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Editore: Liberator Publishing, Stoke Ferry, Norfolk, 2007
ISBN 10: 0955191653ISBN 13: 9780955191657
Da: WORLD WAR BOOKS, TUNBRIDGE WELLS, Regno Unito
Membro dell'associazione: PBFA
Libro Prima edizione
Soft cover. Condizione: Fine. No Jacket. 1st Edition. Excellent illustrated account with photographs taken by crews etc. 60pp., ills.,map,tipped-in plan of airbase, coloured illustration of insignia on rear cover. Near fine, card cover. Scarce and in stock.
Editore: The Liberator Publishing Co, New York, 1918
Da: Bolerium Books Inc., San Francisco, CA, U.S.A.
50p., wraps with traces of wear, paper lightly browned, 8.5x11 inches. Cover illustration by Maurice Stern. Articles by Max Eastman, Roger N. Baldwin, Carlo Tresca, Albert Rhys Williams, John Reed (About the second Masses trial), Alexander Trachtenberg, and others. Poetry by Carl Sandburg, and others. Illustrations by Art Young, William Gropper, Boardman Robinson (centerfold), and others.
Editore: The Liberator Publishing Company [1918], New York, 1918
Da: Lorne Bair Rare Books, ABAA, Winchester, VA, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
First Edition. 12mo. Staple-bound pamphlet; printed paper wrappers; 44pp. Text printed in blue ink. Printed on highly acidic stock; front and rear wrappers are detached; the front wrapper with substantial chips along three margins, but lettering not affected. The text remains firmly bound; toning and brittleness is confined mostly to extremities, paper remains fairly supple though this is a decidedly fragile item. Complete, but just Good. Printed as Liberator Pamphlet No. 1. Scarce pamphlet providing a transcript of Eastman's statement in his defense following the suppression of his socialist monthly, The Masses, for its anti-war stance at the outset of American involvement in World War One. Eastman was himself responsible for many of the most militant anti-war essays in The Masses, and as a result he stood trial twice for charges under the Sedition Act, but was acquitted each time. Following the war, The Masses was revived in a slightly different format, and renamed The Liberator, under which title Eastman continued publishing until 1922. Infrequently seen in commerce.
Editore: The Liberator Publishing Co, New York, 1918
Da: Between the Covers-Rare Books, Inc. ABAA, Gloucester City, NJ, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Softcover. Condizione: Very Good. Vol. 1, no. 9. Edited by Max Eastman and Crystal Eastman. Quarto. 50pp. Illustrated wraps. Short tear at bottom of front wrap, a little color break along the edge of the front wrap, very good or better. Articles by Max Eastman (The trial of Eugene Debs), John Reed (two articles on the USSR), Floyd Dell, and others. Poetry by Max Eastman, Clement Wood, and others; illustrations by Boardman Robinson, Art Young, and others.
Editore: The Liberator Publishing Co, New York, 1920
Da: Second Story Books, ABAA, Rockville, MD, U.S.A.
Softcover. Condition is Good with Light age toning, Light wear to edges and corners (with a few small chips), 4" partial tear to cover (beginning at spine tail), lower staple partially detached (but secure with all pages attached). CX Consignment. Shelved in CX Ephemera Box in Rockville's "Middle Room" 1368944. FP New Rockville Stock.
Editore: The Liberator Publishing Company, New York, 1919
Da: Singularity Rare & Fine, Baldwinsville, NY, U.S.A.
Libro Prima edizione
Single Issue Magazine. Condizione: Good. First Edition. New York: The Liberator Publishing Company, 1919. First Edition of the February, 1919 issue. Quarto, 49 numbered pages. Covers and first adjacent pages loose; age-toned throughout. Good plus. Boardman Robinson cover, a portrait of Abraham Lincoln (an a propos Lincoln quote lies within as well); contributions by Stuart Davis, Max Eastman, Howard Brubaker, William Bross Lloyd, Upton Sinclair, Jean Sterling, Louis Untermeyer, Charles W. Wood, Lydia Gibson, Art Young, Inez Haynes Irwin, Jean Starr Untermeyer, Alexander Trachtenberg, and others. The Liberator was a famed - to a degree, even at the time - and seminal creation of Max Eastman and his sister Crystal Eastman intended to pick up the flag from The Masses, which had been shut down by the U.S. Government on the basis of postal regulations. A socialist publication like The Masses, The Liberator had, in addition to ideological commentary, a variety of art, poetry and short fiction, including many covers and other interior artwork by Robinson, Hugo Gellert and others of note. Inexpensively made at the time and fragile now, but trenchant and already enshrined in American political publishing history. l-lng2.
Editore: Liberator Publishing Company, New York, 1919
Da: Mullen Books, ABAA, Marietta, PA, U.S.A.
Paperback. Red wraps with black lettering and illustration; [50] pp; richly illustrated. Scarce copy of this magazine. This magazine was an important to the socialist movement in the early 20th century. Additionally, it was always filled with interesting illustrations to accompany the articles. This issue contains the articles, "The Hour of the People Has Come," by Klara Zetkin, Rosa Luxemburg, Karl Liebknecht and Franz Mehring; "Bob Minor and the Bolsheviki," by Max Eastman; "Lenin and Wilson," by Max Eastman; "The Senate of the Dead," by Arturo Giovannitti; "Liebknecht Dead," by John Reed; "The Mooney Congress," by Crystal Eastman; "The Peace that Passeth Away," by John Reed; "Ireland and the British Elections," by Hannah Sheehy Skeffington; "The Truth About Breshkovsky," by "X"; "The Why, Wherefore and Whenas of Prohibition," by Charles W. Wood and "Darkness Before Dawn," by Sen Katayama. Good (Wraps are moderately edgeworn/toned/scuffed/smudged/creased; interior is moderately toned; textblock is also creased down the middle; there are chips at the textblock corners; covers are starting.).
Editore: Liberator Publishing Company, New York, 1918
Da: Mullen Books, ABAA, Marietta, PA, U.S.A.
Paperback. Red and tan illustrated stapled wraps with black lettering; [42] pp.; richly illustrated. In 1918, editors of "The Masses, a radical political and literary journal.[whose] editors were brought to trial twice in 1918 because of their editorial opposition to the United States' entry into World War I." -- Encyclopedia Britannica Website. After two hung juries, Eastman founded "Liberator." This issue is particularly focused upon that trial. As such, this issue contains the article, "Story of the Masses Trial," by Floyd Dell, with illustrations by Art Young. Additional articles include, "Max Eastman's Speech," "Morris Hillquit on the New Espionage Law," and "John Reed Brings a Message Straight From Russia." Incredible piece of American Political Discourse History. Good (Wraps are moderately toned/edgeworn/scuffed/smudged; spine is wearing thin, but still intact; there are chips around the edges of the covers and certain pages; pages are moderately toned;page 41 has been torn at the top; interior is clean.).
Editore: Liberator Publishing Co., New York, 1918
Da: Bibliophilia Books, Tampa, FL, U.S.A.
Rivista / Giornale
Soft cover. Condizione: Near Fine. Imperial octavo (27.5x21.5 cm). - 42, [2] pages. - Original covers printed in red, blue and black. - On the back cover: a full-page ad: "RED RUSSIA - John Reed' story of the Lenine (SIC) Revolution". - Tiny losses. - Also includes: MAX EASTMAN: "The Triumph of Karl Marx"; HELEN KELLER: "In Behalf of the I. W. W."; Max Eastman 's poem: "iISADORA DUNCAN", "Two Sonnets - By LOUIS UNTERMEYER; and a center-fold drawing by BOARDMAN ROBINSON: "The Interruption".