Riel: Was He Really Crazy?), Ken Hatt (The North-West Rebellion Scrip Commissions, 1885-1889), John Jennings (The North West Mounted Police and Indian Policy After the 1885 Rebellion), Andre N. Lalonde (Colonization Companies and the North-West Rebellion), Wayne McKenzie (Metis Self-Government in Saskatchewan), Donald McLean (1885: Metis Rebellion or Government Conspiracy), A.I. Silver (The Impact on Eastern Canada of Events in Saskatchewan in 1885), Donald B. Smith (Rip Van Jaxon: The Return of Riel's Secretary in 1884-1885 to the Canadian West, 1907-1909), George F.G. Stanley (The Last Word on Louis Riel- the Man of Several Faces), A. Blair Stonechild (The Indian View of the 1885 Rebellion), John L. Tobias (The Origins of the Treaty Rights Movement in Saskatchewan), James B. Waldram (The Other Side": Ethnostatus Distinctions in Western Subarctic Native Communities). Article about Louis Riel. Locale: ; ; Yukon. (Indians of N.A., Metis, North West Mounted Police, Northwest Rebellion, Riel Rebellion).
Editore: Harper Collins Publishers / Callaway Editions, New York, NY, 1992
ISBN 10: 0060168951 ISBN 13: 9780060168957
Da: G.M. Isaac Books, Winston-Salem, NC, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condizione: As New. Condizione sovraccoperta: As New. (DJ, Text and Plates are clean, neat and tight). Book.
Editore: Israel Post, 140 Nassau Street, New York, 1845
Da: Dark and Stormy Night Books, Newburyport, MA, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Hard Cover. Condizione: Very Good Minus. after Thomas Allom, etched by S.H. Gimber. After W.H. Bartlett, etched by A.L. Dick et al (illustratore). First Edition. Hard cover bound volume, 4to., in three-quarter black calf over dark green cloth, the spine tooled in gilt with extensive filigree design, title and date. Vol. III contains Jan.- June, 1845, (286pp.) bound with Vol. IV, July-Dec. 1845, (284pp.) and with the issue for Jan. 1846 (48pp.) also included. Each volume has a separate table of contents and the fashion plates, (some hand-colored,) chromolithographed extras and lithographed engravings, a few with tissue guards, plates unnumbered. **CONDITION: Very Good Minus, with small split to head and some wear to tail of joints, shelf wear near corners and a few small marks to boards. Hinges are intact with very small wear at rear hinge just starting. Over opened in at least one place. Offset affects pages opposite a number of the prints. Some browning and occasional bits of soiling. **This volume features contributions by significant women writers of the day. Five short stories are included from the Boston area-born abolitionist, journalist, novelist, women's and native American rights advocate, LYDIA MARIA CHILD (1802- 1880) including the first publication of "The Children of Mt. Ida." Based on elements of Greek myth, it is a tale of the ill-fated love of two foster children who grow up together in idyllic innocence on the Phrygian hills in the Aegean. Married, they remain unaware of a regal connection which will require an ultimate sacrifice. The Trojan Wars, the gods, and Helen of Troy, draw the hero away from his first love. Also interesting are the tones of mesmerism to be found in the story--then current in the works of Child's contemporary E.A. Poe, for instance--seen in the ritualized conjuring of a trance-like state in the heroine, enabling prophetic visions. This short story, as well as Child's "Elizabeth Wilson," The Youthful Emigrant," "A Legend of the Apostle John," "Hilda Silvering," "The Irish Heart," and "The Beloved Tune" appear here, and were then later published in book form: "Fact and Fiction: A Collection of Stories," (New York: C.S. Francis, 1846), BAL 3155. Interestingly, LMC dedicated that book to Anna Loring (1830-1896), a Beverly, Massachusetts woman and fellow abolitionist.**Boston poet FRANCES S. OSGOOD (1811-1850) is represented by five poems in Vol. III and at least three more in Vol. IV, including "The Sunbeam's Love," said to refer to her infatuation with the young fellow Bostonian author, Edgar Allan Poe. Poe penned poems in response, including "To F----s S. O---d," and another of 1846 entitled "To Her Whose Name Appears Below," featuring a cryptic anagram of Osgood's name spelled out in the text. These, however, did not appear in "The Columbian Lady's and Gentleman's Magazine." But Poe did contribute a short story, "Mesmeric Revelation" to "The Columbian" in 1844.**Other articles include a discussion of the work of poet Elizabeth Barrett (later Browning) by critic H.T. Tuckerman. Other notable contributions by women include Lydia H. Sigourney, Fanny Forrester and Maria Weston Chapman.**REF: On Poe and Mesmerism, see Poe Society, cf. "The Facts of the Case of M. Valdemar" (1845). For correspondence of Anna Loring, see Mass. Digital commonwealth on the Boston Anti-Slavery Fair. A smorgasbord of mid-nineteenth century thoughts and fashions. (AMJ). Book.
Editore: Ormsby & Hackett, 116 Fulton Street, New York, 1847
Da: Dark and Stormy Night Books, Newburyport, MA, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Hard Cover. Condizione: Very Good. After Thomas Allom, W.H. Bartlett, T.H. Matterson et al (illustratore). Hard cover bound volume, 4to., in three-quarter black calf over green cloth, die stamped with twining foliage and flowers. The spine has extensive gilt decorative banding at head and foot, double ruled faux banding and titles to second, and date 1847 to the fourth compartment. Marbled end papers, and faint remains of marbling are seen to edges of text block. Original four-color cover bound in. Vol. VII contains Jan.- June, 1847, bound with Vol. VIII July-Dec. 1847. Each volume numbered separately. Illustrations include scenes from the Mexican-American War, (then current,) with commentary by the editors on "The Storming of Palace Hill,(sic)," which the editor reports mis-named from Independence Hill near Monterey, California. In total, there are 3 colored fashion plates, 4 mezzotints and 10 black and white line engravings in Vol. VII. Vol. VIII has 9 black and white line engravings (none colored) and 6 mezzotints. **CONDITION: Very Good. Binding is sound and attractive. Some light scuffs to spine, mild edge wear to head and tail of spine, tips, front joint and corners. Minor rubbing to cloth on boards. Wear is superficial, with hinges in order, endpapers bright. Inside: light, or sometimes moderate, toning with occasional spots of soiling, or a few small tears, but generally clean, square and sound.**Featured in the March, 1847 Issue, p. 123, is the FIRST APPEARANCE of EDGAR ALLAN POE's short story, as revised and re-titled, "THE DOMAIN OF ARNHEIM". A previous version had appeared in 1842 under the title "The Landscape Garden" in "The Ladies Companion." Unusual for Poe, the story is not a gothic, doom-laden tale, but rather a prose poem which is a vision of an artist's Shangri-La built amongst a towering, mountainous, riverine landscape. Biographer Una Pope-Hennessy suggests the singular monolithic author's aerie described in the story was based on Poe's familiarity with the English gothic author William Beckford's (cf. 1786 novel, "Vathek.") whose doomed estate of Fonthill Abbey in Wiltshire collapsed under its own weight in a fit of its builder's drug-fueled architectural vanity. ***L. MARIA CHILD contributes three short stories, including what is arguably the best of the tales in this issue, "The Rival Mechanicians," about a rivalry between two apprentices for the heart of a Swiss watchmaker's daughter in a plot which involves the building of increasingly complex watches, barometers, automatons and a human-like "android," (certainly an early use of that word.) The author may have been influenced by her New York acquaintances of the Knickerbocker school (W. Irving, Paulding, et al) in this unusually spooky tale. Her biographer J. G. Whittier selects letters from her correspondence of the period showing a rather reclusive, solitary exile to the New York area at this time, in flight from real danger and condemnation felt from some Bostonians and southerners for her outspoken contributions to the abolitionist press. [Child published frequently on these topics through the New York offices of the American Anti-Slavery Society, located at 143 Nassau Street in 1842; the "Columbian Magazine" was published but a door away at 140 Nassau Street, until 1846. (See BAL 3141)].**Other notable additions to this annual include short stories, songs and poetry by mid-nineteenth century women authors , Francis S. Osgood, Miss Catharine M. Sedgwick, Mrs. E. F. Ellett, Miss Fanny Forrester and others. Some contributions from the men include ALFRED BILLINGS STREET's (1811-1881) "A Day or Two's Fishing in Pike's Pond." The work of this Poughkeepsie, New York native has been described as prose poetry, and his work has been compared favorably to that of the Transcendentalists, Emerson, Bryant and Longfellow. JAMES KIRKE PAULDING (1778-1860), once Secretary of the United States Navy, and a leading contributor to the Knickerbocker New York literary scene of the 1820's and 30's, contributes a terrific gothic tale, "The All-Seeing Eye" in the Jan. 1847 issue, p. 5-12. A traveller, observing from a riverbank, happens to witness a murder during a violent storm. He meets the perpetrator by chance some twenty years later, who is keen to confess his sin. The psychic toll taken upon the rich, worldly-successful murderer is very much reminiscent of Poe's 1843 tale, "The Tell-Tale Heart". ** REFS : On Poe: Poe Soc.: Text 04-c, for "Arnheim." U. Pope-Hennessy, "Edgar Allen Poe, a Critical Biography," (New York: Haskell House Ltd, 1971), pp. 170-171. BAL 16149 mentions the 1842 version of The Landscape Garden, published in the Ladies Companion, version; but not this re-titled story, "Arnheim." On Paulding: BAL 15743 lists "The All-Seeing Eye" as "otherwise un-located" from a version found in the 1852 "Ladies Illustrated Keepsake" ; this 1847 publication may therefore be its first appearance. On Lydia Maria Child, see J.G. Whittier," Letters of Lydia Maria Child with a Biographical Introduction by John G. Whittier and an Appendix by Wendell Phillips, (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, Riverside Press, 1882), BAL 3220. (2.5 lbs.) First appearance of Poe's "The Domain of Arnheim" and Paulding's "The All-Seeing Eye" and. Book.