Catalog 154 - Between the Covers Rare Books
Transcription
Catalog 154 - Between the Covers Rare Books
<< New Arrivals: Books, Books and More Books >> Between the R are B ooks , 112 Nicholson Rd Gloucester City, NJ 08030 C ov e r s inc . (856) 456-8008 mail@betweenthecovers.com www.betweenthecovers.com C at a l o g 1 5 4 : New Arrivals: Books, Books, and More Books Fiction, Poetry, and Miscellaneous............................................... Items 1 - 236 Children’s Books...................................................................... Items 237 - 267 Mysteries & Detective Fiction.................................................. Items 268 - 298 Oh, well. We’ve finally gotten over our bitter disappointment about not winning the Nobel Peace Prize (again!) despite our constant efforts to spread joy throughout the world. But our loss is your gain, as we’ve taken that time that we had originally allotted for writing our acceptance speech, and used it to prepare another catalog. So far this year we’ve bought over 100,000 books (and the year’s not over yet). While we are unusually industrious in our production of catalogs, you can probably understand that not every one of these vivacious volumes is going to emerge into full-color splendor in one of our regular catalogs. So once again we’ve compromised, and printed you a list of new arrivals in black and white. Really, the least you can do to assuage our bruised feeling after this latest rejection is to buy a couple of dozen books. And if the lack of color is that vexing to you, well you can find full color images of these books on our website. And since you were probably going there soon anyway... One more note: Several of the items in this catalog are inscribed to Rachel MacKenzie. MacKenzie replaced Katherine White as the fiction editor at the New Yorker, on the latter’s retirement, on the recommendation of May Sarton. During her tenure at the magazine MacKenzie was noted for her nurturing and editing of, among others, Sarton, Philip Roth, Muriel Spark, and especially Isaac Bashevis Singer. MacKenzie’s enthusiasm led to the magazine devoting an entire issue to Spark’s The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie. However, the magazine wouldn’t publish Goodbye, Columbus as she recommended because Wallace Shawn was too squeamish over the more “frank” aspects of the novella. Terms of Sale All books are First Editions unless otherwise noted. All books are returnable within ten days if returned in the same condition as sent. Books may be reserved by telephone, fax, or email. Institutions will be billed to meet their requirements. For private individuals, payment should accompany order if you are unknown to us. Customers known to us will be invoiced with payment due in 30 days. Payment schedule may be adjusted for larger purchases. We accept VISA, MASTERCARD, AMERICAN EXPRESS, DISCOVER and PayPal. Gift certificates available. Domestic orders please include $5.00 postage for the first item, $2.00 for each item thereafter. Overseas orders will be sent airmail at cost (unless other arrangements are requested). N.J. residents please add 7% sales tax. All items are insured. All items subject to prior sale. Members ABAA, ILAB Cover by Tom Bloom. © 2009 Between the Covers Rare Books, Inc. Note: Color pictures of all available items in this catalog can be seen at www.betweenthecovers.com by searching under author or title. Fiction, Poetry & Miscellaneous ALBEE, Edward. The Zoo Story The Death of Bessie Smith The Sandbox. New York: Coward-McCann (1960). First edition. Fine in very good dustwrapper with the price intact, and a large but very faint stain. Author’s first hardcover book, preceded only by a wrappered acting edition. The only copy we have seen in recent memory with the price intact. 1 ALFRED, William. The Annunciation Rosary. Matawan, New Jersey: The Sower Press 1948. First 2 edition. Fine in wrappers. Warmly Inscribed by the author. A play in verse, the author’s first book. ANDREWS, Frank. Bum on Fifth Avenue: Song of an Ugly Man. Toronto, Ont.: New 3 Line Fraternity 1962. First edition. Printed green wrappers. 85pp. Pencil word (“Andy”?) on the front wrap, else near fine. Author’s complimentary slap laid in. Epic biographical (and possibly autobiographical) poem about a bum who badly needs a dime for a cup of coffee. Unusual, we’ve never seen another; neither have OCLC or Copac, which locate no copies. 4 (Anthology). Poetry Festival: Commissioned Poems 1962. San Francisco: The Poetry Center, San Francisco State College 1962. First edition. Stapled die-cut illustrated orange wrappers. Quarto. Fine. Includes poems by Brother Antoninus, James Broughton, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Jack Gilbert, Thom Gunn, Josephine Miles, Harold Witt, Muriel Rukeyser, and W.D. Snodgrass. (Architecture). HALBERT, Blanche, edited by. The Better Homes Manual 5 [Published in Co-Operation with Better Homes in America]. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press [1931]. First edition. Fine in an attractive, very good orange dustwrapper with fading and small tears at the spine. A scholarly guide to homes and remodeling, take is very scarce in jacket. 6 (Arctic). KENT, Rockwell. N By E. New York: Brewer and Warren 1930. First trade edition. Fine in a nice, very good or better dustwrapper with three very small chips. The jacketed trade edition is many times scarcer than the limited edition. (Art). ALAJALOV, Constantin. Autograph Letter Signed. [New York: 1975]. One 7 page Autograph Letter Signed, dated Dec. 20, 1975, written in green ink on Alajalov’s personal stationery. Folded for mailing, else fine. The artist responds to a correspondent who has suggested Alajalov make a book of his work. He writes, “At present I have no plans, nor ideas, nor inclinations to do anything about it, but, just the same, I want to thank you for the flattering idea. Sincerely yours, Constantin Alajalov.” 8 (Art & Photography, EAKINS, Thomas). HENDRICKS, Gordon. The Photographs of Thomas Eakins. New York: Grossman Publishers 1972. First edition. Quarto. Fine in very good dustwrapper with some foxing and offsetting on the front panel. (Art). KANE, Bob with Tom Andrae. Batman and Me. 9 Forestville, California: Eclipse Books 1989. First edition. Quarto. Blue cloth gilt with applied illustration. Fine in fine slipcase, accompanied by original shipping carton. One of 1000 numbered copies Signed by Kane on a limitation label on the front fly, and each with a full-page drawing by Kane, in this case, a drawing of Batman. An as new copy. (Art, LEWIS, Martin). McCARRON, Paul. The Prints of Martin Lewis: A 10 Catalogue Raisonne. Bronxville, New York: (M. Hausberg 1995). First edition. Quarto. Fine in fine dustwrapper with just a touch of soiling. Nicely Inscribed by compiler Paul McCarron. (Art). POPPER, Frank. (Yakov Agam). Agam. New York: Harry N. Abrams (1990). 11 Third revised edition. Large quarto. Fine in fine dustwrapper. Includes a multicolored drawing in marker in which Agam has incorporated his signature five times. (Automotive). MURPHY, Thos. D. New England Highways and Byways from a Motor Car. Boston: L.C. Page & Company 1924. First 12 edition. Fine in near fine dustwrapper with a couple of small nicks and tears, in a lightly worn, very good or better box with applied illustration. Scarce thus. (Automotive). WINN, Mary Day. The Macadam Trail: Ten Thousand Miles by Motor 13 Coach. New York: Alfred A. Knopf 1931. First edition. Illustrated by E.H. Suydam. Fine in very near fine dustwrapper with a couple of very small tears on the rear panel. Account of a ten thousand-mile trip. 14 (Automotive Trailers). NASH, Charles Edgar. Trailer Ahoy! Being as comprehensive a book on the automobile house trailer as is possible for one man to prepare at this time from his own experiences and the fragmentary data available in an industry frantic with the demands of production. Lancaster, Pennsylvania: Intelligencer Printing Company 1937. First edition. Cloth with applied illustration, spine gilt. Illustrated from photographs. Cloth rubbed near the crown, spine lettering a little dull, one page wrinkled, else a handsome, near fine copy without dustwrapper (possibly as issued). Signed by the author. 15 BARNES, Djuna. A Night among the Horses. New York: Horace Liveright 1929. First edition. Faint offsetting to the half-title from a clipping, and on the fly leaves from an old tape repair to the jacket, else near fine in good, price-clipped dustwrapper with small chips and tape shadows from the old repair (with the tape professionally removed). A collection of short stories, poems, and plays. Scarce in jacket. (Baseball). [Promotional Brochure]: Ye New Georgia Chain Gang Announce Their First New England Tour. East Coast’s Newest 16 and Most Outstanding Baseball Club Presenting the Best in Baseball and Comedy. (Somerville, MA): Ye New Georgia Chain Gang (1950). One quarto leaf folded to make four pages. Faint vertical crease and some modest foxing, else near fine. A brochure announcing the formation of a new (and apparently short-lived) comic barnstorming baseball team. Front cover photo shows the warden, with bat and pistol, holding two players, with mitts and dressed in convict stripes, at bay. The players (as listed) were a combination of minor league stars and retired journeyman major leaguers, and including Charley Osgood (ex-Dodgers), Sam Gentile (ex-Braves), Ray Martin (ex-Braves), Lou Belanger, etc. The team seems to be an offshoot of barnstormers the New England Hoboes, and includes a former Kokomo Clown as well. Whether the tour came off is not clear, as we can find no further information about the team. OCLC references no copies of this brochure. 17 (Baseball). EVERS, John J. and Hugh S. Fullerton. Touching Second: The Science of Baseball. Chicago: Reilly & Britton (1910). First edition. Cloth with applied photographic illustration. Corners a bit worn, and the usual heavy rubbing to the cover illustration, a very good copy lacking the rare dustwrapper. A solid copy of this “howto” book for boys by the second baseman made famous in the “Tinkers-to-Evers-to-Chance” double play combination. Illustrated with photos of various baseball greats, including Evers, Frank Chance, Ty Cobb, Honus Wagner, Nap Lajoie, Christy Mathewson, Walter Johnson, “Home Run” Baker and others showing how it’s done. Later re-issued as Baseball in the Big Leagues. (Baseball fiction). DAVIES, Valentine. It Happens Every Spring. New 18 York: Farrar Straus 1949. First edition. Some sunning to the boards, very good in good dustwrapper with some moderate chipping. An amusing baseball romance, about a chemistry professor who invents a substance that makes baseballs avoid all wood surfaces (i.e. bats) and embarks on a spectacular pitching career. Basis for the Lloyd Bacon film, scripted by Davies, with Ray Milland and Jean Peters. A scarce title. (Basketball). CAUDLE, Edwin C. Collegiate Basketball: Facts and Figures on the 19 Cage Sport. 1959 edition. Winston-Salem NC: John F. Blair, Publisher (1960). First edition. Two tiny tears in the cloth, and corresponding very small holes in the jacket, else fine in fine dustwrapper. Accompanied by a wrappered “1960 Supplement,” which is lightly rubbed, but about fine. A nice copy of this uncommon compendium. 20 Producer’s Copy BEACH, Rex. Big Brother and Other Stories. New York: Harper and Brothers (1923). First edition. Ownership stamp of film production company Famous Players-Lasky, fine in very good or better dustwrapper with a scrape on the front panel. A collection of six short stories, at least three of which were filmed. The title story was the basis for the 1923 film Big Brother directed by Allan Dwan produced by Famous Players-Lasky. It also served as the basis for the 1931 film Young Donovan’s Kid directed by Fred Niblo and starring Richard Dix, Marion Shilling, Jackie Cooper, and Boris Karloff (a few films before his star-making turn in Frankenstein). The the story “Too Fat to Fight” was the basis for the 1918 film of the same name directed by Hobart Henley. Also, the story “Recoil” was filmed by T. Hayes Hunter as The Recoil in 1924 with Mahlon Hamilton, Betty Blythe, and Clive Brook. (BEACH, Sylvia). Sylvia Beach 18871962. Paris: Mercure De France 1963. First edition. 21 Wrappers. Illustrated from photographs. A small bump on the front wrap, else fine. A homage to Beach with contributions by T.S. Eliot, Bryher, Marianne Moore, Janet Flanner, Malcolm Cowley, Allen Tate, Yves Bonnefoy, and others. One of 1400 copies. A lovely copy. BECKOVIC, Matija and Dusan Radovic. Che: A Permanent Tragedy [with] 22 Random Targets. New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich (1970). First American edition. Fine in fine dustwrapper. A dramatic social satire, accompanied by satiric essays by two Serbian authors. A beautiful copy of a very scarce play. BEITH, Gilbert, Edited by. Edward Carpenter: In Appreciation. London: George Allen 23 and Unwin Ltd (1931). First edition. Edited by Gilbert Beith. Very good with a light water stain on the top cover edges, light foxing on the pages, lacking the dustwrapper. An appreciation of early gay activist and socialist philosopher Edward Carpenter with contributions by E.M. Forster, Havelock Ellis, Laurence Housman, Henry Salt, and various other friends and colleagues. BELLOW, Saul. Humboldt’s Gift. (New York): Viking Press (1975). First edition. Usual slight toning to the pages, else fine in fine dustwrapper with a tiny rub on the front panel. Laid in is a decorative envelope Signed by Bellow. A fresh, very nice copy of this Nobel Prize winner’s scarce Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, which reportedly had a small first printing. Burgess 99 title. Very scarce in this condition. 24 BENEDIKT, Michael. Serenade in Six Pieces. (Huntington, Connecticut: M. Sabados 1958). First 25 edition. 24mo. A trilfe age-toned, and corners a little bumped, still very near fine in wrappers. One of 55 numbered copies, this copy Inscribed by the author to poet Howard Moss: “Dear Mr Moss – Please accept this as a small thanks for ‘A Summer Grove,’ and others. Michael Benedikt.” Poet’s first book. BERKMAN, Sylvia. Blackberry Wilderness. Garden City: Doubleday 1959. First edition. A little spotting to the boards, very good in very good dustwrapper. Inscribed by the author to an editor at the New Yorker, Rachel MacKenzie (see introduction): “For Rachel, with love, Sylvia. January 29, 1959.” $50 26 BLAKE, Michael. Dances With Wolves. New York: Newmarket Press (1991). First 27 hardcover edition (preceded by a paperback original). With an afterword by the author. Fine in fine dustwrapper. Briefly Inscribed by the author. (Books Collecting). BASBANES, Nicholas A. Patience and Fortitude: A 28 Roving Chronicle of Book People, Book Places, and Book Culture. (New York): HarperCollinsPublishers (2001). First edition. Fine in near fine dustwrapper with a rubbed tear at the corner of the crown, and a little additional rubbing. Signed by the author. (Book Collecting). STONE, Herbert Stuart. First Editions of American Authors: A Manual for Book29 Lovers. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Stone and Kimball 1893. First edition. Introduction by Eugene Field. Green cloth gilt. Ownership signature of Bernard Flexner, lawyer, philanthropist, and Zionist leader. Very slight bumping to the spine ends, just about fine. 30 BOWLES, Paul. The Spider’s House. New York: Random House (1955). First edition. Fine in near fine dustwrapper with a wrinkled tear on the rear panel. BOYLE, T. Coraghessan. East Is East. (New York): Viking (1990). First edition. Fine in fine 31 dustwrapper. Signed by the author. From the Library of Bruce Kahn. 32 BRIDIE, James. Colonel Wotherspoon and Other Plays. London: Constable & Co 1934. First edition. Owner’s name else fine in a price-clipped, very good or better dustwrapper with slight spine-fading. Plays by a Scottish writer and frequent film collaborator with Alfred Hitchcock. The other three plays represented are What It Is to Be Young, The Dancing Bear, and The Girl Who Did Not Want to go to Kuala Lumpur. The true first is uncommon. BRITTON, Kenneth Phillips. Winter’s Back in Town. Paris: [no publisher] 1927. First edition. 33 12mo. Quarter cloth and printed paper covered boards. Corners rubbed, else near very good. Signed by the author. A (probably self-published) book of poetry published in Paris by a forgotten American playright who authored two Broadway plays (one of which, Houseparty was set in the library of a fraternity house at Williams College, in Williamstown, Massachusetts). Some of Britton’s poetry was published in the New Yorker. OCLC locates two copies. BROUGHTON, James and Gerard Hoffnung. The Right Playmate. London: 34 Rupert Hart Davis 1952. First edition. Papercovered boards. A chip at the spine, thus good in a spine-sunned and modestly chipped and torn, good dustwrapper. Inscribed (but not signed) by Broughton with a long, nearly full-page poem on the subject of the book: finding the right playmate. BUCK, Pearl S. Imperial Woman. New York: John Day Company (1956). First edition. Fine in fine and bright dustwrapper with a touch of rubbing. A superlative, as new copy – the nicest we’ve seen of a surprisingly uncommon title, an historical novel about the last Empress of China. 35 36 BUECHNER, Frederick. A Long Day’s Dying. New York: Alfred A. Knopf 1950. First edition. Near fine in very good, priceclipped dustwrapper with a long tear on the front panel. Warmly Inscribed by Buechner to fellow author Nicholas Delbanco. The noted author and Presbyterian minister’s first book, a richly symbolic work about a widow who has an affair with her son’s college teacher and, to save her own reputation, accuses the latter two of a homosexual relationship. The first book by an author whose long and prolific career has included Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award nominations. (Business). THOMAS, Dorothy Swaine. Social Aspects of the Business Cycle. New York: Alfred A. Knopf 1927. First American 37 edition. Errata slip. Slight toning to the boards, still about fine in very good dustwrapper with small tears, very shallow chips, and a little tanning at the spine. Examination of sociological implications of business cycles by a Columbia Ph.D. Scarce in jacket. 38 CHAMBERLAIN, George Agnew. White Man. Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill (1919). First edition. Illustrated by W.H.D. Koerner. Advance Copy in decorated papercovered boards with applied printed label: “Mr. C.H. Ayers / Compliments of the Publisher.” Rubbing to the spine ends, a small stain on the edge of a few pages, a very good copy. An unusual advance copy, issued without dustwrapper. English woman slated to reluctantly marry a millionaire meets a pilot with a plane, and heads off to Africa. Basis for the 1924 film directed by Louis J. Gasnier and featuring Kenneth Harlan, Alice Joyce, and Walter Long; but better known for being Clark Gable’s screen debut. 39 CHASE, Mary Ellen. The Golden Asse and Other Essays. New York: Henry Holt 1929. First edition. Fine in near fine dustwrapper with a couple of short tears. CHASE, Stuart. Men and Machines. New York: Macmillan 1929. First edition. Illustrated by W.T. Murch. Slight offsetting on the front fly else fine in fine dustwrapper with a short tear. The anatomy and invention of machinery, and what it means for human labor. Beautiful unsigned Art Deco jacket art, and a superb copy. Not particularly scarce, but very much so in this condition. 40 CHAYEFSKY, Paddy. The Passion of Josef D. New York: Random House (1964). First edition. 41 Fine in a price-clipped, near fine dustwrapper. A card Signed by Chayefsky laid into the book. A cheery little musical play about Joseph Stalin that featured Peter Falk in the title role. CHEEVER, John. The Brigadier and the Golf Widow. New York: Harper and Row (1964). 42 First edition. Tiny owner’s name, else fine in an attractive, very good dustwrapper with two tears on the front panel, and with some smudging on the rear panel. Signed by the author on a tipped-in leaf. CHESTER, Alfred. Jamie is My Heart’s Desire. New York: Vanguard Press (1957). 43 Uncorrected proof. Fine in wrappers and near fine dustwrapper. The author’s first novel, with gay themes. Uncommon format. 44 COHN, Nik. Arfur: Teenage Pinball Queen. New York: Simon and Schuster 1970. First edition. Fine in slightly rubbed, near fine dustwrapper with very shallow loss at the top of the front panel. Scarce title, especially in this condition. 45 COLEGATE, Isabel. Winter Journey. London: Hamish Hamilton (1995). First edition. Fine in fine dustwrapper. Signed by the author. CORNCOB, Jonathan. (Noel Perrin). The Adventures of Jonathan Corncob, Loyal 46 American Refugee Written by Himself. Boston: David R. Godine (1976). Reprint of the 1787 edition. Edited with foreword by Noel Perrin. Fine in a mildly sunned, very good dustwrapper. Inscribed by Noel Perrin to his editor at the New Yorker, Rachel MacKenzie (see introduction): “To Rachel, whom I love. Ned.” $125 COURTELINE, Georges. The Bureaucrats: Scenes from French Official Life 47 [Messieurs les Ronds-de-Cuir]. London: Constable 1928. First edition in English. Translated by Eric Sutton. Illustrated by Donia Nachshen. A tiny bookstore label on the front pastedown, foredge a trifle foxed, else fine in a price-clipped, fine dustwrapper. Filmed on several occasions, probably most notably in 1936, directed by Yves Mirande with an ensemble cast headed by Arletty. Very scarce in jacket. 48 COWLEY, Malcolm. Exile’s Return: A Literary Odyssey of the 1920’s. New York: W.W. Norton (1934). First edition. Slightly soiled, else near fine in good dustwrapper with some chipping and several short tears, and some evidence of tape removal on the inside of the jacket. Scarce in jacket. 49 CREELEY, Robert. A Quick Graph: Collected Notes & Essays. San Francisco: Four Seasons Foundation 1970. First edition, hardcover issue. Edited by Donald Allen. Fine in fine dustwrapper. 50 CREELEY, Robert and Martha Visser’t Hooft. Window. Buffalo: Poetry/Rare Books Collection SUNY at Buffalo 1988. First edition, Fine in wrappers and fine unprinted acetate dustwrapper and envelope with applied title label. One of 100 numbered copies Signed by both the artist and poet. 51 CROUZAT, Henri. Island at the End of the World. New York: Duell, Sloan and Pearce (1959). First American edition. Translated by Lowell Bair. Fine in near fine dustwrapper with slight foxing on rear panel. French air force officer marooned on desert island with three beautiful English nurses after their hospital ship is sunk, poor fellow. Basis for the 1959 French film L’île du bout du monde directed by Edmond T. Gréville and featuring Magali Noël, Dawn Addams, Rossana Podestà, and Christian Marquand. The film was released in the U.S., not surprisingly, as Temptation. Nice mildly suggestive jacket art by Larry Lurin. Scarce in this condition. (Cuisine). BONNEY, Therese & Louise. A Guide to the Restaurants of Paris. New York: Robert M. McBride & Company (1929). 52 First edition. Slight edgewear to the boards, very good or better in good dustwrapper with several modest chips and tears. Scarce in jacket, a guide to Paris eateries at the height of the Lost Generation invasion. 53 (Cuisine). BRAUN, Lionel H. and William Adams. Fanny Hill’s Cook Book. New York: Taplinger 1971. First American edition. Illustrations by Brian Forbes. Fine in near fine dustwrapper with some rubbing and tiny tears. Mildly salaciously illustrated recipes for comestibles and cocktails. Scarce in nice condition. (Cuisine, Dining). Trader Vic’s Book of Food and Drink. Garden City: Doubleday 1946. First 54 edition. Introduction by Lucius Beebe. Watercolor illustrations by Guy Huzé. Drawings by William F.M. Kay. Neat owner name on the front fly else fine in fine dustwrapper with a little rubbing. An especially nice copy. DE REGNIERS, Beatrice Schenk. The Little Book. New York: Henry Z. Walck, 55 Inc. 1961. First edition. 24mo. Fine in very near fine dustwrapper. Signed by the author, as well as Inscribed by her to children’s book editor Frances Schwartz. 56 DENISA, Lady Newborough. Fire in my Blood. London: Elek Books (1958). First edition. A pen stroke on the front pastedown, boards a little soiled, else near fine in good, price-clipped dustwrapper lacking the bottom 1½" of the spine, and with other light wear. Biography of an impoverished aristocratic woman who ran away with the gypsies and then supported her family mostly through her sexual exertions. 57 DOS PASSOS, John. The Best Times. New York: The New American Library, Inc. [1966]. Uncorrected proof. Spiral bound in printed wrappers. Slight soiling, some pencil marks in the margins, near fine. Scarce in this format. 58 DUBERMAN, Martin. Black Mountain: 59 DUNCAN, Robert. Selected Poems. An Exploration in Community. New York: E.P. Dutton 1972. First edition. Fine in fine dustwrapper with just a touch of rubbing. San Francisco: City Lights (1959). First edition, second issue in perfectbound wrappers. Lightly soiled, near fine. Pocket Poets Series number ten. EAGAN, Alberta Stedman. New Lamps. New York: The 60 Macaulay Company 1930. First edition. Owner’s name stamps on the front endpapers, a small sticker removal mark on the front fly, else near fine in near very good dustwrapper with small chips and a dampstain on the rear panel. Jacket art unsigned. Novel about the degenerate effects of vice and the breezy lifestyle of two young Jazz Age women. ELIOT, T.S. The Confidential Clerk: A Play. London: Faber and Faber (1954). First edition (“Ihad” for “I had” on p.7) in first state dustwrapper (priced 10s 6d on the front flap). Small owner’s name on the front fly, else fine in very good or better dustwrapper with slight overall soiling. 61 ELIOT, T.S. and Igor Stravinsky. Anthem (The dove descending breaks the air): 62 for chorus a cappella. London: Boosey & Hawkes Music Publishers 1962. First edition. One leaf folded to make four pages. Very slight age-toning else fine, in a worn and torn envelope from the publisher. A memorial to Eliot, Stravinsky sets Part IV of Little Gidding to music. Scarce. ENGLISH, Richard. Strictly Ding-Dong and Other 63 Swing Stories. Garden City: Doubleday, Doran 1941. First edition. Owner’s name on the front fly else fine in a price-clipped, near fine dustwrapper with some rubbing. A collection of swing stories featuring Ding-Dong Williams which were the basis for the 1946 William A. Berke film Ding Dong Williams featuring Glenn Vernon as Ding-Dong, a genius with the clarinet who has to have others write what he composes because he doesn’t know musical notation. Blurbs by Count Basie, Duke Ellington, Benny Goodman, Tommy Dorsey, Paul Whiteman, Guy Lombardo, and Rudy Vallee. (Erotica). GAUTIER, Theophile. Mademoiselle de Maupin. [NY]: Pierre Louys 64 Society 1927. First edition thus. Illustrated by Clara Tice. Fine save for a touch of wear to the board edges, without dustwrapper as issued. No. 912 of 1250 copies printed, 960 of which were meant for America. 65 FARRELL, James T. Press Release, Signed in Facsimile. New York: Vanguard Press (ca. 1945). Press release from Vanguard, using the text of a letter from Farrell protesting the Canadian banning of Bernard Clare. Folded, with the edges chipped, thus very good plus. Signed by Farrell in facsimile. FARRELL, James T. [Photocopied Offprint]: The World Is Today. (No place): The World of Books 66 1971. One photocopied quarto leaf printed recto only. Folded as mailed, very good or better. Inscribed on the verso to critic and author Harry Levin: “Dear Harry: In case this be of any interest, I send it. Book no. 81 is more than 2/3 done. Best, Jim Farrell.” The ink in the inscription has spread out a little on the photosensitive paper, but is still easily readable. Paperclipped to the sheet is the original mailing envelope from Farrell to Levin. 67 FARRELL, James T. [Offprint]: Farrell Looks at his Writing [from] Twentieth Century Literature: A Scholarly and Critical Journal. February 1976. (No place): Twentieth Century Literature 1976. Stapled wrappers. 7pp. Staples oxidized, a light smudge on the front wrap, one word corrected in an unknown, but almost certainly Farrell’s hand (it came from a number of offprints, most of which he had inscribed to a noted scholar and author), and a stray ink mark on another page, a very good copy. FAULKNER, William. Faulkner at West Point. New York: 68 Random House (1964). First edition. Edited by Joseph L. Fant, III and Robert Ashley. Foreword by W.C. Westmoreland. Fine in fine dustwrapper. Advance Review Copy with slip laid in. Transcriptions of Faulkner’s speeches and answers to students’ questions during his April, 1962 visit to West Point, which was one of his last public appearances. An exceptionally fresh copy. FORESTER, C.S. Randall and the River of Time. Boston: Little, Brown and Company 69 1950. First edition, preceding the UK edition. Fine in fine, price-clipped dustwrapper with some light rubbing. Young British WWI officer falls in love during leave. An unusually fresh copy of a relatively common title. FORESTER, C.S. The Good Shepherd. Boston: Little, Brown and Company (1955). 70 First edition, preceding the UK. Fine in fine dustwrapper. An unusually fine copy. FORESTER, C.S. Hornblower and the Crisis. London: Michael 71 Joseph (1967). First edition. Fine in fine dustwrapper. A lovely copy of the last Hornblower novel, along with two short stories. Scarce in this condition. GAYE, Phoebe Fenwick. The Good Sir John. New York: Horace Liveright (1930). First 72 American edition. Boards a little soiled, else near fine in an attractive, very good plus dustwrapper with a crease on the spine. English author’s novel about Sir John Falstaff. 73 GENET, Jean. The Thief’s Journal. (Paris): Olympia Press (1954). First edition in English, with additional notes by the author. Foreword by Jean-Paul Sartre. Translated by Bernard Frechtman. Wrappers as issued. Fine. The Traveller’s Companion Series. 74 GIBBONS, Stella. The Charmers. (London): Hodder and Stoughton (1965). First edition. Fine in near fine dustwrapper with a little toning to the spine, and a small chip at the crown. A scarce novel of London, by the author of Cold Comfort Farm. Jacket design by Jennie Paul. GILCHRIST, Ellen. Two Stories. New York: Albondocani Press 1988. First edition. Stapled selfwrappers. A fine, as new copy. Prospectus for the edition laid in. Copy number 2 of 150 numbered copies Signed by the author. 75 GLASGOW, Ellen. The Romance of a Plain Man. New York: Doubleday, Page 1910. First edition. Spine faded and rubbed, a very good copy. Inscribed by the author: “Felicity Clark Dunne, Ellen Glasgow.” A relatively scarce title. 76 77 GOREY, Edward. Amphigorey Also. New York: Congdon and Weed (1975). First edition. Fine in fine dustwrapper with a touch of rubbing. A nice, fresh copy. GOREY, Edward. Gorey Stories. New York: Samuel French, Inc. (1983). First edition. Conceived and adapted for the Stage by Stephen Currens from Eighteen stories by Edward Gorey. Music by David Aldrich. Stapled blue wrappers. Fine. 78 (GOREY, Edward). MOORE, Merrill. Illegitimate Sonnets. New York: Twayne Publishers (1950). First 79 edition. Fine in a lightly rubbed, very good dustwrapper with a short tear and an owner’s name on the front flap. Endpapers by Edward Gorey, his first commercially published book appearance. GRAHAM, Harry. The Private Life of Gregory Gorm. London: 80 Peter Davies (1936). First edition. Top edges of the easily susceptible boards a little sunned, else fine in near fine, Nicholas Bentley-illustrated dustwrapper with a couple of tiny tears. A nice copy of this uncommon comic novel about a fatuous cleric. 81 GRAVES, Robert. Wife to Mr. Milton. New York: Creative Age Press (1944). First American edition. Lightly worn, very good or better copy in near very good dustwrapper with general wear and small chips and tears. GRAVES, Robert. The Crane Bag and Other Disputed Subjects. London: Cassell (1969). First edition. Fine in fine dustwrapper. A beautiful, very nearly as new copy. 82 HANFF, Helene. The Duchess of Bloomsbury Street. Philadelphia and New York: 83 J.B. Lippincott (1973). First edition. Fine in near fine dustwrapper with very slight wear. Warmly Inscribed by the author. The story of Anglophile Hanff ’s first visit to England, and something of a sequel to 84 Charing Cross Road. HARTE, Francis Bret. The Luck of Roaring Camp, and Other Sketches. Boston: Fields, Osgood, and Co. 1870. First edition, first state. Green cloth gilt. Tiny owner’s stamp on the front fly, modest edgewear to the boards, paper over front hinge starting to crack, a sound, about very good copy. The story and book that propelled Harte to international fame. BAL 7246. 84 85 HAWES, Elizabeth. Men Can Take It. New York: Random House (1939). First edition. Illustrated by James Thurber. Fine in very good dustwrapper with a couple of tears, a tiny nick at the crown, and a small stain on the rear panel. An attack on men’s fashion. Scarce in jacket. HELD, John, Jr. The Gods Were Promiscuous. New York: Vanguard Press 1937. First 86 edition. Near fine lacking the dustwrapper. Inscribed by the author “To Dorothy Quick Mayer. John Held Jr.” Humorous novel by the pre-eminent illustrator of the Jazz Age. Meyer wrote mysteries under her maiden name, and while still a girl she befriended another humorist, Mark Twain. HEMINGWAY, Ernest. By-Line: Ernest Hemingway. Selected Articles and Dispatches of 87 Four Decades. London: Collins (1967). Uncorrected proof of the first English edition. Edited by William White. A small crease on the front wrap, title written on the spine, very good or better in red wrappers with applied printed label. Scarce in this format. HEPBURN, Katherine. Typed Letter Signed. One page Typed Letter Signed (“Kate”) in a slightly 88 infirm hand on her Katherine Houghton Hepburn stationery dated 3 January 1991. Fine. A brief letter, in full: “Dear Noel: I say – that’s quite a letter to get from you – Has me walking on a cloud – Wow! When are you coming here? I feel as if I haven’t seen you in a thousand years – Affection and thanks – Kate.” A nice, personal letter. HERGESHEIMER, Joseph. Quiet Cities. New York: Alfred A. Knopf (1928). First edition. 89 Fine in just about fine dustwrapper with a little rubbing at the crown. A very nice copy. 90 HEYWARD, Du Bose. Lost Morning. New York: Farrar & Rinehart (1936). First edition. Fine in spine-faded, very good or better dustwrapper. Advance Review Copy, so stamped on the front fly. HOLMES, Oliver Wendell. Address Delivered at the Dedication of the Hall of the Boston Medical Library Association, 91 on December III, MDCCCLXXVIII... Report of the Librarian James R. Chadwick. Cambridge: Printed at the Riverside Press 1881. First edition. Printed wrappers. 39, 18pp. Light edgewear, near fine. Chadwick’s report is paginated separately from the Holmes address. HUBBARD, Ralph. Queer 92 Person. Garden City: Doubleday Doran 1930. First edition. Illustrated by Harold von Schmidt. A tiny bookstore label on the front fly, very near fine in a modestly age-toned, very good dustwrapper with a few faint creases. Story of an outcast Indian boy. Very scarce in jacket. HUGHES, Ted. Illustrated 93 with photographs by Fay Godwin. Remains of Elmet: A Pennine Sequence. (London): Faber and Faber (1979). First edition. Slight rubbed spot, and a tiny bump to one corner, near fine in fine dustwrapper. A beautiful copy. HYMAN, Sarah (Shirley Jackson). Patchwork Quilt. (No place 94 New York): Gentlemen’s Quarterly (No date - probably 1958). Folio. Four loose tall quarto proof sheets printed rectos only, printing this complete short story by the daughter of Shirley Jackson, then age sixteen, and representing her first published work. The story is very much in the style of her mother, and exhibits considerable talent, perhaps to the extent that she could have had guidance from her mother, or her father, the literary essayist and critic Stanley Edgar Hyman. Aside for some preliminary matter for a collection of her mother’s unpublished stories, the author doesn’t appear to have published much else. Folded once horizontally, with very light wear, near fine. Possibly unique. ISHAM, Juliet Calhoun. Winds and Tides. New York: G.P. Putnam’s Sons 1925. First edition. 95 Slight offsetting on the front fly from a clipping, else fine in very good dustwrapper with some shallow chipping. Inscribed by the dedicatee, the author’s son, Ralph H. Isham, a financier, biggame hunter, and the discoverer and purchaser of the personal papers of James Boswell: “To Gertrude Broderick in trembling hand and with apologies after a hectic day. Ralph H. Isham. 21 Sept. 1934, New York City.” Laid in are two photographs of the author, and a clipping and press release about Ralph’s purchase of the Boswell Papers. JACOBS, W.W. Salthaven. London: 96 Methuen (1908). First edition. Pictorial green cloth. A trifle worn at the spine ends, still very near fine. A nice copy. JARRELL, Randall. The Complete Poems. New York: Farrar, Straus, Giroux 1969. First 97 edition. A tiny bump on the spine, still easily fine in fine dustwrapper. Scarce in this condition. 98 KAY, Ted. Hazel. (New York): E.P. Dutton 1946. First edition. A small bookplate remnant on the front fly, else near fine in a priceclipped, else fine dustwrapper. A nice copy of the first Hazel book, and surprisingly scarce. KEMP, Harry. The Thresher’s Wife. New York: Albert and Charles Boni 1914. First edition. Corners rubbed, else near fine with a small chip at the top of the paper spine label. Signed by the author. 99 100 KENEALLY, Thomas. Blood Red, Sister Rose. London and Sydney: Collins 1974. Uncorrected proof. One corner a little curled, very near fine. Scarce in this format. 101 KERR, Richard. Wireless Telegraphy Popularly Explained. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons 1898. First edition. 12mo. Yellow cloth stamped in red. 111pp. Front fly detached but present, small chips to the fly, boards a bit foxed, very good. First book on wireless telegraphy in English. Very scarce. KIP, Leonard. The Dead Marquise. New York: G.P. Putnam’s Sons 1873. First edition. Original green cloth gilt. A tiny tear at the crown and a little rubbing at the extremities, a nice otherwise near fine copy. Wright 1483. 102 KREYMBORG, Alfred. The Selected Poems 1912-1944 of Alfred Kreymborg. New York: 103 E.P. Dutton 1945. First trade edition. Near fine with the gilt lettering a bit dimmed and the spinal extremities bumped, in near fine dustwrapper with the spine lightly sunned. Inscribed by the author to Henry Leach, author and editor of The Forum, with a manuscript letter Signed by Kreymborg and addressed to Leach laid in. LAUGHLIN, James. Gists & Piths: A Memoir of Ezra Pound. (Iowa City): The Windhover Press at Iowa 1982. First edition. Quarter cloth and papercovered boards with printed paper spine label. Fine. One of 225 copies of a total edition of 250. 104 105 LAX, Robert. The Circus of the Sun. (New York: Journeyman Books 1959). First edition. Cloth and photographically illustrated papercovered boards. Drawings and design by Emil Antonucci. Cover photograph by Charles Harbutt. Fine in good original unprinted glassine dustwrapper. One of 500 numbered copies Signed by both Lax and Antonucci. Additionally briefly Inscribed by Lax: “Douglas / Bob.” Lax’s first and most famous book, a meditation on the Creation, was described in the New York Times as “perhaps the greatest English language poem of this century.” A close friend of Thomas Merton’s, their correspondence was published. Occasionally described as a hermit, Lax did little to advance his literary career. His sparing use of words qualifies him as one of the founders of literary minimalism. 106 LEES-MILNE, James. Ancestral Voices. London: Chatto and Windus 1975. First edition. Fine in fine, Reynold’s Stone-illustrated dustwrapper with just a touch of age-toning. The first volume of Lees-Milne’s diaries, written while inspecting houses on offer to the National Trust. A very nice copy. LEWIS, Sinclair. The Man Who Knew Coolidge. New York: Harcourt Brace and Company 107 (1928). First edition. Fine in a near very good dustwrapper with some loss at the crown. A flawed but presentable copy. 108 LINDSAY, Vachel. Going to the Sun. New York: D. Appleton and Company 1923. First edition. Illustrated by the author. Cloth beautifully restored at the spine, gilt lettering on the spine is dull, else a near fine copy in an attractive, internally repaired, good dustwrapper with some loss at the crown, that has been supplied to this copy. Inscribed by the author: “My very good wishes to my lifetime, lifelong friend Marjorie S. Logan, Nicholas Vachel Lindsay – December 25, 1923.” Logan was the head of the Fine Arts Department at Milwaukee-Downer College. A significant association copy. 109 LLOYD, Harold. Printed Calling Card Signed. Small engraved calling card. Approximately 1½" x 3". Fine. Lloyd has crossed out his printed name and written “Merry Xmas, Harold.” Undated but a pencil note on the back notes “from Christmas 1926.” 110 LOGUE, Christopher. [Broadside]: The Song of The Dead Soldier: (to the tune of McCafferty): one killed in the interests of certain Tory senators in Cyprus. London: Villiers 1959. First separate edition. Folio. Folded in quarters. Some even tanning, and a couple of tiny tears. Scarce and fragile. LOY, Mina. The Last Lunar Baedeker. Highlands, North Carolina: The Jargon 111 Society 1982. First edition. Edited by Roger L. Conover. Note by Jonathan Williams. Fine in fine dustwrapper, in the original shrinkwrap. A beautiful copy. (MacPHERSON, Kenneth, edited by). Close Up. Number 5. November 1927. 112 Riant Chateau, Switzerland: Pool 1927. Wrappers. Volume 1. Lightly soiled, near fine. Includes articles by MacPherson, Dorothy Richardson, Rene Crevel, and others. Uncommon and influential English-language film journal published and edited by Kenneth MacPherson, with an assist from his wife, Bryher, between 1926 and 1933. 113 MALAMUD, Bernard. A New Life. New York: Farrar, Straus & Cudahy 1961. First edition. A poor copy with dampstaining and wear, lacking the dustwrapper, mitigated some by being Inscribed by Malamud to his close friend, the author Nicholas Delbanco: “For Nick, Writer – Colleague – Friend – who, with his lovely wife, makes more fun. Bern. Bennington April 1974.” MAMET, David. American Buffalo. New York: Grove Press (1976). First edition, wrappered issue. Fine in wrappers. The author’s first book. Winner of the 1976 Obie Award and the New York Drama Critics Circle Award for Best American play of 1977. 114 MANKOWITZ, Wolf. A Kid for Two Farthings. New York: E.P. Dutton 1954. First American 115 edition. Fine in bright, near fine dustwrapper with a little light rubbing and some foxing visible only on the inside of the jacket. Basis for Carol Reed’s first color film, scripted by Mankowitz, a charming comedy about a London boy who buys a one-horned goat and believes it to be a unicorn. MAROTTA, Giuseppe. Neapolitan Gold. London: Hogarth Press 116 1950. First English edition. Translated from the Italian by Frances Frenaye. A little foxing on the title page else about fine in a near fine dustwrapper with some tiny tears. Humorous stories from Naples, and also the basis for the 1954 Vittorio De Sica film L’Oro di Napoli. The film, which had six separate segments, had a necessarily large cast that included Silvana Mangano, Sophia Loren, Totò, Paolo Stoppa, and De Sica himself. Very scarce. MAUGHAM, W. Somerset. The Writer’s Point of View. London: Published for the 117 National Book League by the Cambridge University Press 1951. First edition. Stiff wrappers in dustwrapper. Fine. 118 McALMON, Robert. A Hasty Bunch. (Paris: The Author 1922). First edition. The rear wrapper has been sympathetically replaced, else a very good or better copy. Small handbill “From an h’English Printer to an English Publisher” laid in, and a trifle soiled. McAlmon was the founder of Contact Editions which published James Joyce, Ezra Pound, and several others, including Ernest Hemingway’s first book. He was at the center of expatriate life and helped to support various struggling artists and writers in that tumultuous time. The author’s second book, published at his own expense prior to the formation of Contact Editions. McCARTHY, Cormac. No Country 119 For Old Men. New York: Alfred A. Knopf 2005. First edition. Fine in dustwrapper with the slightest of rubbing, but which is otherwise fine. Basis for the Coen Brothers film that won four Academy Awards including Best Picture. McMURTRY, Larry. Cadillac Jack. New York: Simon & Schuster (1982). First edition. Cloth in cloth covered slipcase. Fine. One of 250 numbered copies Signed by the author, one of his less common limited editions. From the Library of Bruce Kahn. 120 121 McMURTRY, Larry. The Desert Rose. New York: Simon & Schuster (1983). First edition. Fine in slipcase as issued. One of 250 numbered copies Signed by the author. A notably small limitation for a major novel by an author of McMurtry’s popularity and collectibility. From the Library of Bruce Kahn. 122 MEAD, Taylor. On Amphetamine and In Europe: Excerpts from the Anonymous Diary of a New York Youth. Volume Three. New York: Boss Books (1968). First edition. Wrappers. Top corner bumped, else near fine. Poetry by an underground film star and New York poet and performance artist. Very uncommon title. 123 MERWIN, W.S. The Miner’s Pale Children. New York: Atheneum 1970. First edition. Bump at the top of the rear board, very good in very good plus dustwrapper with a chip on the rear panels. A collection of short stories, most of which first appeared in the New Yorker. This copy Inscribed by Merwin to his editor at the New Yorker Rachel MacKenzie (see introduction): “For Rachel, all the children in one album at last – with love from Bill. New York Nov. 1970.” A nice association. 124 MERWIN, W.S. Houses and Travellers. New York: Atheneum 1977. First edition. Foxing on the foredge, still near fine in very good plus dustwrapper with a few short tears. One of 1000 copies printed. A collection of short stories, most of which first appeared in the New Yorker. This copy Inscribed by Merwin to his editor at the New Yorker Rachel MacKenzie (see introduction): “For Rachel who had more than she would ever admit in this book’s being as it is, Her Copy with much love from Bill. New York Oct 26 1977.” A nice association. (Military). CHURCHILL, Winston S. The River War: An Account of the Reconquest of the Sudan. 125 London: Eyre & Spottiswoode (1951). Third edition, fifth printing. Bound by Bayntun in half black morocco and cloth by Bayntun. Slight sunning to the cloth, else about fine. A handsome volume. MILLAY, Edna St. Vincent. Huntsman, What Quarry? New York: Harper & 126 Brothers (1939). First edition. Fine in fine dustwrapper with a touch of soiling. A lovely copy. 127 MILLER, Arthur. Salesman in Beijing. New York: The Viking Press (1984). First edition. Fine in near fine dustwrapper with a crease on the front flap and a little rubbing. Signed by Miller. MILLER, John. A Description of the Province and City of New York; with Plans 128 of the City and Several Forts as they existed in the Year 1695…Now first printed from the original manuscript. (To which is added, a Catalogue of an extensive Collection of Books relating to America, on sale by the Publisher) [cover title]: New York in 1695. London: Thomas Rodd 1843. First edition. Sympathetically rebacked in gray cloth gilt with original papercovered boards, and printed paper title label on the front board. 44, [4], 21116pp. 6 folding plates. Mostly unopened. Bookplate on the front pastedown, edgewear to the boards, old repair and a small chip to the last leaf of text, else near fine. Howes M610. 129 MILLS, James. The Panic in Needle Park. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux (1966). First edition. A couple of tiny spots on a preliminary page, near fine in dustwrapper with a tear on the front panel, but which is otherwise near fine. Basis for the 1971 film featuring Al Pacino in his first starring role (as well as Raul Julia in his first credited movie part). 130 Woman Traveller MINER, Clara M. as C.M.M. Stray Bits from the Orient: Experiences of an American in Hindostan, What She Saw, Heard and Learned. Buffalo: The Courier Company 1892. First edition. Flexible green cloth gilt. Penciled owner’s name on the front fly, a little rubbing. near fine. According to the title page, “The Proceeds of this work are to be devoted to the education and elevation of Hindoo Women.” MITCHELL, David. Cloud Atlas. (London): Sceptre (2004). First edition. Fine in fine dustwrapper with fine wraparound band. 131 MONTAGUE, Margaret Prescott. Up Eel River. New York: Macmillan Company 1928. First 132 edition. Illustrated by Martha Bensley Bruere. A bookplate removed from the front fly causing a tear, else near fine in very good dustwrapper with negligible and shallow nicks and tears. Tony Beaver, a Paul Bunyan-type, performs amazing feats in the West Virginia mountains. 133 (MOORE, Marianne). TAMBIMUTTU, editor. Festschrift for Marianne Moore’s Seventy-Seventh Birthday. New York: Tambimuttu & Mass 1964. First edition. Fine, with the spine lettering in the second state, in near fine dustwrapper with two very small chips. Inscribed by Moore: “For G.B.M. Marianne Moore Nov. 9 1966.” Advance Review Copy with slip laid in. Contributors include Robert Lowell, Babette Deutsch, May Swenson, James Laughlin, Allen Tate, Kathleen Raine, Vernon Watkins, Allen Ginsberg, Ruthven Todd, Howard Moss, Robert Penn Warren, David Ignatow, Herbert Cahoon, Stanley Kunitz, James T. Farrell, and others. Fifteen black and white drawings, most of which are by Laurence Scott and Peggy Bacon. Dustwrapper design by Leonard Baskin. (Music). WHITEMAN, Paul and Leslie Lieber. How to Be a Bandleader. New York: Robert M. McBride (1948). First edition. Copiously illustrated 134 with photographs of contemporary musicians in action. Fine in near fine dustwrapper with a couple of shallow nicks at the crown. An amusing, and very scarce book. 135 NATHAN, Robert. The Bishop’s Wife. Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill (1928). Early reprint. Fine in an attractive, very good dustwrapper with several small tears. Inscribed by the author: “I’m afraid this isn’t a ‘first’. Robert Nathan” (a seemingly uncommon example of an author correctly being able to identify his own first editions). Basis for the wonderful 1947 Christmas film in which Cary Grant plays an angel who sets out to help a Bishop (David Niven), but becomes the love interest of the Bishop’s wife (Loretta Young). Remade in 1996 as The Preacher’s Wife with Denzel Washington and Whitney Houston. 136 NIEDECKER, Lorine. The Collected Poems (1936-1966). (Penland, North Carolina): The Jargon Society 1968. First edition. Plant prints by A. Doyle Moore. Printed wrappers. Fine in wrappers. One of 2000 copies. Jargon 48. O’CONNOR, Flannery. Everything That Rises Must Converge. New York: Farrar, Straus & 137 Giroux (1965). First edition. Some spotting on the topstain, else near fine in fine dustwrapper. From the Library of Bruce Kahn. O’CONNOR, Flannery. Mystery and Manners: Occasional 138 Prose selected and edited by Sally and Robert Fitzgerald. New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux (1969). First edition. Fine in fine dustwrapper, a lovely copy of these fugitive essays, either unpublished or which had appeared in scattered and often obscure periodicals. A posthumous title which is becoming increasingly difficult to find especially in this condition. From the Library of Bruce Kahn. O’NEILL, Eugene. Lazarus Laughed. New York: Boni 139 & Liveright 1927. First edition, trade issue. Fine in fine dustwrapper with a little foxing on the spine. A lovely copy of the trade edition, seldom found thus. (Paint). KELLY, A. Ashmun. The Expert Paint Mixer: 140 Designed for the Use of House and Structural Painters. Giving a course of instruction in the preparation of paints used for interior and exterior work, with directions for applying them, and with which course are included clear and helpful observations on the theory, nature, and origin of color, descriptions of bases, pigments, and liquids employed in the compounding of paints, with many useful tables and suggestions of a practical nature. Philadelphia: David McKay Company, Publishers 1923. Reprint (copyright page dated 1920). Fine in near fine dustwrapper with tiny tears. A very nice copy. PALAHNIUK, Chuck. Fight Club. New York: W.W. Norton (1996). First edition. Fine in fine dustwrapper. Signed by the author. Basis for the intriguing David 141 Fincher film with Brad Pitt, Ed Norton, and Helena Bonham Carter which merits repeated viewings and is destined for cult status. From the Library of Bruce Kahn. 142 PAYNE, John. Vigil and Vision: New Sonnets. London: Villon Society 1903. First edition (advance issue?). Decorated cloth stamped in red and gilt. A near fine copy. Bookplate of H. Buxton Foreman, editor, book collector, bibliographer, and literary fraudster on the front pastedown. Laid in is a one page Autograph Letter Signed, written on the back of a Villon Society flyer for the book from Alfred Foreman, Secretary of the Society to his brother Henry Buxton Foreman transmitting “accompanying advance sheets” (not present) for this book, and asking for his corrections, and also mentioning that he will have a special case made up for the sheets. The book is lettered as copy “No. 1.” Despite a long and distinguished literary career, H. Buxton Forman was later implicated as a conspirator with Thomas Wise in that gentleman’s celebrated literary forgeries. 143 PERRIN, Noel. Amateur Sugar Maker. Hanover, New Hampshire: University Press of New England (1972). First edition. Illustrated by Robert Mac Lean. A razor slit on the rear board and rear panel of the jacket, slightly foxed, else very good in a spine-tanned, very good dustwrapper with a short tear at the foot. Nicely Inscribed by the author to his editor at the New Yorker, Rachel MacKenzie (see introduction): “Rachel, the first chapter of this book was written for you. And edited by you. If only the other three had had the same treatment, a pretty good book would have been a very good one. love, Ned. New York 23 Nov. 1974.” $150 144 PERRIN, Noel. First Person Rural: Essays of a Sometime Farmer. Boston: David R. Godine (1979). First edition. Illustrated by Stephen Harvard. A trifle foxed, near fine in spine-tanned, very good dustwrapper with a short tear at the foot. Nicely Inscribed by the author to his editor at the New Yorker: “To my dearest Rachel – this would be a better inscription if you had edited it. (But you’d leave the love.) Ned 22 Dec. 1978.” $125 PERRY, George Sessions. Tale of a Foolish Farmer. New York: McGraw-Hill (1951). 145 First edition. Fine in an attractive, very good plus, spinefaded dustwrapper with a couple of small chips. Signed by the author. From the Library of Carter Burden. Memoir by a Texas author about his return to Texas. 146 PETERSON, Brenda. River of Light. New York: Alfred A. Knopf (1978). First edition. A little foxed, else fine in a just about fine dustwrapper. First book by a New Yorker staffer. Inscribed by the author to an editor at the New Yorker, Rachel MacKenzie (see introduction): “3/78. To Rachel, my first editor and gentle friend. Thank you for being there at the end of this book. I worked towards your generous, critical eyes like light. With love and respect, Brenda.” MacKenzie is the first person thanked in the acknowledgments of the book. $85 147 PHILLIPS, Morris. Abroad and at Home: Practical Hints for Tourists. New York: Brentano’s (1891). First edition. Red cloth illustrated in gilt. Modest soiling to the boards, very good or better. Inscribed by the author to mystery writer Augusta Prescott, curiously, on the frontispiece tissue guard. Interesting illustrated coated purple endpapers. (Philosophy). HEIDEGGER, Martin. Holzwege [Off the Beaten Track]. Frankfurt am Main: 148 Vittorio Klostermann (1950). First edition. Text in German. Cheap pages are browned, a small chip on the half-title, else near fine in near fine dustwrapper with small nicks and tears. An important collection of essays based on his lectures and published in English as Off the Beaten Track. This collection includes one of his most influential essay, “Der Ursprung der Kunstwerkes” (“The Origin of the Work of Art”). (Photography). BOURKE-WHITE, Margaret. Halfway to Freedom: A Report on the New India in the Words and Photographs of 149 Margaret Bourke-White. New York: Simon & Schuster 1949. First edition. Slight wear, near fine in a modestly worn, very good or better dustwrapper with a couple of very small chips and tears. Bourke-White’s account of the emergence of India and Pakistan from British control. (Photography). CAPA, Cornell and J. Mayone Stycos. Margin of Life: 150 Population and Poverty in the Americas. New York: Grossman 1974. First edition, wrappered issued. A small tear on the front wrap, else near fine. Capa’s photos accompanied by Stycos’s text. This copy warmly Inscribed by Capa to photographer Bernice Abbott. A nice association copy. (Photography). HOSOE, Eikoh and Yukio Mishima. Ba Ra Kei: Ordeal by 151 Roses. New York: Aperture 1985. First American edition. Preface by Yukio Mishima. Folio. A small sticker removed from the front fly, else fine in very good or better dustwrapper with some spotting on the front panel. Accomplished, and occasionally erotic photographs, probing the psyche, life, and eventual death (in a ritual suicide) of Mishima, who collaborated on the design of the Japanese edition. (Photography). KERTÉSZ, André. Distortions. New York: Alfred A. Knopf 1976. First edition. Quarto. Edited by Nicolas Ducrot. Introduction by Hilton Kramer. Fine in near fine dustwrapper with a wrinkle in the lamination of the front panel. 152 (Photography). PFEIFFER, Walter. Walter Pfeiffer (1970–1980). (Frankfurt: Elke 153 Betzel Verlag 1980). First edition. Photographic wrappers. Embossed owner’s stamp on the front leaf and a little rubbing to the wrappers, else near fine. Uncommon photography book that ranges from cuddly kitties to strong homoerotic content. (Photography). PLICKA, Karel. Prag ein Fotografisches Bilderbuch. Prague 154 in Pictures en Images. Prag: Artia (1953). First edition. Folio. Fine in near fine dustwrapper and a moderately worn cardboard slipcase. Relatively common, but in nicer than usaul condition. (Photography). VERSACE, Gianni and Donatella. South Beach Stories. 155 (Milan): Leonardo Arte (1993). First edition, Bloomingdale’s issue. Folio. Fine in fine dustwrapper. Includes photographs by Bruce Weber, Doug Ordway, and David Vance. Signed by Gianni Versace. (Photoplay). CLARKE, Donald Henderson. Louis Beretti [jacket title]: Louis 156 Beretti, Gangster. Born Reckless. New York: Grosset & Dunlap 1930. Photoplay edition. A bit rubbed, else near fine in near fine dustwrapper with a small label neatly removed from spine. Illustrated with scenes from the film directed by John Ford and Andrew Bennison, and featuring Edmund Lowe. (Photoplay). FAVERSHAM, Julie Opp. The Squaw Man. New York: Grosset and 157 Dunlap [1931]. Photoplay edition. Adapted from the play by Edwin Milton Royle. Fine in very near fine dustwrapper with minor wear. Illustrated with scenes from film directed by Cecil B. DeMille and featuring Warner Baxter and Lupe Velez. Mac Tey jacket art. (Photoplay). TARKINGTON, Booth. Business and Pleasure: Photoplay title of The 158 Plutocrat. New York: Grosset and Dunlap (stated 1927 - really 1932). Photoplay edition, and the first edition with this title. Small name stamp on the front fly, and some foxing to both the front board and the title page, very good or better in a nice, very good plus dustwrapper with a little foxing and very light wear. Illustrated with stills from the 1932 film that featured Will Rogers and Joel McCrea, with an attractive jacket painting of Rogers by Mac Tey. A nice copy. 159 PINSKY, Robert. Landor’s Poetry. Chicago: University of Chicago Press (1968). First edition. Fine in a lightly rubbed, else near fine dustwrapper. First book by a former U.S. poet laureate. POUND, Ezra. The Pisan Cantos. (New York): New Directions 1948. First edition. Fine in chipped, good only dustwrapper. The jacket is notoriously brittle, this copy is worn but sound and without restoration. Connolly 100. 160 POUND, Ezra. Personae: Collected Shorter Poems of Ezra Pound. London: Faber and Faber (1952). First English edition. Top corners a little bumped, else near fine in a slightly spine-toned, very good or better dustwrapper with two small tears at the crown. 161 POUND, Ezra. Section: Rock-Drill 85-95 de 162 los cantares. Milano: All’Insegna del Pesce D’Oro 1955. First edition. Illustrated papercovered boards. Bottom corners very slightly bumped, still fine in a chipped, very good example of the original unprinted glassine dustwrapper. One of 500 numbered copies. POUND, Ezra. Thrones: 96-109 de los 163 cantares. London: Faber and Faber (1960). Uncorrected proof of the English edition. Unprinted blue wrappers. Title and a couple of words in ink on the front wrap, else fine. PRICE, Reynolds. Late Warning. New York: Albondocani Press 1968. First edition. Fine in self-wrappers. One of 150 numbered copies Signed by the author, this is copy number 8. 164 (Psychology). FREUD, Sigmund. Der Mann Moses und die monotheistische Religion. Drei Abhandlungen [Moses and 165 Monotheism]. New York: Longmans, Green and Co. 1939. First American edition. Text in German. Spine slightly sunned, else fine in near fine dustwrapper with a few short nicks and tears. 166 (Psychology). JUNG, C.G. Analytische Psychologie und Erziehung [Analytical Psychology and Education]. (Heidelberg): Niels Kampmann Verlag (1926). First edition. Text in German. Green cloth gilt. 94,(1)pp. Slight wear to the corners and a little age-toning, else a near fine copy. (Psychology). PFISTER, Oskar. Religiosität und Hysterie [Religiosity and 167 Hysteria]. Leipzig: Internationaler Psychoanalytischer Verlag 1928. First edition. Text in German. A trifle soiled, very near fine. (Psychology). RANK, Dr. Otto. Eine Neurosenanalyse in Traumen [An Analysis 168 of Neuroses in Dreams]. Leipzig, Wien, Zürich: Internationaler Psychoanalytischer Verlag 1924. First edition. Text in German. Printed papercovered gray boards. Slight toning at the spine, near fine. 169 PURDY, James. Jeremy’s Version. Garden City: Doubleday & Company, Inc. 1970. Uncorrected proof. Spiral bound in wrappers. A chip at the bottom of the front wrap, else very good. Scarce in this format. PURDY, James. Sleep Tight. (New York): Nadja (1979). First edition. Small quarto. String tied wrappers. Uncut. One of 100 numbered copies Signed by the author. 170 PYNCHON, Thomas. V. Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott (1963). Fourth 171 impression, noted as such on both the copyright page and the front flap of the dustwrapper (as “fourth printing”). Fine a in very lightly rubbed, fine dustwrapper. Very scarce. Only the second copy of the fourth printing that we’ve seen. The bibliography does not mention the existence of this printing, and the bibliographer was unaware of it until we notified him of it when we had another copy over a decade ago. 172 PYNCHON, Thomas. Mason & Dixon. New York: Henry Holt (1997). First edition. Fine in fine dustwrapper. Publisher’s business card laid in signed “Love.” 173 (PYNCHON, Thomas). Proceedings, Second Series, No. 26. New York: (American Academy of Arts and Letters) 1976. First edition. Wrappers. A tiny tear on the front wrap, else fine. Includes the text of Thomas Pynchon’s letter declining the William Dean Howells Medal for Gravity’s Rainbow, which appears in the text of William Styron’s speech presenting Pynchon with the award. Also includes William Gaddis’ acceptance of the National Book Award for J.R., a Norman Mailer speech, and contributions by Robert Lowell, John Ashbery, and others. Mead B23. 174 RAND, Ayn. Night of January 16th. New York and Cleveland: World (1968). Definitive edition, with new introduction by Rand. Originally published in 1936 only in a wrappered acting edition. Fine in fine dustwrapper. A beautiful copy. REED, Mark. Yes, My Darling Daughter. New York: Samuel French 1937. First edition. 175 Fine in very good or better dustwrapper with slight chipping at the crown. A play that was the basis for the 1939 film directed by William Keighley and featuring Priscilla Lane, Jeffrey Lynn, Roland Young, and Fay Bainter. 176 ROBBINS, Harold. Never Love a Stranger. New York: Alfred A. Knopf 1949. First edition. Corners bumped, small splashmarks on the boards, front hinge repaired, a good copy in a worn and tattered dustwrapper. Nicely Inscribed by the author: “To Rudie, With appreciation for your help and efforts. Harold Robbins.” First novel by the bestselling master of the potboiler, and, as many first novels are, openly autobiographical in nature. ROBERTS, Kenneth L. Antiquamania. Garden 177 City: Doubleday, Doran and Company 1928. First edition. Illustrated by Booth Tarkington. A little foxing, and a bump on the rear board, thus a very good copy in a very good or better, price-clipped dustwrapper with a few shallow tears. Scarce in dustwrapper. A compilation of humorous tales about antiques, antique collectors, and antique dealers. One imagines a considerable amount of alcohol was expended in the compilation of this collection. 178 ROONEY, Frank. The Heel of Spring. New York: Vanguard Press (1956). First edition. Very near fine in very good or better dustwrapper with some modest foxing. Nicely Inscribed by the author: “For Mary Nelson – in appreciation of a memorable summer – Frank Rooney.” ROREM, Ned and Frank O’Hara. Four Dialogues for Two Voices and Two Pianos. New York: Boosey & Hawkes 1969. First edition. 179 Quarto. Cover illustration by Joe Brainard. Just about fine. Inscribed by Rorem in the year of publication: “Merry Christmas to Paul Berl, Ned Rorem 1969.” Berl was the piano accompanist to Spanish operatic soprano Victoria de los Angeles. 180 ROSEN, Norma. Green: A Novella and Eight Stories. New York: Harcourt, Brace & World (1967). First edition. Fine in a spinefaded, very good or better dustwrapper. Inscribed to New Yorker fiction editor Rachel MacKenzie (see introduction): “March 28, 1967 Dear Rachel – Most of these you know, and as far as I am concerned you are a kind of Godmother to this book. Is that all right with you? Love, Norma.” At least one of the stories appeared in the New Yorker. A nice association. RUSHDIE, Salman. The Moor’s Last Sigh. New York: 181 Pantheon (1995). First American edition. Fine in fine dustwrapper. Signed by the author. RUSSELL, Bertrand. History of the World in Epitome (For use in Martian infant 182 schools). (London): Gaberbocchus Press (1962). First edition. Illustrated by Franciszka Themerson. 64mo. Near fine in gold wrappers with a little rubbing. Mostly printed on gold foil pages, as a celebration of Russell’s ninetieth birthday. 183 SARTON, May. Inner Landscape. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company (1939). First American edition (using British sheets). Fine in very good dustwrapper with some toning at the spine and small nicks and tears. Nicely Inscribed by the author to Rachel MacKenzie (see introduction), her editor at the New Yorker: “To Rachel with love from May. Oct. 1950.” A superb association. SARTRE, Jean-Paul. Intimacy and Other Stories. (New York): New Directions (1948). First American edition. Translated by Lloyd Alexander. Near fine in very good dustwrapper displaying evidence of having been folded. 184 (Science-Fiction). ALDISS, Brian W. An Age. London: Faber & Faber (1967). First edition. Fine 185 in fine dustwrapper. A beautiful copy. (Science-Fiction). BANKS, Iain. Walking on Glass. (London): Macmillan (1985). First 186 edition. Fine in fine dustwrapper. The author’s second novel. (Science-Fiction). BENSON, Theodora. The Man from the Tunnel and 187 Other Stories. New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts (1950). First American edition. Pencil name, else fine in a lightly worn, slightly spine-faded, very good plus dustwrapper with some tiny nicks and tears. Advance Review Copy with slip laid in. A nice copy of this collection of stories, several of which wander over into the macabre. 188 (Science-Fiction). DREW, Edward J. The Sludge. New York: Vantage Press (1988). First edition. Fine in a trifle rubbed, else fine dustwrapper. Vanity press science-fiction novel about a pile of sludge that attacks New York, and the policeman who is in charge of combating it, written by an employee of the NYPD. Scarce. OCLC locates no copies. (Science-Fiction). GASKELL, Jane. The Serpent. (London): Hodder and Stoughton (1963). 189 First edition. Fine in a very lightly rubbed, fine dustwrapper. First volume in the author’s Atlantis trilogy. (Science-Fiction). REYNOLDS, George W.M. Wagner the Wehr-Wolf. New 190 York: Hurst and Company (no date - circa 1875). Probable piracy, an early and possibly first American edition. Blue-green cloth decorated in purple, black, and gilt. A large piece of page one of the prologue missing, affecting pages one and two. Cheap paper a bit browned, some modest overall soiling, a very good or better copy. (Science-Fiction). SMITH, Clark Ashton. Other Dimensions. Sauk City: 191 Arkham House 1970. First edition. Fine in a bright and fine dustwrapper, with the slightest trace of rubbing. One of 3000 copies. 192 (Science-Fiction). TAINE, John. Green Fire. Los Angeles: Fantasy Publishing Company, Inc. (1952). First edition by this publisher, originally published in 1928. A little foxing to the endpapers, else fine in near fine dustwrapper with a little wear at the top of the front panel. 193 SHAW, George Bernard. Saint Joan: A Chronicle Play in Six Scenes and an Epilogue. London: Constable and Co. Ltd. 1924. First edition. Green cloth gilt. Foxing in text, some uneven soiling on the spine, very good without the dustwrapper. Actress Eva Le Gallienne’s copy with her bookplate. Small slip of paper laid in the text with an inscrutable note in Le Gallienne’s hand: “Twelve pound look.” Daughter of the French poet Richard Le Gallienne, Eva was a distinguished actress, producer, and director. She founded the Civic Repertory Theatre in New York in the 1920s. In 1964 she was awarded a special Tony Award celebrating her 50th year as an actress and honoring her work with the National Repertory Theatre. She also received a 1977 Theatre World Special Award, and a 1986 National Medal of Arts. (Show Business). MERMAN, Ethel and Pete Martin. Who Could Ask for Anything More. New York: 194 Doubleday 1955. First edition. Fine in fine dustwrapper. Complimentary copy from Macy’s, so stamped on the halftitle. A beautiful copy and very uncommon thus. 195 SIMON, Neil. Laughter on the 23rd Floor. New York: Random House (1995). First edition. Fine in fine dustwrapper. Briefly Inscribed by the author. Based on the author’s experiences writing comedy for Sid Caesar. Basis for the television film directed by Richard Benjamin. SINCLAIR, Upton. What Can Be Done About America’s Economic Troubles? 196 Girard, KS: Haldeman-Julius (1939). First edition. Near fine in stapled wrappers with a small split at the foot of the spine. Ahouse notes that some copies have Sinclair’s own imprint, but does not establish priority. Ahouse B26. 197 SNODGRASS, W.D. Magda Goebbels. (Winston-Salem): Palaemon Press 1983. First edition. Fine in wrappers and fine marbled paper dustwrapper with applied title-piece. Laid in is a four page printed statement by Snodgrass. One of 150 numbered copies Signed by Snodgrass. SOLZHENITSYN, Aleksandr I. America, We Beg You to Interfere. Wheaton, 198 IL: Church League of America 1975. First separate edition (previously published in an AFL-CIO publication). Quarto. Stapled wrappers. (28)pp. Modest offsetting at the extremities, a very good or better copy. Authorized translation in English of the text of two speeches delivered by Solzhenitsyn in Washington, DC and New York, under the sponsorship of the AFL-CIO. Very scarce. 199 STEELE, Wilbur Daniel. Meat: A Novel. New York: Harper and Brothers 1928. First edition. Fine in a price-clipped, about very good dustwrapper with a chip on the front panel. Advance Review Copy, so stamped on the front panel of the jacket. A family drama by Steele. The author, little remembered today, was considered one of the most consistent masters of the American short story during the 1920s and ’30s. STEVENSON, Robert Louis. The Ebb-Tide and Lloyd Osbourne. London: 200 William Heinemann 1894. First edition. Two attractive bookplates on the front endpapers (including that of author Munson Aldrich Havens), corners a little bumped, a very good or better copy. STEVENSON, Robert Louis. Songs of Travel and Other Verse. London: Chatto & Windus 1896. 201 First edition. Bookplate, corners slight bumped, else near fine. STOREY, David. The Changing Room: A Play. London: Jonathan Cape (1972). First edition. Fine in fine dustwrapper. A lovely copy. 202 STRATTON-PORTER, Gene. At the Foot of the Rainbow. New York: The Outing 203 Publishing Company 1907. First edition. Four color illustrations by Oliver Kemp, Designs and decorations by Ralph Fletcher Seymour. A few pages roughly opened, front hinge tender but holding, else a near fine copy. One of the author’s scarcest titles, especially in this condition. 204 TANNENBAUM, Samuel A. Was William Shakspere a Gentleman? Some Questions in Shakspere’s Biography Determined. New York: The Tenny Press 1909. First edition. Fine in near fine printed (French-folded) dustwrapper with a couple of small tears and small stains at the top of the front panel. Inscribed by the author to Volney Streamer. Tannenbaum was a prolific early-20th Century literary scholar, bibliographer, and paleographer, best known for his work on William Shakespeare and his contemporaries. Streamer was an actor and later Librarian of the Players’ Club, and the author of several books, including at least one on Shakespeare. (Tennis). COFFIN, Tristram Potter. Great Game for a Girl. 205 Hauppauge, New York: Exposition Press (1980). First edition. Small owner’s name, a little wear to the boards, a crease to the corner of one page, a very good copy in a rubbed, good plus dustwrapper. Uncommon vanity press tennis novel. 206 THOMAS, Dylan. Under Milk Wood: A Play in Two Acts. London: J.M. Dent & Sons (1958). First edition of this acting edition with preface and musical settings by Daniel Jones. Stiff card wrappers. Fine. TIMMERMANS, Felix. Pallieter. New York: Harper and Brothers (1924). 207 First American edition. Translated from the German by C.B. Bodde. Illustrated (and jacket art) by Anton Pieck. Fine in just about fine dustwrapper with very slight marks on the front panel. Novel by a Flemish author. Very scarce in jacket. 208 TUCK, Lily. The News from Paraguay. (New York): HarperCollins (2004). First edition. Fine in fine dustwrapper. Winner of the National Book Award. 209 VIVANTE, Arturo. A Goodly Babe. Boston: Little, Brown and Company (1966). First edition. Fine in a lightly rubbed, about near fine dustwrapper with a short tear. Author’s complimentary slip laid in. Inscribed by the author to his editor at the New Yorker, Rachel MacKenzie (see introduction): “New York, March 1966. For Rachel, who guided me like the Northern Star, Arturo.” MacKenzie was the dedicatee of Vivante’s story collection The French Girls of Killini: Twenty-One Short Stories. $150 210 VIVANTE, Arturo. Run to the Waterfall. [New York]: Charles Scribner’s Sons (1979). First edition. A little foxed on the foredge, near fine in just about fine dustwrapper. A collection of short stories, all of which appeared in the New Yorker. Inscribed by the author to his editor at the New Yorker, Rachel MacKenzie (see introduction): “New York, November 20, 1979. For Rachel, these page that we traced together hand in hand with love, Arturo.” MacKenzie was the dedicatee of Vivante’s story collection The French Girls of Killini: Twenty-One Short Stories. $150 211 WALPOLE, Hugh. The Old Ladies. London: Macmillan 1924. First edition. Slight spotting to the boards, near fine in about very good dustwrapper with minor chips, and tanning and splash marks on the spine. Scarce in jacket. 212 WARE, William. Zenobia: or, The Fall of Palmyra. An Historical Romance. New York: C.S. Francis 1838. First edition with this title. Two volumes. Octavo. Originally published in 1837 under a different title. Publisher’s green leaf pattern cloth. Slight wear at the spine ends, a small chip to the front fly of Volume One, nice, very good or better copies. Each volume bears the ownership signature of “J. Quincy” on the titlepage, almost certainly Josiah Quincy III, sixteenth president of Harvard and second Mayor of Boston, but possibly his son, Josiah Quincy Jr., who was the eleventh Mayor of Boston (their signatures were similar). WAUGH, Evelyn. A Little Learning: The First Volume of an Autobiography. London: Chapman Hall (1964). Uncorrected proof. Printed wrappers. A bit cocked, else near fine. 213 WELTY, Eudora. On Short Stories. New York: Harcourt, Brace & Co. (1949). First edition. Fine in a nice, near fine, original tissue dustwrapper with tiny nicks and tears. Complimentary card from the publisher laid in, signed by three Harcourt employees, and additionally lightly inscribed by them in pencil. Nicer than usually found. One of 1500 copies sent out as a New Year’s greeting to the friends of the author and publisher. 214 WELTY, Eudora. Three Papers on Fiction. Northampton: Smith College 1962. First edition. 215 Stapled wrappers. Fine. Three lectures on writing fiction that Welty delivered at Smith College as the William Allan Neilson Professor in 1962. WELTY, Eudora. White Fruitcake. (New York): Albondocani Press (1980). First edition. Cover drawing by Robert Dunn. One of 450 copies printed as a holiday greeting by the author and publisher. Fine in original envelope with stiffener. 216 217 (Western). EVANS, Max. The Rounders. New York: Macmillan 1960. First edition. Slight toning to the endpapers, else fine in a lightly spine-sunned, near fine dustwrapper. Author’s first novel, basis for the Burt Kennedy-directed western comedy featuring Glenn Ford and Henry Fonda. (Western). LOCKHART, Caroline. The Lady Doc. Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott 1912. 218 Stated second edition. Illustrated and with jacket art by Gayle Hoskins. Gift inscription, fine in an attractive, near fine dustwrapper with a couple of small nicks. WETJEN, Albert Richard. Way for a Sailor! New York: The Century Co. (1928). First edition. 219 Slight spotting to the boards, else near fine, lacking the very uncommon dustwrapper. Nicely Inscribed by the author: “Salem, Ore. Jan. 1929 Inscribed by the author for Mr. F.W. Wilcox on behalf of Monroe and Myrtle – With all good wishes – Albert Richard Wetjen.” Basis for the 1930 film directed by Sam Wood, notable mostly for being one of the few talkie’s to feature John Gilbert, who appeared along with Wallace Beery, Leila Hyams, Polly Moran, and Doris Lloyd, and with a short appearance by an uncredited Ray Milland. The film, despite a screenplay W.L. River and Laurence Stallings, additional dialogue by Charles MacArthur, and the only acting appearance in a film by author Jim Tully, was by all accounts a failure, and helped to deliver yet another nail into the coffin of the once-enormously successful Gilbert’s career, reportedly hastened by the enmity of studio boss Louis B. Mayer. WHEELOCK, John Hall. The Black Panther. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons 1922. First 220 edition. Binding a bit rubbed, thus very good or better, lacking the dustwrapper. Inscribed by the author, with an additional note in Wheelock’s hand giving the date and location (Morristown, NJ) of the composition of one piece. WHEELOCK, John Hall. In Love and Song. New York: Scribner’s (1971). First edition. Illustrated 221 by Stefan Martin. Front cover gilt slightly rubbed, else fine in fine, price-clipped dustwrapper. Signed twice by Wheelock, and also with a laid in, Signed photograph of the author, with a note in his hand stating that the picture had been taken in his office the day before his retirement from Scribners. WILBUR, Richard. Advice from the Muse. Deerfield, Massachusetts / Dublin: Deerfield Press / 222 Gallery Press 1981. First edition. Fine in fine dustwrapper. One of 100 copies Signed by the author. WILLIAMS, William Carlos. W.C.W.F.H.W. April 18. 1959: To Be Recited to Flossie on 223 Her Birthday. (New York: New Directions 1959). First edition. One leaf folded twice. Fine. A single poem. One of 100 copies printed for New Directions at the Press of Igal Roodenko. WILLIAMS, William Carlos. I Wanted to Write a Poem. The Autobiography of the 224 Works of a Poet. Reported and Edited by Edith Heal. London: Jonathan Cape (1967). Uncorrected proof of the first English edition. Fine in wrappers and fine, slightly oversized dustwrapper. WILLINGHAM, Calder. Geraldine Bradshaw. New York: Vanguard Press (1950). First edition. Boards a little smudged, a very good copy in about very good dustwrapper with a triangular chip at the crown. Inscribed by Willingham to fellow author James Jones: “James Jones – An old cuss – Calder Willingham.” The author’s second book, with a nice association. 225 WILSON, Edmund and Paul Sherman. Corrections and Comments. Iowa City: The Windhover Press / 226 The University of Iowa 1976. First edition. Oblong octavo. Paste-paper over boards with printed paper spine. Fine. One of 175 copies. WODEHOUSE, P.G. Mulliner Nights. Garden City: Doubleday Doran 1933. First American edition. Corner of the 227 front fly clipped, a spot on the front board and a little faint spotting on the spine, a very good copy in a good only dustwrapper with the red portion of the spine faded nearly to white, the front flap partially price-clipped, and some staining (visible only on the inside of the jacket). Uncommon in jacket, even one so humble as this. WODEHOUSE, P.G. Sir Agravaine. Poole, Dorset: Blandford Press 228 (1984). First edition. Illustrated by Roger McPhail. Thin quarto. Fine in fine dustwrapper. (Women). ADDAMS, Jane. A New Conscience and An Ancient Evil. New York: Macmillan 1912. First edition. 229 Handwritten church ownership statement on the front fly, near fine in a very good dustwrapper lacking the top ¾", just touching the top of the title. The fragile jacket is uncommon. Addams on the problems of “white slavery.” WOOLF, Virginia. Tres Guineas [Three Guineas]. Buenos Aires: Sur (1941). First edition in Spanish of Three Guineas. Translated by Roman J. Jimenez. Fine in stiff wrappers in a slightly edgeworn, near fine French-folded dustwrapper. 230 231 WOOLF, Virginia. A Haunted House and Other Stories. London: Hogarth Press 1943. First edition. Crimson cloth lettered in gold. Fine in very good dustwrapper with an old internal repair, and small nicks and tears. 232 WOOLF, Virginia. El Cuarto De Jacob [Jacob’s Room]. Barcelona: Ediciones Lauro 1946. First edition in Spanish of Jacob’s Room. Translated by Simon Santaines. Pages a bit browned, else near fine in near fine, price-clipped dustwrapper with a couple of tiny nicks at the crown. Scarce. (WOOLF, Virginia). BELL, Vanessa. Notes on Virginia’s Childhood: A Memoir. New 233 York: Frank Hallman 1974. First edition. Edited by Richard J. Schaubeck, Jr. Printed papercovered boards. Fine. One of 300 numbered copies printed by Andrew Hoyem in San Francisco. A lovely copy. 234 WOOLMER, J. Howard. A Checklist of The Hogarth Press. Andes, New York: Woolmer/Brotherson, Ltd. 1976. First edition. With a Short History of the Press by Mary E. Gaither. Slightly bumped else fine in fine dustwrapper. Addenda and errata both laid in. 235 WURLITZER, Rudolph. Nog. New York: Random House (1968). First edition. Owner’s name, a little scratching on the front board, and slight spotting on the topedge stain, else near fine in very good dustwrapper with small tears. Inscribed by the author beneath the owner’s name: “January 1969 from Rudy.” Wurlitzer’s first novel, a sixties road trip narrative that was compared to Pynchon’s work (Pynchon himself contributed a blurb to a later Wurlitzer novel). Wurlitzer also wrote numerous screenplays including the cult drag-racing film Two-Lane Blacktop starring James Taylor and Dennis Wilson, and the cult search-for-the-perfect-guitar film Candy Mountain with Tom Waits, Leon Redbone, Dr. John, and many others. YGLESIAS, Jose. An Orderly Life. New York: Pantheon 1968. First edition. Near fine in near fine dustwrapper with a small internal repair. Inscribed by the author to an editor at the New Yorker, Rachel MacKenzie (see introduction): “For Rachel from Jose on May Day. 5-1-69.” With MacKenzie’s ownership signature. $85 236 Children’s Books 237 Goosie Gander Rhymes. London: Dean’s Rag Book Co. [no date - circa 1920]. Edition unknown. Illustrated by Kenneth H. Lovell. Printed flexible linen self-wrappers. Octavo. (12)pp. A “cloth book.” A bit wrinkled, else near fine. 238 Ouaou! Ouaou! Collection Toto, Mimi, Lulu. Paris: Hachette [no date - circa 1925]. Edition unknown. Printed flexible linen self-wrappers. Octavo. (12)pp. A “cloth book.” A bit of fraying at extremities of the wrappers, very good or better. Trains and Ships. [No place - New York]: Platt and Munk 1929. Edition unknown. Printed flexible linen wrappers. Small quarto. (8)pp. A “cloth book.” Slightly wrinkled, else near fine. 239 First Cloth Book. [No place - New York]: Holiday House 1934. Edition unknown. Printed flexible linen wrappers. Octavo. (8)pp. A “cloth book.” Small stains, else near fine. 240 ABBE, Patience, Richard and Johnny. Of All Places! New York: Frederick 241 A. Stokes 1937. First edition. Illustrated from photographs. Foxing to the boards, endpapers, and a little in the text, thus very good in very good or a little better dustwrapper with a creased tear on the front panel, and some other tiny tears. Precocious children in Hollywood report on their interactions with Clark Gable, Charlie Chaplin, fellow children Shirley Temple and Elizabeth Taylor, and a bevy of others. Scarce. 242 ANNO, Mitsumasa. Anno’s Alphabet: An Adventure in Imagination. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell 1975. First American edition. Thin quarto. Fine in fine dustwrapper. (Baseball Fiction). LEONARD, Burgess. The Rookie Fights Back. 243 New York: J.B. Lippincott (1954). First edition. Fine in about fine dustwrapper with a couple of tiny tears. An especially fresh copy of this novel for adolescents. Young Herman Sherman returns to save the Bay City Lancers, for whom he was the former bat boy. McCue p.64. Very scarce in this condition. 244 BISHOP, Sheila. A Silver Nutmeg and a Golden Pear. London: William Heinemann (1945). First edition. Illustrated by the author. Neat pencil owner name on the front fly else fine in near fine dustwrapper with a tear on the front panel and a small nick at the crown. A wartime children’s book that includes Golliwogs in the plot. Scarce in jacket. BUTLER, Francelia. The Skip Rope Book. New York: The Dial Press (1963). First edition. 245 Pictorial boards. Fine in very near fine dustwrapper with a tiny tear and a little soiling. Signed by the author with a sentiment. CARROLL, Lewis. Sylvie and Bruno Concluded. London and New York: Macmillan & Co. 1893. First edition, first issue. Illustrations by Harry Furniss. Publisher’s red cloth gilt, all edges gilt. Modest edgewear, foxing confined mostly to the endpapers, one signature very slightly sprung, a very good or better copy. 246 CHWAST, Seymour. The Flip-Flap Limerickricks. New York: Random House 1972. First 247 edition. Staple bound glossy wrappers. Fine and uncommon thus. A flap book from the Push Pin Studios. CHWAST, Seymour. The Flip-Flap Mother Goooooose. 248 New York: Random House 1972. First edition. Glossy paper over boards. Staples a trifle pulled, else fine and uncommon thus. A flap book from the Push Pin Studios. CIARDI, John. The Reason for the Pelican. Philadelphia: 249 J.B. Lippincott Company (1959). First edition. Illustrated by Madeleine Gekiere. Thin quarto. Neat gift inscription, else fine in a slightly age-toned, near fine dustwrapper with very tiny nicks and tears. Scarce in reasonably nice condition. DONNISON, Polly. William the Dragon. London: Sidgwick & Jackson (1972). First 250 edition. Thin oblong octavo. Fine in fine dustwrapper with small applied title label on spine, apparently added by the publisher as an afterthought. Exceptionally uncommon title, written and illustrated by an eleven-year old English school girl. GARIS, Howard R. Uncle Wiggily Drawing Master with an Uncle Wiggily Story. New York: Fred A. Wish, Inc. 1923. First edition. 251 Folio. Illustrated by Lang Campbell. Card folder with metal apparatus for tracing. Clips used to fix the apparatus in place, and hold the drawing paper, and the apparatus itself are a bit oxidized and rusted, a small stain and small tear on front cover, a very good copy of a fragile item. GARIS, Howard R. Second Adventures of Uncle Wiggily: The Bunny 252 Rabbit Gentleman and His Muskrat Lady Housekeeper. Newark, NJ and New York: Charles E. Graham & Co. (1924). First edition. Thin quarto. Illustrated by Lang Campbell. Cloth and papercovered boards with applied illustration. Corners rubbed, some smudging to the boards and illustrations, a very good copy lacking the dustwrapper. A nice presentable copy. (GOREY, Edward). TARCOV, Edith H. Rumpelstiltskin. New York: Four Winds Press 253 (1973). First hardcover edition. Pictures by Edward Gorey. Fine in fine dustwrapper. An especially fresh copy. GRAHAME, Kenneth. Illustrated by Michael Hague. The Reluctant Dragon. New York: 254 Holt, Rinehart & Winston 1988. First edition illustrated by Michael Hague. Small quarto. Fine in cloth and slipcase, in original publisher’s shrinkwrap and cardboard mailer. The mailer has some modest wear and has been opened at one end (allowing for the still-shrinkwrapped book to come out). One of 350 numbered copies Signed by Hague, and with a special reproduction of an illustration in the text. 255 HORWICH, Frances R. and Reinald Werrenrath, Jr. Miss Frances’ All-Day-Long Book. New York: Rand McNally & Company (1954). First edition. Illustrated by Katherine Evans. Thin quarto. A light stain at the crown else near fine in near fine dustwrapper with a couple of tears. A Ding Dong School Book. Scarce in a nice jacket. HUFFARD, Grace Thompson, Laura Mae Carlisle, Helen Ferris. (Willy Pogany). My Poetry Book: An Anthology of 256 Modern Verse for Boys and Girls. Chicago: The John C. Winston Company (1934). First edition. Illustrated by Willy Pogany. Introduction by Booth Tarkington. Fine in very good Pogany-illustrated dustwrapper with some foxing and small chips. HUXLEY, Aldous. The Crows of Pearblossom. New York: Random House (1967). First 257 edition, preceding the British edition. Illustrated by Barbara Cooney. Fine in fine dustwrapper. A much nicer that usual copy of this children’s book written by Huxley for a favorite niece, and published posthumously. JOHNSON, Siddie Joe. Cat Hotel. New York: Longmans Green and Co. 1955. First edition. Illustrated by Janice Holland. Fine in very near fine dustwrapper. A handsome copy. 258 259 LOFTING, Hugh. Tommy Tilly and Mrs. Tubbs. New York: F.A. Stokes (1936). First American edition. Oblong small octavo. Publisher’s cloth with applied pictorial illustration. Gift inscription, and a slight tear at the crown, else a very good copy lacking the dustwrapper. A book for younger children by the author of the Doctor Dolittle series. MACDONALD, George and Maurice Sendak. The Golden Key. New York: Farrar, Straus 260 and Giroux 1967. First edition thus. Illustrated by Maurice Sendak. Afterword by W.H. Auden. Fine in fine dustwrapper. An especially nice copy. 261 PARRY, Marian. King of the Fish: Adapted from a Korean Folk Tale. New York: Macmillan (1977). First edition. Thin oblong quarto. Illustrated by the author. Fine in pictorial boards in dustwrapper with a tear at the front flap fold, else near fine. Inscribed (but not signed) by the author with two attractive ink and watercolor drawings of fish. Also laid in is an Autograph Letter Signed by the author, sending the book along. A nice book. 262 SENDAK, Philip. In Grandpa’s House. New York: Harper and Row (1985). First edition. Pictures by Maurice Sendak. Fine in fine dustwrapper. 263 SIDNEY, Margaret. Phronsie Pepper: The Youngest of “The Five Little Peppers.” Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company 1937. First edition with new color frontispiece by Arthur Bechler. Near fine in an edgeworn, very good dustwrapper. On the front fly is a long and interesting full-page inscription by the author’s daughter Margaret M. Lothrop about her parents. SPIER, Peter. The Erie Canal. Garden City: Doubleday & Company 1970. First edition. Oblong thin quarto. Illustrated by Spier, a much-awarded illustrator. Fine in good dustwrapper with a few tears on the front panel. Nicely Inscribed by the author. 264 TAYLOR, Ann and Jane and Adelaide O’Keefe. The “Original Poems” and Others. London: Wells, Gardner, Darton & Co. [1903]. 265 First edition with these illustrations. Edited by E.V. Lucas. Illustrated by Francis D. Bedford. Blue cloth elaborately decorated in white, green, and gilt. Corners a bit bumped and rubbed, tiny tears at the spine ends, a nice and tight, very good or better copy. 266 THURBER, James. Many Moons. New York: Harcourt, Brace and Company (1943). Early reprint. Illustrations by Louis Slobodkin. Thin quarto. Fine in very good or better dustwrapper lacking the top ½" of the spine. Winner of the Caldecott Medal for 1944. Presumably, this children’s tale is based in part on one of Thurber’s own earliest publications, a musical of the same title written while he was a college student. Dedication Copy 267 ZOLOTOW, Charlotte. The New Friend. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell (1981). Reprint of the 1968 edition. Square octavo. Illustrated by Emily Arnold McCully. A little foxing else near fine in near fine dustwrapper. A dedication copy, Inscribed by the author to editor and agent Frances Schwartz. The printed dedication reads: “For Frances Schwartz, once again,” beneath which the author has written: “with love – always – Charlotte.” Schwartz was the editor at Abelard-Schuman, where the book was originally published in 1968. Mysteries & Detective Fiction AMBLER, Eric. Cause for Alarm. New York: Alfred A. Knopf 1939. First American edition. The photosensitive green cloth a little sunned at the spine, else near fine in very good price-clipped dustwrapper with tape (quite possibly removable) along the edges of the flaps, just barely touching a letter or two of text. Author’s fourth mystery. 268 BELLAIRS, George. Death Before Breakfast. London: John Gifford (1962). First edition. 269 Fine in a very good or better dustwrapper with a small chip and tear at the crown. BELLAIRS, George. (Edward Gorey). Death in the Wasteland. New York: London House 270 & Maxwell (1964). First American edition. Some foxing on the spine, near fine in near fine dustwrapper designed by Edward Gorey, with a small sticker shadow of the front panel. The desirability of the Gorey jacket makes this title scarce in nice condition. DOLPH, Jack. Dead Angel. Garden City: Doubleday / Crime Club 1953. First edition. Pages slightly browned still fine in fine dustwrapper. Doc Connor investigates a family of Cuban sugar growers who are living in New York. Jacket design by Anna Marie Jauss. A beautiful, fresh and bright copy. 271 272 FORREST, Charles. The Defendant Soul. New York: Harper and Brothers 1930. First edition. Modest wear to the spine, thus very good in an attractive, very good dustwrapper with several small tears, and a very faint dampstain along the edges of the spine. Working woman murders another in order to protect her husband. Very scarce. 273 GODEY, John. The Man in Question. Garden City: Doubleday / Crime Club 1951. First edition. Pages slightly browned still fine in fine dustwrapper with very slight wear. Secret agent in New York makes contact in the Public Library. A beautiful, fresh and bright copy. GREEN, George Dawes. The Caveman’s Valentine. New York: Warner Books 274 (1994). First edition. Fine in fine dustwrapper. Signed by the author. Edgar winner. HAMMETT, Dashiell. The Continental Op. New York: Random House (1974). First edition of this 275 collection of stories taken from earlier collections. Fine in fine dustwrapper. HARRIS, Thomas. The Silence of the Lambs. New York: St. Martin’s Press (1988). First edition. 276 Owner’s name, a little foxing on the boards, near fine in a near fine price-clipped dustwrapper. Basis for the acclaimed Jonathan Demme film which was the first film since One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest to win all the major Academy Awards. HEARD, H.F. A Taste for Honey. New York: Vanguard Press (1941). First American edition. Boards a little sunned, and spine ends slightly worn, very good in a fairly attractive, good dustwrapper with some sunning and small chips at the spine. 277 HEARD, H.F. Reply Paid. New York: Vanguard Press (1942). First American edition. Spine ends slightly worn, very good in about very good dustwrapper with some small chips at the crown. Rex Stout blurb. Jacket art by “MC.” 278 JAMES, Robert. Board Stiff. Garden City: Doubleday / Crime Club 1951. First edition. Pages slightly browned still fine in fine dustwrapper. Shipboard murder on a cruise to Nassau. A beautiful, fresh and bright copy. 279 JOHNS, Captain W.E. Biggles of the Interpol. Leicester: Brockhampton Press (1957). First 280 edition. Ownership signature of author and critic Donald Barr, and a small bookstore label on the front endpapers, else near fine in very good or better dustwrapper with light rubbing. JOHNS, Captain W.E. Biggles in Mexico. Leicester: Brockhampton Press (1959). First 281 edition. Two ownership signatures, including that of author and critic Donald Barr, and a small bookstore label on the front endpapers, page edges a little foxed, else near fine in about very good or better dustwrapper with small chips and tears. 282 JOHNS, Captain W.E. Biggles’ Combined Operation. (London): Hodder and Stoughton (1959). First edition. A small bookstore label on the front endpapers, else fine in near fine dustwrapper with light rubbing. KERR, Philip. Dead Meat. London: Chatto & Windus (1993). First edition. Fine in fine dustwrapper. From the Library of Bruce Kahn. 283 PHILLPOTTS, Eden. Jig-Saw. New 284 York: Macmillan Company 1926. First American edition. Near fine in very good plus dustwrapper with an internally repaired small tear, a small scrape on the front panel, and some overall agetoning. Very scarce in jacket. 285 QUEEN, Ellery. To the Queen’s Taste: The First Supplement to 101 Years’ Entertainment consisting of the best stories published in the first four years of Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine. Boston: Little, Brown and Company 1946. First edition. A crease at the top of the front board, a tiny hole on the spine, modest wear, about very good lacking the dustwrapper. Inscribed by (one half of ) Ellery Queen to a fellow author: “To Charles Angoff in admiration and friendship. Sincerely, ‘Ellery Queen’ (Fred Dannay).” SIMENON, Georges. Black Rain. New York: Reynal & Hitchcock (1947). First American edition. Translated from the French by Geoffrey Sainsbury. Near fine in about very good, price-clipped dustwrapper with a chip on the front panel. 286 SIMENON, Georges. The Burgomaster of Furnes. London: Routledge and 287 Kegan Paul (1952). First English edition. Translated from the French by Geoffrey Sainsbury. Fine in fine dustwrapper with a later publisher’s price label on the front flap. A beautiful copy, and very scarce thus. Jacket art by “MB.” SIMENON, Georges. The House by the Canal. London: 288 Routledge and Kegan Paul (1952). First English edition. Translated from the French by Geoffrey Sainsbury. A tiny bookstore label on the front pastedown, fine in fine dustwrapper. A beautiful copy, and very scarce thus. Jacket art by “MB.” SIMENON, Georges. The Stain on the Snow. London: 289 Routledge and Kegan Paul (1953). First English Edition. Translated from the French by John Petrie. A tiny bookstore label on the front pastedown, fine in near fine dustwrapper with small nicks at the crown and a small hole on the rear spine fold. A better than usual copy. Jacket art unsigned. SIMENON, Georges. Strangers in the House. Garden City: Doubleday 1954. First American 290 edition. Translated from the French by Geoffrey Sainsbury. Fine in fine dustwrapper. The American edition is scarce, and rarely found in this condition. Jacket art by Joe Magniani. 291 SIMENON, Georges. The Methods of Maigret. Garden City: Doubleday Crime Club 1957. First American edition. Translated by Nigel Ryan. Fine in fine dustwrapper. A lovely copy, and very scarce thus. Jacket art by Jack Keats. 292 SIMENON, Georges. The Stowaway. London: Hamish Hamilton (1957). First English edition. Translated from the French by Nigel Ryan. Bottom corners slightly bumped, still fine in fine dustwrapper. A beautiful copy. Jacket art by Robin Jacques. SIMENON, Georges. The Fate of the Malous. London: 293 Hamish Hamilton (1962). First English edition. Translated from the French by Denis George. Top corners quite bumped, else near fine in a bright and crisp, near fine dustwrapper. Nicer than usual. Jacket art by P. Youngman Carter. SIMENON, Georges. Maigret’s Dead Man. Garden City: Doubleday Crime Club 1964. First 294 American edition. Translated from the French by Jean Stewart. Fine in fine dustwrapper. A lovely copy, and very scarce thus. Jacket art by Arthur Shilstone. SIMENON, Georges. Three Beds in Manhattan. Garden City: Doubleday 1964. First American edition. Translated from the French by Lawrence G. Blochman. Fine in fine dustwrapper. The American edition is very scarce, and rarely found in this condition. Jacket art by Ellen Raskin. 295 SIMENON, Georges. Four Days in a Lifetime. London: Hamish Hamilton (1977). First English edition. Translated from the French by Louise Varese. Fine in fine dustwrapper. A beautiful copy. Jacket art by Jerry Bauer. 296 TRUAX, Rhoda. The Accident Ward Mystery. Boston: Little, Brown and Company 1937. 297 First edition. Some spotting to the boards, thus fair only in very good dustwrapper with two vertical creases on the spine. Jacket art by Samuel H. Bryant. VAN GULIK, Robert. The Chinese Gold Murders: A Chinese Detective Story. New 298 York: Harper and Brothers (1959). First American edition. Fine in fine dustwrapper. The second Judge Dee mystery to appear in the U.S. Harper and Brothers bookmark laid in advertising this title. A beautiful copy, and scarce thus. Our website contains reference information on the first editions of over 3000 classic and award winning books. www.betweenthecovers.com