10MB - Badger Books
Transcription
10MB - Badger Books
Badger Books Front Cover: item 151 Southern Cross Rear Cover: item 151 Southern Cross, reverse side when folded Inside Rear Cover: item 31 Bookselling Badger Books PO Box 66 WOOLLAHRA NSW 2025 02 93875421 info@badgerbooks.com.au www.badgerbooks.com.au ABN 49 739 354 885 Prices in Australian dollars and include gst. Free postage within Australia for all orders over $20.00 from this catalogue or from our webpage. All overseas orders sent at cost.. Payment by Visa, Mastercard, AMEX, cheque and Paypal. Books are returnable for any reason within ten days with prior notification THIRTY THOUSAND BOOKS on open shelves in Woollahra.Visitors welcome during business hours. Please telephone in advance. We are always interested in purchasing single books or collections of the type contained in this catalogue. April 2012 1. ABÉ, KOBO. The Face of Another. New York: Knopf, 1966. First American edition. An invisible man of sorts tries to survive; basis for the movie by Hiroshi Teshigahara. Contemporary owner’s signature, else fine in dustwrapper. $35.00 2. ABORIGINAL. Dance and Dancers from Lockhart River and Edward River, performed at Laura Quinkin Country, 1986 by Donna Foster. [Cairns] Samarpan Shanta [1986]. First Australian edition. #68/500 NUMBERED COPIES. Introduction by Ibina Cundell. Eleven plates of dance performances from the Laura Festival. Pictorial wrappers, spiral binding. Fine. $35.00 3. ALTHER, LISA. Kinflicks. NewYork: Knopf, 1976. First American edition. INSCRIBED BY THE AUTHOR. Lisa Alther’s first book. Ginny Babcock’s journey through American obsessions of the sixties and seventies, a coming of age novel published in the first year of the Decade of Women. Near fine in very good dustwrapper rubbed on rear panel. $50.00 4. ANCIENTS. Who’s Who in the Classical World by John Hazel. London: Routledge, 2005. Reprint of the second edition of 2002. 2vols. One volume each for individuals from the Greek and Roman worlds: short biographies, chronology, lists of rulers, glossary and maps. 600+pp. Both vols. fine in matching dustwrappers in slipcase as issued. The pair $75.00 5. ANDRADE, MÁRIO DE. Macunaíma. London: Quartet, 1984. First English edition. Translated from the Brazilian Portuguese by E.A.Goodland. First English translation of the classic Brazilian novel, originally published in 1928, developed from the author’s studies of his country’s indigenous people, and now seen as a precursor to magic realism. Hysterical movie version by Joaquim Pedro de Andrade in the late 1960s. Review copy with the local publisher’s slip laid in. Top edge dusty, near fine in fine dustwrapper. $45.00 6. ARMSTRONG, LOUIS. Louis Armstrong, in His Own Words – Selected Writings. New York: Oxford University Press, 1999. First American edition. Edited and with an introduction by Thomas Brothers, annotated index by Charles Kinzer. Nineteen pieces beginning with the extraordinary “Louis Armstrong + the Jewish Family in New Orleans, La., the Year of 1907” (30pp.). Fine in dustwrapper. $40.00 7. ASHBERY, JOHN. Turandot and Other Poems. New York: Tibor de Nagy Gallery, 1953. First American edition. #54/300 NUMBERED COPIES. Illustrations by Jane Freilicher. John Ashbery’s first book, printed under the supervision of Nell Blaine, the American artist. Patterned coloured wrappers with label, sewn. Slight toning to extremities, small chips to crown and base of spine. Near fine. KERMANI A1 $2,500.00 8. (ASHBERY, JOHN.) Poster for a reading by Ashbery at the Poetics Institute of New York University on 19th February 1981. Single glossy sheet measuring 22 x 36cms., folded twice, and, on reverse, mailing label to Robert Wilson at the Phoenix Bookshop. Fine. $100.00 11. AUSTRALIA. Australian Rhapsody (Vaucluse) for Pianoforte Solo by Adolph Mann. Sydney: W.H. Paling, c.1938. No.7 of Paling’s Piano Series, 5pp. Single sheet measuring 32 x 48cms., printed both sides, folded once and with a single sheet laid in. Minor cracking at ends of fold, else very good. $40.00 9. ASHBERY, JOHN. Man in Lurex. New York: Dia, 1993. Ashbery’s poem and “Après L’Orage” by Pierre Martory. Three broadsides issued for a reading by the two poets on 5th October 1993. Ashbery’s, the French and English versions of Martory’s poem, the English translation by Ashbery. Broadsides measure 28 x 12cms. each; the three laid into a printed folder made from a single sheet, measuring 28 x 37cms., folded twice and with details of the evening and biographies of the poets printed on the cover and inside folds. All fine. $175.00 12. AUTOBIOGRAPHY. The Autobiographical Eye, edited by Daniel Halpern. New York: Ecco Press, 1982. Antaeus, Nos.45/46, Spring/Summer 1982. Collects autobiographical pieces by twentyfour writers including R.K. Narayan, Italo Calvino, Hermann Hesse, Tennessee Williams and Nadine Gordimer. Fine in dustwrapper. $35.00 ASHBERY, JOHN. See T.S.Eliot, Frank O’Hara, Paris – 20th Century Expatriates and Raymond Roussel 10. AUSTRALIA. The Wild Animals of Australasia by A.S. Le Souef and Harry Burrell. London: Harrap, 1926. First English edition. From all of the island continent and drifting off to New Guinea and parts of the Pacific. Illustrated. Original grey green pictorial cloth. Fine. $75.00 AUSTRALIA. See Aboriginal, Joseph Banks, Bruce Beresford, Building, Roy Campbell, Peter Carey, Children’s Literature, Liviu Ciulei, Continental, Father Damien, Ealing Studios, Eucalyptus, Exhibition Catalogue, James Fairfax, First Aid, Ella Fitzgerald, Food, Furniture, Gardening, Lian Hearn, Home, Spud Johnson, Charles Kingsford Smith, Laundry, Joseph Losey, Ella MacIntyre, George Mackaness,Wally Mellish, Menu, Moments, Music, Richard Neville, Nuclear, Pier Paolo Pasolini, Penguin, Steele Rudd, Fred Schepisi, Martin Sharp, Sheet Music, Social Credit, Swimming, Sydney,Teeth, Arthur Upfield, Vietnam, Billy Williams,Wool,World Wars and Judith Wright 13. AVEDON, RICHARD. Photographs 1947-1977. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1978. First American edition. Preface by Harold Brodkey. 162 reproductions: most fashion, individuals and elaborately staged scenes, also portraits including Audrey Hepburn, Cyd Charisse, Marilyn Monroe, Katharine Hepburn, Brigitte Bardot, Elizabeth Taylor, Penelope Tree, Jean Shrimpton, Lauren Hutton,Veruschka and Zouzou. Large qto. Pictorial boards. Foxing to prelims.Very good in printed transparent dustwrapper with a short snag on the front panel. $125.00 AVEDON, RICHARD. See Portraits 14. BAILEY, DAVID. Beady Minces. London: Mathews Miller Dunbar / Bailey, 1973. First English edition. Bailey’s fourth book collecting photographs taken between 1960 and 1973 from Sixties London and also travels to India, Nepal, Paris, Lake Rudolf and Peru; portraits of Jean Shrimpton, Mick Jagger, Andy Warhol and most of the decade’s luminaries. Qto. Fine in very good dustwrapper rubbed on front and rear panels and darkened on the spine. $125.00 15. BANKS, JOSEPH. Joseph Banks in Newfoundland and Labrador, 1766 – His Diary, Manuscripts and Collections, edited by A.M.Lysaght. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1971. First American edition. Everything from Banks’ pre Endeavour voyage on the Niger in 1766. Prints from Banks’ samples by G.D.Ehret, Peter Paillou and Sydney Parkinson. Qto. Slight edgewear at crown and base of spine, else fine in dustwrapper. $150.00 16. (BERESFORD, BRUCE.) The Getting of Wisdom. Original English poster for The Getting of Wisdom directed by Bruce Beresford (1978). Poster by Peter Strausfeld, the German graphic artist, in his distinctive style of linocut set in a bold, single colour background and which he produced exclusively for the Academy Cinemas on Oxford Street from 1947 until his death in 1980. Poster measures 76 x 102cms., rolled. Very good with a small crease at the bottom right corner. $300.00 18. BERNHARD, THOMAS. Gargoyles. New York: Knopf, 1970. First American edition. The author’s second novel and first to be published in English. Review copy with publisher’s slip laid in. Fine in dustwrapper. $400.00 OATH, n. In law, a solemn appeal to the Deity, made binding upon the conscience by a penalty for perjury. Ambrose Bierce. 19. BIERCE, AMBROSE. The Devil’s Dictionary. Cleveland, OH: World, [c.1967]. Reprint. “Begun in a weekly paper in 1881 ... continued in a desultory way and at long intervals until 1906.” (Bierce), when it was published as The Cynic’s Word Book, a longer version appeared in Bierce’s Collected Works in 1911 with its current title. Fine in very good dustwrapper chipped at edges. $30.00 17. (BERNARD OF CLAIRVAUX, SAINT). Saint Bernard of Clairvaux by Watkin Williams. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1953. Reprint, first published in 1935. Twelfth century France, the Cistercian order and Saint Bernard’s role in the formation of the Knights of the Temple. Bookplate. Very good in dustwrapper chipped at edges. $45.00 20. (BLUM, LÉON.) Léon Blum – From Poet to Premier by Richard L.Stokes. New York: Coward-McCann, 1937. First American edition. The turbulent life of the first Socialist and first Jew to serve as Prime Minister of France; written before World War Two and Blum’s imprisonment in Buchenwald, Dachau and Tyrol concentration camps. Owner signature on front pastedown, very good in dustwrapper chipped at edges and rubbed on rear panel. $45.00 21. (BLYTON, ENID.) The Blyton Phenomenon by Sheila Ray. London: Deutsch, 1982. First English edition. The history of the struggle in attitudes to the prolific author’s work between devotion from children and resistance from adults and institutions. Spots of foxing to prelims, else fine in dustwrapper. $30.00 I must say that Drs Alka and Seltzer should have won the Nobel Prize years ago; my only quarrel with their brain-child is its noise. Charlie Mortdecai breakfasting 24. BONFIGLIOLI, KYRIL. The Great Mortdecai Moustache Mystery. London: Black Spring Press, 1999. First English edition. The final adventure featuring Charlie, completed by Craig Brown. Fine in dustwrapper. $25.00 25. BOOKPLATES. Modern British Bookplates by W.E. and D.J. Butler. Cambridge: Silent Books, 1990. First English edition. Fiftyfive reproductions, short bios and contact details of artists. Pictorial boards. Fine. $40.00 26. BOOKS ABOUT BOOKS. The Early Nineties – a View from the Bodley Head by James G. Nelson. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1971. First American edition. Clientele, authors, artists, printers and the partners who passed through the doors of the publisher and bookshop between 1887 and 1894. Fine in dustwrapper. $75.00 22. (BONFIGLIOLI, KYRIL.) The Mortdecai ABC – a Bonfiglioli Reader by Margaret Bonfiglioli. London:Viking, 2001. First English edition. A brilliant alphabetical assemblage from the Charlie Mortdecai novels elaborating on references, asides, jokes, allusions, biographical details and obsessions relevant to both Bonfiglioli and Mortdecai, illustrated; six short stories by Bonfiglioli; 60pp. of correspondence including an exchange with Michael Powell re a collaboration in 1973 with the working title of I Carried a Biro for Ronnie Kray. Fine in dustwrapper. $85.00 23. BONFIGLIOLI, KYRIL. After You With the Pistol. London: Secker and Warburg, 1979. First English edition. The third novel featuring Charlie Mortdecai and Jock Strapp, his manservant. Fine in dustwrapper. $35.00 27. BOOKS ABOUT BOOKS. Early Lithographed Books- a Study of the Design and Production of Improper Books in the Age of the Hand Press by Michael Twyman. London: Farrand Press and the Private Libraries Association, 1990. First English edition. History, practitioners, styles of books; appendices of titles produced by lithography, writers and letterers from the first half of the 19th century. Illustrated. Printed cloth. Fine in glassine dustwrapper chipped around edges. $120.00 28. BOOKS ABOUT BOOKS. Brought to Book – the Balance of Books and Life, edited by Ian Breakwell and Paul Hammond. London: Penguin, 1994. First English edition. One hundred and twenty-five contributors – including Ed Ruscha, William Gibson, Iain Sinclair, Glen Baxter, David Gascoyne, and Driffield – reveal their reading rituals and how books have found their way into their private lives. Not a list in sight but much re books’ roles in fetishism, sex, travel, status, cooking and self image. Illustrations. Pictorial wrappers. Fine. $30.00 29. BOOKS ABOUT BOOKS. Sidewalk by Mitchell Duneier. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1999. First American edition. Photographs by Ovie Carter. Profiles of the book and magazine sellers on the streets of New York and their place in the mechanism of the city. Fine in dustwrapper. $35.00 BOOKS ABOUT BOOKS. See Edward Lear, Paris – 20th Century Expatriates, Penguin and George Sims I am not the great brilliant person to decide about how good a book is. I judge books by my customers who buy them and spark others to read them. Frances Steloff 30. BOOKSELLING. Shakespeare And Company by Sylvia Beach. New York: Harcourt, Brace and Company, 1959. First American editon. INSCRIBED BY FRANCES STELOFF, FOUNDER OF THE GOTHAM BOOK MART IN 1920,TO A THEN MUCH YOUNGER COLLEAGUE, CHRISTMAS 1962. Memoir of the American bookseller in Paris inscribed by her Manhattan counterpart who co-founded the James Joyce Society and remarked, “Sylvia Beach took care of his book wants at Shakespeare & Company in Paris ... sometimes Joyce ordered books from the Gotham directly by mail – including during the last year of his life”.Very good in dustwrapper darkened on spine and rubbed on rear panel. $150.00 31. BOOKSELLING. Books seem to me pestilent things, and infect all that trade in them. ... New York: Gotham Book Mart, nd. SIGNED BY EDWARD GOREY. An extract from a letter by John Locke to Anthony Collins, the English philosopher (9th June 1704) with a colour illustration by Edward Gorey. Locke reflects on the character and practises of booksellers and related trades and Gorey’s illustration focuses on the covetousness of one member. Single sheet measuring 22 x 35cms., folded once to make 4pp. Fine. See illustration inside rear cover. $300.00 32. BRADBURY, RAY and DAVID ARONOVITZ. The Parrot Who Met Papa. Rochester, MI: The Pretentious Press, 1991. First American edition. SIGNED BY RAY BRADBURY AND DAVID ARONOVITZ,THE SIXTH BOOK FROM THE PRESS. Ray Bradbury’s story, which appeared first in Playboy in 1972, concluded by David Aronovitz in 1991. With Aronovitz’s acknowledgement to Bradbury. Printed wrappers, stapled. The two stories bound back to back, all fine in original envelope which is cracked along one fold. 100 copies. $60.00 33. BRAINARD, JOE and KENWARD ELMSLIE. The Baby Book. [New York: Boke Press] 1965. First American edition. 500 copies, this one unnumbered. Before Penelope Leach, the authors chart baby’s life in the womb, delivery, schedule, potential problems, dreams, sayings, outings and, ending with, first kiss. The first of Joe Brainard’s many collaborative books and five years before I Remember, his first solo book. Qto. Pictorial wrappers, stapled, then tape bound. Fine. $200.00 BROADSIDES. See John Ashbery, Peter Carey, Frank O’Hara, Kurt Schwitters and Zinfandel 34. BUILDING. Construction Cartoons by Kerwin Maegraith. [Sydney : Building Publishing Co., 1959]. First Australian edition. Foreword by Florence M.Taylor. INSCRIBED BY THE AUTHOR IN THE YEAR OF PUBLICATION. Group caricatures, all labelled, from across the building industry in New South Wales, subsidised by advertisements from local associations, manufacturers and retailers; 104pp. Large 8vo. Pictorial wrappers, stapled. Covers rubbed, internally bright.Very good. $75.00 35. BURNS, JOHN HORNE. A Cry of Children. London: Secker and Warburg, 1952. First English edition. The expatriate American author’s third and last novel, the story of an obsessive affair between an American composer and an Italian woman. Near fine in very good dust jacket creased at edges and missing a small piece from the front panel of the dustwrapper. $50.00 36. CALDER, ALEXANDER. A Bestiary, compiled by Richard Wilbur and illustrated by Alexander Calder. New York: Pantheon, 1993. Second American edition, originally published as a limited edition in 1955. INSCRIBED BY RICHARD WILBUR IN 1999. An illustrated commonplace book focussed on animals with contributors from the ancients, poets, naturalists and, spectacularly, William Blake. Qto. Illustrated boards. Fine in near fine, transparent dustwrapper. $125.00 37. CALVINO, ITALO. “Last Comes the Raven”. The Paris Review, No.6, Summer 1954. Translated by Ben Johnson, illustrations by Joe Downing. An early appearance of Calvino in English, two years before publication of The Path to the Nest of Spiders, in a story translated again, and collected, as “The Crow Comes Last” in Adam, One Afternoon. Pictorial wrappers. Crown of spine cracked.Very good. $35.00 38. CALVINO, ITALO. Baron in the Trees. London: Collins, 1959. First English edition. The first volume of the Our Ancestors trilogy. Offsetting to prelims, else fine in near fine dustwrapper. $300.00 41. CALVINO, ITALO. Marcovaldo or the Seasons in the City. New York: Harcourt Brace, Jovanovich, 1983. First American edition. Twenty stories, written in the early 1950s and late 1960s, featuring one of Calvino’s most endearing characters. Top edge dusty, near fine in fine dustwrapper. $45.00 42. CALVINO, ITALO. The Literature Machine. London: Secker and Warburg, 1987. First English edition. Thirty essays on literature: genres, themes, locales, authors. Top edge dusty, near fine in dustwrapper with a couple of spots of foxing on the inside flaps. $35.00 CALVINO, ITALO. See Autobiography, Che Guevara, Pier Paolo Pasolini and Vietnam 43. CAMPBELL, ROY. Portugal. London: Max Reinhardt, 1957. First English edition. The poet‘s last book, about the country where he moved with his family in 1952. Fine in dustwrapper designed and illustrated by Bruce Petty. $50.00 39. CALVINO, ITALO. The Non-Existent Knight and The Cloven Viscount. London: Collins, 1962. First English edition. Introduction by Archibald Colquhoun, the translator. The second and third volumes of the Our Ancestors trilogy, written while Calvino was “slipping away quietly” from the Communist Party and into the arms of Ariosto’s Orlando Furioso and the fantastic literature of the 19th century. Fine in near fine dustwrapper lightly rubbed on the rear panel. $200.00 44. ČAPEK, KAREL. How They Do It. London: Allen and Unwin, 1945. First English 40. CALVINO, ITALO. The Watcher and Other edition. Three long explanatory essays Stories. New York: Harcourt Brace, Jovanovich, about how movies, plays and newspapers 1971. First English edition. Three long stories: are produced; illustrations by Čapek. Slight the first American appearances of “The edgewear, very good in dustwrapper chipped Argentine Ant” and the title piece, Calvino’s at edges. $50.00 last return to contemporary Italian politics as his subject. Fine in dustwrapper. $75.00 45. CAREY, PETER. Jack Maggs. New York: Knopf, 1998. First American edition. SIGNED BY THE AUTHOR. Uncorrected proof. Pictorial wrappers designed by Chip Kidd. Fine. $60.00 THE MEMPHIS CAREY – 100 SIGNED COPIES ONLY 46. CAREY, PETER. Then he crept up the stairs and, on the upper landing, drew his long arms around his chest. ... Memphis, TN: Burke’s Book Store, 1998. 100 NUMBERED COPIES SIGNED BY THE AUTHOR. An illustrated extract from Jack Maggs published by Burke’s for a reading by Carey on 23rd February 1998. Handprinted and designed by Terry Chouinard of the Wing & the Wheel Press, Tuscaloosa, Alabama. Broadside measures 48 x 15.5cms. Fine. $125.00 47. (CÉLINE, LOUIS-FERDINAND.) Céline, USA, edited by Alice Kaplan and Philippe Roussin. The South Atlantic Quarterly,Vol.93, No.2, Spring 1994. INSCRIBED BY ALICE KAPLAN TO NEW DIRECTIONS’ FOUNDER JAMES LAUGHLIN. Twenty essays circling this ferocious writer and concluding with Céline‘s own, “Reply to Charges of Treason Made by the French Department of Justice (Copenhagen 6 November 1946)“. Pictorial wrappers. Fine. $35.00 48. CERVANTES. Don Quixote. New York: Viking, 1963. Reprint. One volume edition of Samuel Putnam’s 1948 translation with a long introduction by the translator. Fine in near fine dustwrapper. $45.00 49. CHAR, RENÉ. ANDRÉ BRETON and PAUL ELUARD. Ralentir Travaux. Cambridge, MA: Exact Change, 1990. First American edition. Slow Under Construction: collaborations by the three poets, then all evangelically Surrealists, written between 25-30 March 1930, during a week together in Avignon. Preface by each poet and all translated by Keith Waldrop. Pictorial wrappers. Fine. $45.00 50. CHATWIN, BRUCE. Winding Paths. London: Cape, 1999. First English edition. Edited and introduced by Roberto Calasso. 200+ photographs from all of Chatwin’s travels with short, related extracts from his books. Small square qto. Pictorial wrappers. Fine. $45.00 51. CHILDREN’S LITERATURE. Skippety Songs, written and illustrated by Karna Birmingham. Sydney: The Endeavour Press, 1934. First Australian edition. Poems with illustrations, many previously published in The Sydney Morning Herald. Pictorial wrappers. Edges scuffed.Very good. MUIR 708 $35.00 52. CHILDREN’S LITERATURE. Stories of Adventure by Louise Kinch. Melbourne: Gunn and Taylor [1945]. First Australian edition. Illustrated by Edith Grieve. Five stories: bushrangers, miners and Aboriginals in Australia, an earthquake in New Zealand, the wilds of Canada and the USA, and a short tale set in Darjeeling. Four full page colour plates and line drawings throughout. Folio. Pictorial wrappers. Contemporary gift inscription, else fine. MUIR 3175. $45.00 53. CHILDREN’S LITERATURE. Tikvah – Children’s Book Creators Reflect on Human Rights. New York: SeaStar Books, 1999. First American edition. Forty-four writers and illustrators of children’s books – including Leonard Baskin, Antonio Frasconi, Lillian Hoban, Hilary Knight, Wendell Minor and Barry Moser – reflect on human rights. Illustrated. Qto. Fine in dustwrapper. $40.00 CHILDREN’S LITERATURE. See Enid Blyton, Food, Lian Hearn, Edward Lear, Ella MacIntyre, Norway, Penguin, Maurice Sendak, Isaac Bashevis Singer and Judith Wright 54. (CIULEI, LIVIU.) The Lower Depths by Maxim Gorky. Program from a production at the Sydney Opera House (1977), directed by Liviu Ciulei, the late Roumanian theatre and movie director. Invited by the Old Tote, a year before it expired, Ciulei delivered a spectacular production which tamed the Drama Theatre’s stage. Pictorial wrappers, stapled. 16pp. Staples rusting, else fine. $35.00 55. (CLAVER, PETER.) A Saint in the Slave Trade by Arnold Lunn. London: Sheed and Ward, 1935. First English edition. The life of the Jesuit priest, “slave of the slaves”, who spent 40 years among the human cargo as it arrived in Cartegna, Colombia during the 17th century. Edgewear.Very good in dustwrapper darkened on the spine and chipped at edges. $40.00 56. COLETTE. The Gentle Libertine. New York: Farrar and Rinehart, 1931. First American edition. Originally published in 2vols. as Minne and Les Égarements de Minne by “Mr. Willy” in 1904 and 1905 respectively. With a dustwrapper endorsement from Arnold Bennett accurately noting the author’s interest in “the sentimental hearts and unruly bodies of men and women”. Owner signature. Near fine in a very good gold-foil dust jacket which has a few small chips at edges and crown and base of spine. $175.00 57. COLETTE. 7 by Colette of the Academy Goncourt. New York: Farrar, Straus and Cudahy, 1955. First omnibus edition, all first published between 1910 and 1945. Introduction by Janet Flanner followed by all of Gigi,The Cat, My Mother’s House, Chance Acquaintances, Chéri,The Last of Chéri, and The Vagabond. Droll fifties gift inscription, “For idle respites between television shows …”; edgewear, very good in good dustwrapper chipped around edges. $40.00 58. CONTINENTAL. Open City. Program for the Sydney season of Rossellini’s Rome, Open City at The Variety, “Sydney’s New Continental Theatre” 238 Pitt Street [c.1950]. Distributed by Exclusive Films Ltd., “... formed for the purpose of importing and distributing throughout Australia and New Zealand very carefully selected, high grade English, French and other Continental films.” Cast, background, long extracts from overseas reviews, details of movies to follow and local advertisements, 10pp. Pictorial wrappers, stapled. Fine. $45.00 In its less than one year of screening, three of Gala’s eight films have been eulogised by the press as “Masterpieces”. “Wild Strawberries” has been similarly honoured.This is not accidental. In its search of “International Film-of-merit” Gala does not hesitate to pay the high purchase price demanded overseas for the very highest quality in the field now known as Cinema “Art Film”. Since the cost of such films must be recouped from release in one theatre in each Australian Capital city (they are rarely shown in Suburbs or Country), it will be readily appreciated that admission prices cannot be otherwise than as they are. Quality does not come cheaply in any field, and we are grateful that this position is understood and graciously accepted by Sydney’s small but devoted band of discriminating art film lovers.” 59. CONTINENTAL. Wild Strawberries. Program for the Sydney season of Bergman’s movie with The Red Balloon screening before interval at the Continental Gala Cinema [c.1959]. Generic booklet produced by British Empire Films, 14pp., with local single sheet, folded once to make 4pp., produced by the Gala and written in its familiar house style, see above, laid in. Pictorial wrappers. Fine. $45.00 60. COPPARD, A.E. Pink Furniture. London: Cape, 1930. First English edition. Illustrations by Nancy Bankart Gurney. Toby’s search for the Book of Wisdom. Offsetting to prelims, else fine in dustwrapper darkened around edges and on spine and chipped at crown. $75.00 61. CRUMB, ROBERT. Heroes of the Blues. New York:Yazoo Records, 1980. Thirty-six colour portraits by Crumb, on cards measuring 9.5 x 7cms., short biography of the musicians on reverse. Complete set in original two part illustrated box. Cards are all fine, nick to one corner of the lid, otherwise fine. $150.00 62. CRUMB, ROBERT. Early Jazz Greats. Newton, NJ:Yazoo Records, 1982. Thirtysix colour portraits by Crumb, on cards measuring 9.5 x 7cms., short biography of the musicians on reverse. Complete set in original two part illustrated box. Cards are all fine, the lid of the box is sunned on two sides, otherwise fine. $150.00 63. CRUMB, ROBERT. Pioneers of Country Music. New York:Yazoo Records, 1983. Forty colour portraits by Crumb, on cards measuring 9.5 x 7cms., short biography of the musicians on reverse. Complete set in original two part illustrated box. Cards and box both fine. $150.00 His greatest contribution to humanity is Mr. Natural and his style is just weirdly his own. If he has any imitators, then they should be restrained. His kid of art should only happen once. Ralph Steadman on Robert Crumb 64. (CRUMB, ROBERT.) The Life and Times of R.Crumb: Comments from Contemporaries, edited by Monte Beauchamp. Northampton, MA: Kitchen Sink Press, 1998. First American edition. Foreword by Matt Groening. Contributions from Terry Gillam, Daniel Clowes, Jim Jarmusch, Ralph Steadman, Paul Krassner and many others. Illustrated. Review copy with publisher’s press release laid in. Square 8vo. Pictorial wrappers. Fine. $40.00 65. (DAMIEN, FATHER). Damien the Leper by John Farrow. New York: Sheed and Ward, 1937. First American edition. Foreword by Hugh Walpole. The life of the 19th century Flemish priest who spent sixteen years caring for the lepers on Molokai. Written by the expatriate Australian movie director. Fine in dustwrapper beginning to darken on the spine. $45.00 66. DEPRESSION. Darkness Visible by William Styron. London: Cape, 1991. First English edition. The author’s memoir of his “storm of murk”, first published in Vanity Fair in 1989. Fine in dustwrapper. $40.00 67. DIAMOND, JARED. Collapse - How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed. New York: Viking, 2005. First American edition. Fine in dustwrapper. $25.00 68. DICKINSON, EMILY. The Master Letters of Emily Dickinson, edited by R.W. Franklin. Amherst, MA: Amherst College Press, 1986. First American paper edition. The poet’s three letters to the still unidentified “Master”, written between 1858 and 1862 and never sent, reproduced in facsimile with printed text facing, as well as transcriptions and annotations that demonstrate the stages of composition for each letter. Printed wrappers. With the facsimile letters in a printed envelope laid in. All fine. $40.00 69. DOLL. The Doll by Carl Fox. New York: Abrams [1977]. First American edition. Photographs by H.Landshoff. The monumental work: examples and history from around the world and across the social classes, 71 tipped-in colour plates and 120 b&w reproductions. Qto. Fine in dustwrapper. $100.00 [to] ”the preacher of the inner word from the ‘impenitent thief ’” James Joyce’s inscription to Edouard Dujardin on the latter’s copy of Ulysses 70. DUJARDIN, EDOUARD. We’ll to the Woods No More. New York: New Directions, 1957. Second American edition. Translation by Stuart Gilbert, introduction by Leon Edel and illustrations by Alice Laughlin. First published in 1887, read by James Joyce in 1902 and cited by him as an important factor in the creation of the interior monologues of Ulysses. Edgewear, very good in dustwrapper. $40.00 71. DUMAS, ALEXANDRE. From Paris to Cadiz. London: Peter Owen, 1958. First English edition. Edited and translated by A.E.Murch. On the road with the Dumas family: a wedding in Madrid, two months in Spain, and on to Algeria, all in 1864. Bookplate. Fine in near fine dustwrapper with remnants of a stain on a corner of the rear panel. $45.00 72. DYBBUK. A Dybbuk, adapted by Tony Kushner from the play by S.Ansky, and The Dybbuk Melody and Other Themes and Variations by Ansky. New York: Theater Productions Group, 1998. First American edition. Ansky’s classic play concerning a rich man’s daughter and the spirit of her dead beloved (first produced in 1920) and first English translation of his eight interrelated stories; play and stories translated by Joachim Neugroschel, with an afterword to the play by Harold Bloom. Fine in dustwrapper with an illustration by Maurice Sendak.. $40.00 The 130 genuine Aboriginal natives who appear in Bitter Springs not only provide the film with some of its most interesting aspects but prove themselves to be natural actors.The Aborigines who took part in the filming came from the feeding and missionary station at Ooldea, some 300 miles away from the location site, and they had a camp of their own near the film’s unit headquarters at Quorn [SA]. The filmmakers wondered what they would be like.They had been told that the natives were the laziest people on earth, completely untrustworthy, dishonest and work-shy, but they proved themselves to be very different from expectations.They were quick, intelligent, with a great sense of humour and a lively curiosity, and at no time was there any trouble over their honesty. “They turned out to be wonderful actors”, according to the director, Ralph Smart. “Unlike civilised people, they are quite unselfconsciousness, so when asked to play a role they did it as they would naturally, without any trouble at all.The difficulties arose only when some of them began to believe they could act – the results were terrible then!” - “The Aborigines as Actors” 73. EALING STUDIOS. Bitter Springs (1950). British Pressbook for the English release of the third Ealing Studios’ movie made in Australia which premiered in Sydney on 24th June 1950 and in London 2 weeks later on 6th July. Bitter Springs was shot in the Flinders Ranges SA between May and November 1949 and is concerned with the tensions that arise after the King family purchase 600 acres of Aboriginal tribal land from the South Australian Government to establish a sheep station. The movie was the first serious treatment of Aboriginal Land Rights in an Australian feature with Ransom, a trooper (Michael Pate) setting out the options to Wally King (Chips Rafferty), “You can hunt ‘em off, you can ease ‘em off, or you can take ‘em with you.” The resolution of the movie is well removed from the climate of the time – "But in the end the white man’s magic prevails: not the magic of the gun, but that other magic, the magic of compromise, of finding a way to give both sides a chance of living side by side without violence", according to the pressbook– and carries the deep racism and assumed superiority as in the quotation above. The booklet contains examples of posters and advertisements to be used overseas, synopses in French and German, “the story in ten pictures” or images plus summary, biographies of the actors, director and producer, and anecdotes from the shooting, see “The Aborigines as Actors”, part quoted above. Large oblong qto., 31 x 36cms. Pictorial wrappers, stapled. Fine. $450.00 74. EALING STUDIOS. The Siege of Pinchgut (1959). British trade poster for the English release of the fourth and last Ealing Studios’ movie made in Australia (and the last movie from Ealing), which premiered at the Berlin Film Festival in June 1959 and in Sydney on 3rd March 1960. An escaped prisoner with a series of grievances terrorises Sydney from Fort Denison and sets out his terms in the time honoured manner. Poster originally laid in to Kinematograph Weekly, a trade publication available by subscription to cinema managers. Poster measures 28 x 43cms., one vertical centre fold, else fine. $300.00 75. ECCENTRICS. Grandfather Was Queer – Wags and Eccentrics in Early America by Richardson Wright. New York: Lippincott, 1939. First American edition. Personalities gathered from the length and breadth of the continental United States between Colonial Times and the Civil War; then grouped into categories – “Cave dwellers and solitaries”, “Gospel Glutted”, “Centers of Waggery” among others – and, with the effect of, dragging briefly into the spotlight the individuals who didn’t contribute to the creation of dominant American mythology. Fine in dustwrapper. $35.00 It is not unusual to begin a discussion of R.B. Kitaj’s work with a mention of Eliot’s. Kitaj himself has done so. Questions of politics aside, there are obvious parallels. Both left America in their twenties and brought to Europe a sensibility that was still unknown in the country of their birth but that, surprisingly, took root and flourished in their adopted one. John Ashbery 76. ELIOT, T.S. On Poetry and Poets. New York: Farrar, Straus and Cudahy, 1957. First American edition. Sixteen essays on subjects:Yeats, Kipling, Byron, Milton,Virgil and including seven on aspects of poetry, all written between 1942 and 1956. R.B.KITAJ’S COPY WITH HIS SIGNATURE. Fine in near fine dust jacket with shallow chips to base and crown of spine. $150.00 77. (ELLISON, RALPH.) Ralph Ellison by Arnold Rampersad. New York: Knopf, 2007. First American edition. Life of the AfroAmerican writer known for Invisible Man and his long struggle with Juneteenth or Three Days Before the Shooting, his second novel, published posthumously twice in versions edited from Ellison’s 2,000pp. of manuscript. Fine in dustwrapper. $35.00 78. ENDE, MIICHAEL. The Neverending Story. Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1983. First American edition. The adventures of Bastian Balthazar Bux. Fine in dustwrapper. $45.00 EPHEMERA. See John Ashbery, Bruce Beresford, Liviu Ciulei, Continental, Robert Crumb, Ealing Studios, Eucalyptus, Exhibition Catalogue, John Fairfax, First Aid, Ella Fitzgerald, Furniture, Home, Charles Kingsford Smith, Laundry, George Mackaness,Wally Mellish, Menu, Moments, Music, Lawrence Norfolk, Nuclear, Paris, Pier Paolo Pasolini, Fred Schepisi, Martin Sharp, Sheet Music, Social Credit, Swimming,Teeth,World Wars and Zinfandel 79. ERTÉ. Things I Remember. London: Peter Owen, 1975. First English edition. Illustrated memoir by the art deco artist and illustrator from his birth in St.Petersburg in 1892. Fine in dustwrapper. $50.00 80. EUCALYPTUS. Recipes: Eucalyptus Oil, compiled by Bev Turner. Kangaroo Island, SA [Emu Ridge Eucalyptus, 1993]. First Australian edition. SIGNED BY THE AUTHOR IN THE YEAR OF PUBLICATION. History, methods of extraction, uses in cleaning, treating injuries and fighting insects before getting down to recipes for smoked emu, eucalyptus butter, toffee and ice cream. Pictorial wrappers, stapled. Punch hole to front cover, else fine. $35.00 81. EXHIBITION CATALOGUE. Catalogue of Exhibits in the New South Wales Annexe of the Exhibition 1871. Sydney: Gordon and Gotch, 1871. 12mo. Printed wrappers, sewn. Sunned around perimeter, edges frayed, spine split, 36pp. Good. $100.00 82. EXHIBITION CATALOGUE. Royal Art Society of New South Wales 44th Annual Exhibition. Sydney: Royal Art Society, 1923. Entries in various categories, prices, illustrations, advertisements, 58pp. total. Printed wrappers stapled. Covers marked, staples rusted, edges frayed; internally clean and bright. Good. $45.00 83 EXHIBITION CATALOGUE. European Art Exhibition for Australia. Sydney: Redcliffe Press, 1923. 581 items: mostly British and French, a small no. of Belgian, Dutch, Itaian, Spanish and Swiss pieces, organised by Penleigh Boyd, exhibited at Sydney Town Hall. Qto. Printed wrappers, stapled, with colour image of "Hop Pickers“ by A.J. Munnings tipped to front cover. Edges darkened, spine beginning to crack, a couple of annotations and a short tear to one page. Overall very good. Price list laid in. $45.00 84. EXHIBITION CATALOGUE. Royal Art Society of New South Wales - 44th [sic, see previous item but one] Annual Exhibition. Sydney: Royal Art Society, 1924. 210 items, all priced, 14 works reproduced, 20pp. of local advertisements. Printed wrappers, stapled. Edges frayed, covers marked, internally clean, small paper pocket tipped onto title page. Good. $45.00 85. EXHIBITION CATALOGUE. The Royal British Colonial Society of Artists Third Australian Exhibition. Sydney: Farmer and Co., 1925. 150 items, all priced, 10 tippedin plates. Printed wrappers, stapled. Edges frayed, staples rusted, scattered foxing throughout, plates clean. Good. $45.00 86. EXHIBITION CATALOGUE. Guide to the First Exhibition of the New South Wales Collection of Applied Art by Charles F. Laseron. Sydney: Farmer and Co., 1927. Printed wrappers, stapled. Edges chipped and creased. Contemporary owner‘s signature, small clipping tipped onto title page.Very good. $45.00 87. EXHIBITION CATALOGUE. The Burdekin House Exhibition in Aid of the Royal Prince Alfred Hospital. Sydney: Burdekin House Committee, 1929. 395 items, many illustrated, plus 16pp. of local advertisements. Pictorial wrappers. Edgewear, corners scuffed, internally clean. Good. $45.00 88. EXHIBITION CATALOGUE. New South Wales Art Gallery Pictures. Sydney: Art in Australia, 1931. Sixty colour and b&w plates. Qto. Printed wrappers. Corners scuffed, edgewear, owner signature, prelims foxed, glossy paper for plates clean. Good. $30.00 WHEN THE MASS MEDIA WAS YOUNG 89. EXHIBITION CATALOGUE. Montage and Modern Life 1919-1942, edited by Matthew Teitelbaum. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press and Boston, MA: Institute of Contemporary Art, 1992. First American edition. The role of montage in photographs, architecture, movies, advertisements, photomontages and journals from mostly Germany, Russia and the United States. Five essays, 115 reproductions. Qto. Top edge dusty, else fine in dustwrapper. $60.00 EXHIBITION CATALOGUE. See Pier Paolo Pasolini, Portraits and Martin Sharp We won’t forget that American and Australian soldiers fought together to stamp out the dangerous foothold Japan had in New Guinea, or that your campaigns upwards through Guadalcanal were breaking the tentacles which might have been about our free and very pleasant land.The Japanese have not the semi-civilisation of the German; they are not a nice people by whom to be conquered. – John Fairfax 90. FAIRFAX, JOHN. “Open Letter to Americans” Gismo No.1, 1944. The first of two issues published by the American Red Cross and distributed to servicemen in the South Pacific. Gismo contains articles, stories and poems by servicemen in the Pacific. Fairfax is the only Australian contributor. His piece is written with the urgency and anger of wartime, and is substantially different to the version collected in Drift of Leaves (1952). The final sentence quoted above, and others like it, have gone though the aim of the piece remains the same, “to tell you the feelings of the average Australian towards America”. LAID IN IS A TLS, 2PP., FROM THE EDITOR TO CHESTER KERR OF THE OFFICE OF WAR INFORMATION,WASHINGTON setting out the production problems, varying quality of contributions, number submitted, 2,000, and the gap between the editor and those on the ground, “I remember one particular poem which I thought rather good. Their reaction was unanimous: ‘perfect for the States; it wouldn’t go out here’”. Modest wartime production, the final column of Fairfax’s piece has been cut and pasted into place. Qto. Pictorial wrappers, stapled. Folded for posting, else fine. $250.00 91. FIRST AID. The Treatment of the Apparently Dead from Drowning, Suffocation, Lightning, Stroke, Or Electric Shock. [NSW, no publisher, c.1948]. An illustrated guide to treatment of all of the above plus snake bite, ticks, spiders, sandflies and Sandy Blight. Pictorial wrappers, stapled. One corner scuffed, crown of spine cracked.Very good. $35.00 FIRST BOOKS BY Lisa Alther, John Ashbery, Thomas Bernhard, Joe Brainard, Richard Ford, Nicolas Freeling, Janet Gleeson, James Hanley, Spud Johnson, Clarice Lispector, Richard Neville, Lawrence Norfolk, Pier Paolo Pasolini, Leonardo Sciascia, Arthur W. Upfield, Paolo Volponi and Garry Winogrand (under Portraits) The Embers stands alone to fulfil a long wanted need in Melbourne’s fast diminishing night life 92. (FITZGERALD, ELLA.) Program for Ella Fitzgerald’s performances, supported by Mel Tormé and the Lou Levy Quartet at The Embers, Toorak Road, South Yarra on 4th December 1960. Biographies and photographs of the performers and a detailed resumé of The Embers –hours, seating, dress code, clientele, menu, 675 capacity – by Garry Van, the manager; 10pp. Pictorial wrappers, stapled.Very good. $35.00 93. FLAUBERT, GUSTAVE. The Dictionary of Accepted Ideas. New York: New Directions, 1954. First American edition. Translated, introduction and notes by Jacques Barzun. Flaubert versus the world. Fine in dustwrapper. $35.00 96. FOOD. Flying Sauces – Cheap Food Recipebook by Katwin Edgerley. [Canberra] Health Vitality and Martinis [c.1990]. First Australian edition. Basic terms, tips for budget shopping in Canberra and recipes, with an emphasis on vegetarian dishes and soups; 68pp. Printed wrappers, ringbound. Fine. $35.00 FOOD. See Eucalyptus, Menu, Restaurant and Zinfandel 97. FORD, RICHARD. “In Desert Waters”. Esquire, August 1976. An early story preceding A Piece of My Heart, collected in the anthology Last Night’s Stranger (1982), and otherwise not reprinted. Pictorial wrappers. Fine. $25.00 98. FORD, RICHARD. A Piece of My Heart. New York: Harper and Row, 1976. First American edition. SIGNED BY THE AUTHOR. Richard Ford’s first book. Spots of foxing to foredge and prelims, else fine in dustwrapper. $400.00 94. FOOD. Cheeses of the World by André Simon. London: Faber and Faber, 1956. First English edition. Country by country, Eurocentric; “Practically the whole of the large cheese production of Australia is Cheddar, but there are also small quantities of various cheeses made which approximate as much as possible to prototypes popular in Continental Europe ...” Owner’s small label, else fine in very good dustwrapper. $50.00 95. FOOD. Lots of Fun to Cook with Rupert by Sonia Allison. Glasgow: Collins, 1974. First English edition. Illustrations by John Harrold. Between adventures Rupert Bear finds time to prepare coconut snowballs, toad-in-thehole, Welsh rarebit and nine other traditional meals. Colour illustrations throughout. Qto. Pictorial boards. Spots of foxing, edgewear. Very good. $35.00 99. FORD, RICHARD. Rock Springs. New York: Atlantic Monthly Press, 1987. First American edition. SIGNED BY THE AUTHOR. Richard Ford’s first collection of stories. Fine in dustwrapper. $50.00 100. FORD, RICHARD. Communist. Derry, NH and Ridgewood, NJ: Babcock and Koontz, 1987. First separate edition of this story, originally published in Antaeus. #35/200 COPIES (TOTAL EDITION 240) SIGNED BY THE AUTHOR. Frontispiece wood engraving by Gaylord Schanilec. Ford’s first limited edition. Plain green wrappers, sewn; with cover title label. Fine. $100.00 101. FORD, RICHARD. Wildlife. New York: Atlantic Monthly Press, 1990. First American edition. SIGNED BY THE AUTHOR. A short coming of age novel. Top edge dusty, else fine in dustwrapper. $50.00 A SAMPLING OF ALL HIS DETECTIVES – PIET VAN DER VALK (KILLED OFF RASHLY IN 1972), ARLETTE VAN DER VALK (HIS WIDOW), HENRI CASTANG (HIS SUCCESSOR) – AND ESSAYS ON COLLEAGUES AND MODELS FROM “THE MOST ECCENTRIC,THE MOST IDIOSYNCRATIC AND THE MOST EUROPEAN OF CRIME WRITERS” - ANITA BROOKNER 102. FREELING, NICOLAS. Love in Amsterdam. New York: Harper and Row, 1962. First American edition. Freeling’s first novel and first Van der Valk..Very good in dustwrapper with short annotation on rear inside flap of dustwrapper. $45.00 105. FREELING, NICOLAS. The Widow. New York: Pantheon, 1979. First American edition. INSCRIBED BY THE AUTHOR TO DICK WILSON. After tracking down her husband’s killer, Arlette Van der Valk has remarried, and then becomes enmeshed in her first murder. Fine in dustwrapper. $85.00 106. FREELING, NICOLAS. Castang’s City. New York: Pantheon, 1980. First American edition. INSCRIBED BY THE AUTHOR TO DICK WILSON. Well into Henri’s career. Review copy with publiser’s slip laid in. Fine in dustwrapper. $85.00 107. FREELING, NICOLAS. Arlette. New York: Pantheon, 1981. First American edition. INSCRIBED BY THE AUTHOR TO DICK WILSON. Published in England as One Damn Thing After Another. The second, and last, Arlette mystery. Fine in dustwrapper. $85.00 108. FREELING, NICOLAS. Wolfnight. New York: Pantheon, 1982. First American edition. INSCRIBED BY THE AUTHOR TO DICK WILSON. The sixth Henri Castang. Fine in dustwrapper. $85.00 der Valk. Fine in very good dustwrapper with a short closed tear on rear panel. $85.00 109. FREELING, NICOLAS. Criminal Convictions - Errant Essays on Perpetrators of Literary License. Boston: Godine, 1994. First American edition. Essays on professional colleagues and other writers including Dorothy Sayers, Arthur Conan Doyle, Georges Simenon, Charles Dickens, Rudyard Kipling, Stendhal and Joseph Conrad. Fine in dustwrapper. $35.00 104. FREELING, NICOLAS. Auprès de Ma Blonde. New York: Harper and Row, 1972. First American edition. INSCRIBED BY THE AUTHOR TO DICK WILSON. Published in England. as A Long Silence The last Van der Valk: gunned down in the street, he “... had a new part to study, the most important of his parts. In the words of the seventeenth century actor, he was on the way to study a long silence.” Fine in dustwrapper. $85.00 110. FRIEDLANDER, LEE. In the Picture: Self-Portraits, 1958-2011. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2011. First American edition. The photographer’s enduring subject, albeit with spectacular variations, in 400+ duotone images, which also nets his family and friends, and records the ageing process of Friedlander and his shadow. Square qto. Pictorial boards. Fine as issued without dustwrapper. $100.00 103. FREELING, NICOLAS. Double Barrel. New York: Harper and Row, 1964. First American edition. INSCRIBED BY THE AUTHOR TO DICK WILSON, DETECTIVE FICTION AFICIONADO AND BOOKSELLER. The fourth Van 111. FRIEDRICH, OTTO. Decline and Fall. New York: Harper and Row, 1970. First American edition. The fall of the Curtis Publishing empire and, specifically, the end of The Saturday Evening Post, by its last managing editor. Fine in dustwrapper. $40.00 on Camille Renault who towards the end of his eventful life was made a satrap in the College of Pataphysics. Drawings throughout, most by Franciszka Themerson. Bound with the authors’ photographs from the covers of the original booklets. Near fine in very good dustwrapper sunned on the spine. $85.00 112. FRIEDRICH, OTTO. The Grave of Alice B.Toklas and Other Reports from the Past. New York: Holt, 1989. First American edition. Thirteen long essays – including Parsifal, Henry James, Mozart, James Baldwin, Empress Galia Placidia – by the great American popular historian. Fine in dustwrapper. $40.00 113. FURNITURE. How the Hobby Family Solved All Their Troubles! Sydney: “Homerex”, Home Recreations Limited [1920?] Homerex catalogue with illustrated instructions to assemble 21 pieces of household furniture including “the butler”, “occasional table”, “wall table”, “plate rack” and, in excellent taste according to the catalogue, a “monk’s chair”; 48pp. Oblong 8vo. Pictorial wrappers, stapled. A couple of marks to covers.Very good. $50.00 114. FUSSELL, PAUL. Abroad – British Literary Travel Between the Wars. New York: Oxford University Press, 1980. First American edition. Celebrating the journeys and works of English writers – Robert Byron, Norman Douglas, Graham Greene, W.H.Auden, Christopher Isherwood, D.H. Lawrence and others – between the World Wars and setting out a different model for expatriate writers to challenge the Americans flocking to Paris (see items 213217). Fine in dustwrapper. $40.00 115. GABERBOCCHUS PRESS. The First Dozen. London: Gaberbocchus Press, 1957. First one volume edition. The twelve nos. of the publisher’s Black Series, published separately between 1954-1957 and offering an excellent introduction to the range and interests of Stefan and Franciszka Themerson’s private press. Authors include Raymond Queneau, C.H.Sisson, both Themersons, as well Pol-Dives’ illustrations from magic lantern slides and a loving piece 116. GAMES. Magnetic Fish Pond – Improved Edition. Bavaria: J.W.S. and S. [c.1910]. Originally produced as The Game of Magnetic Fish in 1904 and here containing the coloured aquarium – four painted sides, each 22 x 20cms., secured at edges to form the aquarium – eleven coloured fish with rings through their mouths and weights marked on their sides, four rods (two with original line) and one magnet. All contained in an illustrated box, 30 x 30cms., with rules and advertisements for other games set out on inside of lid and the outside bottom of the box. Box frayed, remnants of stain on lid, repairs inside lid, fair. Implements for play not complete; aquarium sides all fine. $100.00 La ruée vers l’or noir 117. GAMES. JouaRep – Jeu de Recherches et d’Exploitations Pétrolières. Paris: Editions Sofel [c.1955]. French board game beginning with the search for oil in the Sahara and then developing, Monopoly style, into building profitable pipelines across the Desert, all watched over by Le Directeur du Bureau de Recherches de Petrole or “BRP”, aka one of the players. The board is a detailed map of the Sahara, 39 x 39cms., divided into geographical segments, and with equally spaced rows of holes across the boards for possible strikes. Rules, die, oil wells, pipelines and cash all contained in two drawers (39 x 7.5cms.) adjacent to the board with wooden sliding drawers holding these items in place. The board and drawers all contained in a sturdily made wooden box measuring 42 x 60cms., with plastic carry handle and illustration on reverse. Light wear at edges, else fine and ready to play. $600.00 119. GIBSON, RALPH. Tropism. New York: Aperture, 1987. First American edition. 100+ images surveying all the photographer‘s career and publications; chronology, bibliography and list of exhibitions. Qto. Fine in dustwrapper. $100.00 120. GILDZEN, ALEX. Funny Ducks. No place: Ghost Dance Press, 1973. First American edition. INSCRIBED BY THE AUTHOR TO R.B.KITAJ, “IN APPRECIATION OF HIS FRIENDSHIP”, IN THE YEAR OF PUBLICATION. The third collection by the poet, archivist and, more recently, blogger and mail artist. “The Lament of Arletta Duncan”, the final poem in the collection, about the thirties movie actress, is dedicated to Kitaj. Cover by Ira Joel Haber, Brooklyn artist and bookseller. Pictorial wrappers, stapled. Fine. $150.00 121. GLEESON, JANET. The Grenadillo Box. London: Bantam Press, 2002. First English edition. SIGNED BY THE AUTHOR. The first of the author’s three historical mysteries. Fine in dustwrapper. $35.00 GAMES. See Richard Neville 118. GARDENING. Searl’s Key to Australian Gardening. Sydney: Searl and Sons, 1922. Month by month schedule, shortcuts and hints, styles of garden; illustrations and reproductions; 264pp. plus index. Illustrated paper covered boards. Covers rubbed, internally sound.Very good. $60.00 122. GLEESON, JANET. The Serpent in the Garden. London: Bantam Press, 2003. First English edition. SIGNED BY THE AUTHOR. The author’s second mystery, beginning in Summer 1765. Fine in dustwrapper. $35.00 123. GLEESON, JANET. The Thief Taker. London: Bantam Press, 2004. First English edition. SIGNED BY THE AUTHOR. The author’s third mystery and first featuring Agnes Meadowes. Fine in dustwrapper. $35.00 Of all pleasure, I see much may be destroyed by eagerness of anticipation. I had told my female companion, to whom travelling was new, how she would be surprised and astonished, at the difference found in crossing the narrow sea from England to France, and now she is not astonished at all, why should she? September 7, 1784. The first two sentences of Mrs. Piozzi’s account 124. GRAND TOUR. Observations and Reflections Made in the Course of a Journey Through France, Italy and Germany by Hester Lynch Piozzi. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press, 1969. First published in 1789 and covering her Grand Tour of 1784 to 1787. Mark where bookseller’s sticker has been removed on front pastedown, else fine in dustwrapper. $60.00 125. GRAY, FRANCINE DU PLESSIX. Them – a Memoir of Parents. New York: The Penguin Press, 2005. First American edition. SIGNED BY THE AUTHOR. The Libermans – two Russian émigrés, flee Europe for America in 1940, become New Yorkers, arbiters of taste, socialites, one a director of Vogue then Condé Nast, all in less than one generation – are remembered and examined by their daughter. Fine in dustwrapper. $40.00 126. (GUEVARA, ERNESTO “CHE”) !Viva Che! – Contributions in Tribute to Ernesto “Che” Guevara., edited by Marianne Alexandre. London: Lorrimer, 1969. Reprint. Fifty contributors including Fidel Castro, Stokely Carmichael, Italo Calvino, Grahame Greene, Christopher Logue, Julio Cortazar, Thomas Merton, Francesco Rosi, Susan Sontag and Oz Magazine; 24pp. of photographs. Mark where bookseller’s sticker has been removed, else fine in very good dustwrapper chipped at edges. $45.00 127. (GUSTON, PHILIP.) Philip Guston’s Late Work: a Memoir by William Corbett. Cambridge, MA: Zoland Books, 1994. First American edition. INSCRIBED BY THE AUTHOR TO R.B. KITAJ, “THIS BOOK ABOUT A PAINTER WHO KNEW AS YOU DO NOW OF WHAT IT IS LIKE TO HAVE GREAT PAINTINGS REVILED. ALL COURAGE TO YOU, WITH MY ADMIRATION, BILL CORBETT. 10 MARCH ‚95”. Memoir by the poet and art critic of his friendship with Guston during the last eight years of the artist’s life. Fine in dustwrapper. $175.00 128. HAMILTON-PATERSON, JAMES. The Bell-Boy. London: Hutchinson, 1990. First English edition. The expatriate English author’s third novel, set in the faraway city of Malomba. Fine in dustwrapper. $45.00 129. HAMMETT, DASHIELL. The Novels of Dashiell Hammett. New York: Knopf, 1965. First omnibus edition. All of Red Harvest,The Dain Curse,The Maltese Falcon,The Glass Key and The Thin Man. Short, introductory note by Lillian Hellman. Owner signature, else fine in dustwrapper. $60.00 130. HANLEY, JAMES. Drift. London: Eric Partridge, 1930. First English edition. SIGNED BY THE AUTHOR IN THE YEAR OF PUBLICATION. The author’s first book, set among an Irish Catholic family living in Liverpool. Slight offsetting to prelims, else fine in dustwrapper. 500 copies. $450.00 131. HANLEY, JAMES. Boy. New York: Knopf, 1932. First American edition. The third version of Hanley’s banned novel of the tragic life of Arthur Fearon, after the unexpurgated and expurgated English editions. For this edition the asterisks of the second English edition have been removed, the scenes of homosexuality rewritten and some American sailors’ slang added. Boy appeared unexpurgated in a trade edition in 1990. Dull shadow where bookplate has been removed from front pastedown, edgewear, else fine in dustwrapper sunned on spine. $100.00 132. HASIDIM. Tales of the Hasidim – The Early Masters and The Later Masters by Martin Buber. New York: Schocken, 1947-1948. 2vols. First American editions.Vol.1: stories and legends of the 18th Jewish mystical movement, vol.2: history of the movement, central figures, glossary and genealogy. Both vols. fine in very good dustwrappers darkened and chipped on the spines. The pair $100.00 133. HAVEL, VÁCLAV. Disturbing the Peace. New York: Knopf, 1990. First American edition. A book length conversation between Havel and Karel Hvíždala. Fine in dustwrapper. $30.00 134. HEARN, LIAN. Tales of the Otori. London: Macmillan, Sydney: Hachette, 20022006. 4vols. Across the Nightingale Floor, Grass for the Pillow, Brilliance of the Moon (THE LAST SIGNED BY THE AUTHOR), the original trilogy and The Harsh Cry of the Heron (the sequel). The first 3vols. are first English editions, the sequel a first Australian edition. Gillian Rubinstein’s historical fantasy series written under the pseudonym of Lian Hearn. All fine in dustwrappers. The 4vols. $100.00 135. HEREDIA, JOSÉ-MARIA DE. The Trophies. London: Rupert Hart-Davis, 1962. First English edition. Introduction and translations by Brian Hill. Fifty sonnets by the 19th century French poet. Parallel French English text throughout. Laid in is a printed version of “The Enchanter” by the translator, 4pp. Fine in dustwrapper. $35.00 136. HEYER, GEORGETTE. Friday’s Child. London: Heinemann, 1944. First English edition. A Regency romance, noted by her biographer as the author’s favourite. Extremities darkened, binding weakening, short gift inscription, good in dustwrapper missing pieces from the crown and base of the spine, closed tear and chips. $100.00 137. (HIMES, CHESTER.) The Several Lives of Chester Himes by Edward Margolies and Michael Fabre. Jackson, MI: University Press of Mississippi, 1997. First American edition. The journey out of postwar America for an Afro-American writer. Fine in dustwrapper. $35.00 138. (HIMES, CHESTER.) Chester Himes –a Life by James Sallis. New York: Walker, 2001. First American edition. The second attempt at a life of the expatriate AfroAmerican writer. Fine in dustwrapper. $35.00 139. HOME. Household Book. [Sydney] The New South Wales Society for Crippled Children [1941]. First aid, menus and cooking tips, emergency meals, washing, sewing, deportment and the making of the complete woman at home are all covered in 40pp. Pictorial wrappers, stapled. Nick to bottom right corner of cover.Very good. $35.00 140. (HURSTON, ZORA NEALE.) Wrapped in Rainbows - the Life of Zora Neale Hurston by Valerie Boyd. New York: Scribner, 2003. First American edition. Folklorist, novelist and key member of the Harlem Renaissance. Remainder mark bottom edge, else fine in dustwrapper. $30.00 141. JAMES. The James Family – a Group Biography by F.O. Matthiessen. New York: Knopf, 1947. First American edition. The biography of, according to the author, “a family of minds”. With selections from the work of Henry James Senior and his children William, Henry and Alice. Edgewear.Very good in dustwrapper chipped along edges and missing a small piece from the top of the front panel. $50.00 142. JAMES, HENRY. The Notebooks of Henry James, edited, introduction and commentary by F.O. Matthiessen and Kenneth B. Murdock. New York: Oxford University Press, 1947. First American edition. Edited from notebooks written between 1878 and 1909. Fine in near fine dustwrapper. $45.00 143. (JAMES, HENRY.) A Private Life of Henry James – Two Women and His Art by Lyndall Gordon. London: Chatto and Windus, 1998. First English edition. James’ relationships with Constance Fenimore Woolson and, earlier, Minny Temple. Brief inscription. Near fine in fine dustwrapper. $35.00 144. JAPAN. A Century of Japanese Photography. London: Hutchinson, 1981. First English edition. Compiled by the Japan Photographers Association and originally published in Japan in 1971. 514 reproductions covering the years 18401946, beginning with Tsurumaru Castle in Kagoshima and ending with war orphans in 1946. Oblong qto. Printed cloth. Fine in illustrated paper covered slipcase frayed at a couple of edges. $125.00 To get away from literature, it is difficult not to be crude in words and say all the things I would like to say – to you and about you – but I think you have felt them as much as I have – so there is no need. ...We’ve got to see each other some more – I hope, some day. Patrick White to Spud Johnson, 26 June 1939 145. JOHNSON, SPUD. Horizontal Yellow. Santa Fe, NM: Writers’ Editions [1935]. First American edition. #66/400 NUMBERED COPIES SIGNED BY THE AUTHOR. The first book by the editor of Laughing Horse, central figure in the New Mexico literary scene of the 1920s and 1930s, and Patrick White’s lover for three weeks in June 1939. Fine in darkened dustwrapper chipped at edges and missing pieces from crown and base of spine. $200.00 147. JOYCE, JAMES. The Holy Office. Columbus, OH: Joseph Vogel, 1980. #8/36 NUMBERED COPIES. Designed, hand lettered and coloured by the publisher, a retired gentleman from Ohio who also produced an edition of 1 copy of Samuel Beckett’s contribution to Oh! Calcutta! The earliest extant Joyce publication, printed first in Dublin [no copies known], then, funded by Joyce, in Pola,Yugolslavia, in an unknown edition though usually described as less than 100 copies. Five handcoloured title pages, half-titles and colophon. Rectos only, 14pp. An eccentric, modest production. Printed wrappers. Fine. In original hand lettered envelope. $150.00 148. JOYCE, JAMES. Ulysses. Dublin: The Lilliput Press, 1997. First Irish edition. #958/1000 NUMBERED COPIES (total edition of 1,026 copies). Foreword by John Banville, edited by Danis Rose. History of the composition, analysis of the Rosenbach manuscript, rationale for the “Reader’s Edition” all by Rose (83pp.). The latest of the “definitive” versions of Ulysses for what is now also referred to as “the illegal edition” (see http://www.geneticjoycestudies.org/GJS4/ GJS4%20Herbert.htm for the sides of the coin). Original cloth. Inscribed compliments slip from the publisher laid in. Fine in slipcase as issued. $350.00 146. JOYCE, JAMES. The Critical Writings. New York:Viking, 1959. First American edition. Edited by Ellsworth Mason and Richard Ellmann. Fifty-seven pieces, written between 1896 and 1937, and including lectures, book reviews, programme notes, newspaper articles, letters to editors and poems. Fine in very good dustwrapper missing a piece from the middle of the front panel. $40.00 JOYCE, JAMES. See Bookselling, Edouard Dujardin and Italo Svevo 149. JOYCES. John Stanislaus Joyce - the Voluminous Life and Genius of James Joyce‘s Father by John Wyse Jackson and Peter Costello. London: Fourth Estate, 1997. First English edition. Slight ink mark on foredge, else fine in dustwrapper. $40.00 150. KERMODE, FRANK. Pieces of My Mind:Writings 1958-2002. London: Allen Lane, 2003. First English edition. Nineteen long essays, including, published – “Solitary Confinement”, Wallace Stevens, Wuthering Heights, unpublished – “Forgetting (1988), “Memory” (1994), “The Cambridge Connection” (2000) and seven reviews – Raymond Carver, Ian McEwan, Martin Amis. Fine in dustwrapper. $45.00 151. (KINGSFORD SMITH, CHARLES.) Southern Cross (1946). British trade poster for the English release of Southern Cross [released as Smithy in Australia and Pacific Adventure in the USA], directed by Ken G.Hall, his last movie as a feature director. A locally made biopic about the aviator funded from America by Columbia Pictures using film hire revenue frozen in Australia by restrictions on the export of capital. Single sheet measuring 28 x 43cms., printed in colour on both sides and folded once vertically. Fine. See covers. $300.00 153. KONWICKI, TADEUSZ. Bohin Manor. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1990. First American edition. A recent novel by the Polish movie director and writer. Fine in dustwrapper. $30.00 154. KRABBĖ, TIM. The Vanishing. New York: Random House, 1993. First American edition. Dutch noir, lovers reunited in death, and basis for two movies, in Holland (1988) and America (1993) respectively. Fine in dustwrapper. $30.00 155. KUNDERA, MILAN. Life is Elsewhere. New York: Knopf, 1974. First American edition. A Czech poet between World War Two and the Prague Spring. Spots of foxing to foredge, mark on pastedown where price sticker has been removed, else fine in dustwrapper. $60.00 156. KUNDERA, MILAN. Laughable Loves. London: John Murray, 1978. First English edition. Introduction by Philip Roth who identifies the power and play in “erotic enterprises and lustful strategies” as Kundera’s themes in these seven stories. A couple of spots of foxing to foredge, else fine in dustwrapper. $60.00 157. KUNDERA, MILAN. Jacques and His Master. London: Faber and Faber, 1986. First English edition. Translated by Simon Callow. Kundera’s homage to Diderot. Pictorial wrappers. Near fine. $30.00 158. KUNDERA, MILAN. Ignorance. New York: HarperCollins, 2002. First American edition. An exile returns novel. Fine in dustwrapper. $25.00 152. KONWICKI, TADEUSZ. Moonrise, Moonset. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1987. First American edition. One Pole‘s "personal patented 1981“ or thoughts on Russia during a difficult year for the Solidarity Movement. Fine in dustwrapper. $30.00 159. LATIN AMERICAN LITERATURE. Seven Voices – Seven Latin American Writers Talk to Rita Guibert. New York: Knopf, 1973. First American edition. The seven: Miguel Angel Asturias, Jorge Luis Borges, Julio Cortazar, Gabriel Garcia Márquez, G.Cabrera Infante and Octavio Paz. Fine in near fine dustwrapper with a couple of chips at edges. $45.00 160. LAUNDRY. Hydromat Ten SemiAutomatic Washing Machine. Potts Point, NSW: Service-U Pty Ltd., [c.1956]. Promotional card produced by the local agents. Fifties puff: “You can afford Hydromat Happiness” and inside divided into tasks for men (assembling and maintenance) and women (the washing). Single sheet measuring 16 x 18cms., printed in two colour on both sides and folded once to make 4pp. Light wear.Very good. $25.00 If I had stayed in Hollywood, I would have killed myself. Or someone would have done it for me. Piper Laurie 161. LAURIE, PIPER. Learning to Live Out Loud: a Memoir. New York: Crown, 2011. First American edition. Rosetta Jacobs from Detroit, Michigan, her career in and out of Hollywood, live television in late 1950s New York, Sarah Packard in The Hustler, and a trip to Australia for the lead in Tim (1979). Fine in dustwrapper. $25.00 162. (LEAR, EDWARD.) Nonsensus: Cross-Referencing Edward Lear’s Original 116 Limericks with Eight Holograph Manuscripts and Comparing Them to Printed Texts from the 1846, 1855 and 1861 Versions;Together with a Census of Known Copies of the Genuine First Edition, compiled by Justin G. Schiller. Stroud, Gloucestershire: Catalpa Press, 1988. First English edition. INSCRIBED LIMERICKALLY BY JUSTIN SCHILLER IN 1989. With Lear’s illustrations and introduction by Vivian Noakes. Oblong pictorial wrappers. Fine. $45.00 163. LE CARRÉ, JOHN. Our Game. London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1995. First English edition. The suppressed issue, reputedly 1,000cc., descending digits to “1” and different dustwrapper design to the second impression. Fine in dustwrapper. $250.00 164. LE GALLIENNE, RICHARD. From a Paris Scrapbook. New York: Ives Washburn, 1938. First American edition. Introduction by William Rose Benét. Seventy-two pieces on life in, and aspects of, Paris: tea drinking, rue de Rivoli, Napoleon’s Bastille, toys of French children, memories of a grey old wall and “What America Owes to France”. Fine in near fine dustwrapper. $75.00 165. LISPECTOR, CLARICE. The Apple in the Dark. New York: Knopf, 1967. First American edition. The first book by the Brazilian novelist to appear in English. Introduction by Gregory Rabassa, the novel’s translator. Fine in dustwrapper. $85.00 ... you get this strange mixture of an extraordinary culture, represented by Patrick White, and of fascism, ugliness, prejudice, vulgarity. All in a landscape as varied, cruel, beautiful and repulsive as in Two Men on the Run [Figures in a Landscape]. It’s a kind of western, a type of film I’ve never done, and I still may make it using David Mercer’s brilliant scenario. Joseph Losey on the proposed movie of Voss. 166. LOSEY, JOSEPH. Conversations with Losey by Michel Ciment. London: Methuen, 1985. First English edition. A book length interview beginning with his childhood in Wisconsin through the twists and turns of his theatre and movie career, finishing with The Trout and a list of 64 planned and unmade movies. Fine in near fine dustwrapper darkening on the spine. $60.00 167. MACFALL, HALDANE. The Three Students. New York: Knopf, 1926. First American edition. INSCRIBED AFFECTIONATELY BY THE AUTHOR TO LADY WARD ON THE DAY OF PUBLICATION. A romantic adventure set in Persia in the 11th century featuring Omar Khayyam as a character. Lady Ward’s bookplate. Fine in dustwrapper. $75.00 168. MACINTYRE, ELLA. Pin Money. Sydney: Shakespeare Head Press, 1936. First Australian edition. Illustrations by J.Warren Smith. Plain wrappers. Fine in very good dustwrapper with spots of insect damage at edges and folds. MUIR 4570 $50.00 169. (MACKANESS, GEORGE.) Lodge University of Sydney (1937-1938). A bound volume of printed ephemera relating to George Mackaness and the Masonic Lodge at the University of Sydney. The volume contains the invitation to installation of Bro. George Mackaness, 22nd October 1937 (3pp.), program for his Installation 22nd October 1937 (12pp.), then notices of 15 monthly and special meetings during 1938 (each 3-4pp.) listing agenda, toasts, order of service; and Installation of Bro. Robert Jackson Noble, 28th October 1938 (12pp.) Presented to Mackaness in the year of publication. Printed purple cloth, faded on spine else fine. $50.00 170. MCMURTRY, LARRY. Roads – Driving ‘America’s Great Highways. New York: Simon and Schuster, 2000. First American edition. “I wanted to drive American roads at the century’s end, from border to border and beach to beach”, the author and bookseller. Fine in dustwrapper. $30.00 171. MASS MOVEMENTS. Leaders, Dreamers, and Rebels - an Account of the Great Mass-Movements of History and the Wish-Dreams that Inspired Them by René Fülöp Miller. New York:Viking, 1935. First American edition. First published in Vienna the previous year and tracking the struggle against the “world’s anxiety dream ... where apprehension dominates the earliest and deepest strata of human thought and feeling.” Fine in dustwrapper. $85.00 172. (MELLISH, WALLY.) Mr. Reliable (1996). Original English poster for Nadia Tass’ version of the Wally Mellish siege. Western Sydney, 2nd- 9th July 1968, early years of talkback radio, armed individuals, hostages, police, negotiations, live news, a marriage and celebrity culture. Poster measures 76 x 96cms., folded three times. Fine. $75.00 173. MENU. Complimentary Banquet for John See, Esq., M.P. by His Brother Members of the Legislature, Monday Dec. 18, 1888. Menu for a banquet given for John See, State Parliamentary member for Grafton from 1880-1904, prior to an overseas trip. Toasts for the day, menu – four courses, all written in French, whiting and snapper as main courses, various delicacies between courses – and a touching “au revoir” on the rear cover. Single card, measuring 12.5 x 18cms., printed two colours, folded once to make 4pp. Covers rubbed.Very good. $150.00 174. MINGUS, CHARLES. Beneath the Underdog - the World as Composed by Mingus. New York: Knopf, 1971. First American edition. Edited by Nel King. Autobiography as anguish, stream of consciousness and fiction or, in the book’s disclaimer, “Some names in this book have been changed and some of the characters and incidents are fictitious”. Fine in dustwrapper. $85.00 174A. MOMENTS. Presentation of medals for the men’s 200 metres at the Summer Olympics, Mexico City, 16th October 1968. New York: Personality Posters Inc., 1969.Vintage b&w poster of Tommie Smith and John Carlos standing with raised black gloved fists during the playing of the American national anthem. Peter Norman, the Australian athlete and silver medallist, stands on the podium wearing a badge endorsing the Olympic Project for Human Rights. The gestures of the three athletes were personally costly: the two American athletes were expelled from the Games, continued briefly as athletes in at home before switching to football. Norman was ostracised at home. He was ranked fifth in the world at the time of the qualifiers for the Munich Olympics in 1972, ran the necessary times, was not selected, and retired soon after. Norman’s official exclusion was maintained for the Sydney Olympics (2000) when he was not invited with other former Australian Olympians for a lap of honour. The images produced of the three athletes’ gestures quickly became emblematic for a range of contemporary movements and issues: “Black Power”, the American civil rights movement, the use of sporting events as a vehicle for advancing political beliefs, the sullying of the Olympic ideal, and, in Norman’s case, though much later, solidarity and as a modest and unique example of the willingness of Australians to stand side by side with Americans in a major conflict. Peter Norman died in 2006. Tommie Smith and John Carlos were pallbearers at his funeral in Melbourne. Norman’s Mexico City Olympic time of 20.06 seconds is currently the men’s Australian record for the 200 metres. The b&w photograph is not attributed. The publisher issued, usually soon after the event, a series of posters of significant AfricanAmerican events from the late 1960s. Poster measures 103.5 x 74cms., very lightly toned. Linen backed, rolled and overall near fine. $1,750.00 175. (MOORE, MARIANNE.) Marianne Serves Lunch by Robert A.Wilson. New York: The Phoenix Bookshop, 1976. First American edition. Memoir of meetings and an improvised lunch with the poet. Publisher and MOMA stalwart Monroe Wheeler’s copy with his bookplate. Printed wrappers, stapled. Fine. 250 copies, none offered for sale. $45.00 176. MOSQUITO. Mosquito – a Natural History of Our Most Persistent and Deadly Foe by Andrew Spielman and Michael D’Antonio. London: Faber and Faber, 2001. First English edition. History, behaviour, highlights, 3,500 species, and a cv any animal would be proud of. Fine in dustwrapper. $25.00 177. MOVIES. The Face on the Cutting Room Floor by Murray Schumach. New York: William Morrow, 1964. First American edition.Varieties and details of censorship in movies in America from the Silent period to date of publication and, from the early 1950s, including television. Illustrated. Top edge dusty, else fine in dustwrapper. $45.00 178. MOVIES. Authors on Film, edited by Harry M.Geduld. Bloomington, IA: Indiana University Press, 1972. First American edition. Forty-one pieces on movies, moviegoing, experiences on movies and private obsessions by T.S.Eliot, William Faulkner, Jack Kerouac,Virginia Woolf, Truman Capote, Thomas Mann and many others. Fine in dustwrapper. $35.00 179. MOVIES. The War Trilogy by Roberto Rossellini. New York: Grossman, 1973. First American edition. Illustrated screenplays for Open City, Paisan and Germany – Year Zero. Fine in dustwrapper. $45.00 180. MOVIES. The Hollywood Writers’ Wars by Nancy Lynn Schwartz, completed by Sheila Schwartz. New York: Knopf, 1982. First American edition. The history of the formation of the Screenwriters’ Guild, beginning in 1933, and on through the HUAC period. Near fine in dustwrapper. $40.00 181. MOVIES. Lethal Innocence – the Cinema of Alexander MacKendrick by Philip Kemp. London: Methuen, 1991. An unusual trajectory from Boston, Glasgow, London and Los Angeles with four or five terrific movies along the way. Fine in dustwrapper. $35.00 MOVIES. See Kobo Abè, Mário De Andrade, Bruce Beresford, Kyril Bonfiglioli, Karel Capek, Continental, Ealing Studios, Charles Kingsford Smith,Tadeusz Konwicki,Tim Krabbé, Piper Laurie, Joseph Losey,Wally Mellish, Nuclear, Gordon Parks, Pier Paolo Pasolini, Fred Schepisi, Leonardo Sciascia, Jorge Semprun, Shirley Temple and François Truffaut 182. MURDER. The Deadly Innocents - Portraits of Children Who Kill by Muriel Gardner. London: Hogarth Press, 1977. First English edition. Preface by Stephen Spender. Eight case histories. Near fine in very good dustwrapper. $35.00 183. MUSIC. Singabout. Wooloomooloo, NSW: The Bush Music Club, 1956-1959. Vol.1, nos.1-3, vol.2, nos.1-4 and vol.3, nos.1 and 3, or 9 of the 12 issues from the first three vols. News, editorials, accounts of meetings and events, letters, reviews, articles - “Aboriginal Songs” by Roland Robinson – lyrics to 86 traditional and original songs, music to 67 of these; contributors include Merv Lilley, David Martin, Lance Skuthorpe and Dorothy Hewett. Pictorial wrappers, stapled. Owner and a couple of institutional discard stamps, spots of foxing. All very good or better. The 9 issues $100.00 184. MUSIC. The Eddie Condon Scrapbook of Jazz by Eddie Condon and Hank O‘Neal. New York: St. Martin‘s Press, 1973. First American edition. Foreword by John Steinbeck. Combination of autobiography and scrapbook beginning with Eddie going on tour with Hollis Peavey‘s Jazz Bandits in 1922. Square qto. Fine in dustwrapper. $85.00 185. MUSIC. Swing to Bop - an Oral History of the Transition in Jazz in the 1940s by Ira Gitler. New York: Oxford University Press, 1985. First American edition. Primary material for Bebop with contributions from Billy Eckstine, Dexter Gordon, Woody Herman, Jay McShann, Gerry Mulligan, Lennie Tristano and sixty others. Fine in dustwrapper. $60.00 186. MUSIC. Jazz Spoken Here Conversations with Twenty-Two Musicians by Wayne Enstice and Paul Rubin. Baton Rouge, LA: Louisiana State University Press, 1992. First American edition. Mose Allison, Bill Evans, Dizzy Gillespie, Charles Mingus, Joe Pass and 17 others, all headliners. Review copy with publisher‘s slip laid in. Fine in dustwrapper. $45.00 190. NEVILLE, RICHARD. Playpower. London: Cape, 1970. First English edition. INSCRIBED BY MARTIN SHARP WHO DESIGNED THE DUSTWRAPPER AND ILLUSTRATED THE TITLE PAGE. The author’s first book. Headopoly, an Underground Almanac History Game, listing events, key dates and individuals from January 1965 to December 1969, in pocket at rear. Spots of foxing to foredge, else fine in very good dustwrapper frayed at edges, repaired on the reverse of the crown of the spine and SIGNED AGAIN BY MARTIN SHARP ON THE REVERSE OF THE FRONT FLAP OF THE DUSTWRAPPER. Headopoly, 94 x 63cms., folded, fine. $350.00 187. MUSIC. When We Were Good – the Folk Revival by Robert Cantwell. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1996. First American edition. Ancestors, the Cold War, the Anthology of American Folk Music – the ingredients for the folk music explosion beginning in the late 1950s. Fine in dustwrapper. $35.00 188. MUSIC. Invisible Republic – Bob Dylan’s Basement Tapes by Greil Marcus. New York: Henry Holt, 1997. First American edition. Speculating on antecedents and offspring of the most bootlegged piece of popular music. Fine in dustwrapper. $25.00 189. MUSIC. Boogaloo –the Quintessence of American Popular Music by Arthur Kempton. New York: Pantheon, 2003. First American edition. Unravelling the strands of black American music. Fine in dustwrapper. $40.00 MUSIC. See Louis Armstrong, Australia, Robert Crumb, Ella Fitzgerald, Charles Mingus and Sheet Music 191. NEVILLE, RICHARD. Hippie Hippie Shake. Port Melbourne,Vic: William Heinemann Australia, 1995. First Australian edition. The author‘s memoir of "the Dreams, the Trips, the Trials, the Love-Ins, the Screw-Ups ... the Sixties“. Uncorrected proof copy. Printed wrappers. Letter from the publisher and invitation to the Sydney launch laid in.Very good. $30.00 192. THE NEW YORKER. Time Exposures by Search-Light. New York: Boni and Liveright, 1926. First American edition. Twenty of the first wave of The New Yorker profiles: Georgia O’Keefe, Charles Chaplin, Carl Sandburg, Alfred Stieglitz and also A.R. Orage, John Dewey and Otto H. Kahn; with portraits and caricatures of all the subjects. Very good in dustwrapper chipped along top edge. $50.00 197. NUCLEAR. Home on the Range [1981]. Original English poster for the anti-nuclear documentary, Home on the Range, directed by Gil Scrine. The poster reproduces a Patrick Cook cartoon surrounded by a close to abstract image of the American base at Pine Gap. Poster measures 57 x 41cms., rolled; with a blank space below the image to add details of screenings. Fine. $100.00 193. NOELS AND MILBANKES. The Noels and the Milbankes by Malcolm Elwin. London: Macdonald, 1967. First English edition. Reconstructing two families through the letters of Lady Byron to Lady Milbanke (her mother), Lady Milbanke to Mary Noel (her aunt) and from Viscount Wentworth (her brother). Owner signature, else fine in near fine dustwrapper. $40.00 194. NORFOLK, LAWRENCE. Lemprière’s Dictionary. London: Sinclair Stevenson [1991]. First English edition. Sixteen extracts (94pp.) from the author’s first book issued as a pre-publication promotion. Pictorial wrappers. Fine. $35.00 195. NORWAY. Popular Tales from the Norse, edited by Peter C. Asbjörnsen and Jörgen I.Moe. London: Bodley Head, 1969. First English edition. Translated and introduced by George Webbe Dasent, illustrated by William Stobbs. Fifty-nine folktales collected contemporaneously with the Brothers Grimm and originally published in Norway in 1859. Fine in near fine dustwrapper. $40.00 196. NUCLEAR. Crook Shop and It’s M.A.D. Red Hill, Qld: Popular Theatre Troupe [1981]. Program from two productions, by the professional Queensland community theatre company, concerned with crime and government in Queensland and the “Mutually Assured Destruction” of the Cold War. History of the company, personnel, background to the writing of the plays, membership and support drive. Two sheets, 19 x 26cms., printed both sides and folded once to make 8pp. All fine. $50.00 198. O. Confessions of O – Conversations with Pauline Réage by Régine Deforges. New York: Viking, 1979. First American edition. A book length autobiographical interview with the author of The Story of O. Fine in dustwrapper. $35.00 199. O’HARA, FRANK. Artists‘ Theatre: Four Plays. New York: Grove Press, 1960. First American edition. Paperback original. Introduction by Herbert Machiz. Contains “Try! Try!” by Frank O’Hara, “The Heroes” by John Ashbery, “The Bait” by James Merrill and “Absalom” by Lionel Abel. Printed wrappers. Bump to base of spine. Near fine. $35.00 200. O’HARA, FRANK. “Macaroni” Calais,VT: Z Press, 1974. First edition thus. Broadside containing O’Hara’s poem addressed in part to Patsy Southgate, his great friend, and followed by “In Memoriam” her reply of sorts. Single sheet measuring 48 x 16cms., folded twice. Fine. $100.00 That space was ... New York itself, that kaleidoscopic lumber-room where laws of time and space are altered ... the nightmares, delights and paradoxes of life in this city went into Frank’s style, as did the many passionate relationships he kept going simultaneously (to the point where it was almost impossible for anyone to see him alone) ... John Ashbery 201. O’HARA, FRANK. The Collected Poems of Frank O’Hara. New York: Knopf, 1971. First American edition. Edited by by Donald Allen and introduction by John Ashbery. 500+ poems, written 1947-1966. Near fine in first state dustwrapper with Larry Rivers’ illustration. $400.00 205. OLDS, SHARON. The Wellspring. New York: Knopf, 1996. First American edition. INSCRIBED BY THE AUTHOR IN THE YEAR OF PUBLICATION. Fine in dustwrapper. $125.00 206. OLDS, SHARON. The Unswept Room. New York: Knopf, 2002. First American edition. INSCRIBED BY THE AUTHOR TO EDMUND [WHITE] AND MICHAEL IN THE YEAR OF PUBLICATION. Fine in near fine dustwrapper. $150.00 207. OLYMPICS. Olympic Portraits by Annie Leibovitz. Boston: Little Brown, 1996. First American edition. 120+ images of American athletes training to compete in the Atlanta Olympics of 1996. Small qto. Pictorial boards. Fine as published with dustwrapper. $40.00 202. (O’HARA, FRANK.) Homage to Frank O’Hara, edited by Bill Berkson and Joe LeSueur. Bolinas, CA: Big Sky, 1978. First American edition. Double issue, 11/12, of Big Sky with pieces by John Ashbery, John Cage, Robert Creeley, Robert Duncan, Allen Ginsberg, Ron Padgett, Terry Southern, and many others. Pictorial wrappers. A couple of smudges to covers.Very good. $45.00 203. (O’HARA, FRANK.) City Poet – the Life and Times of Frank O’Hara by Brad Gooch. New York: Knopf, 1993. First American edition. Fine in dustwrapper. $45.00 204. OLDS, SHARON. Blood,Tin, Straw. New York: Knopf, 1999. First American paper edition. INSCRIBED BY THE AUTHOR IN THE YEAR OF PUBLICATION. The author’s sixth collection and more relentless examination of her family. Laid in is an invitation to the New York launch on November 15, 1999. Pictorial wrappers. Fine. $125.00 208. OLYMPICS. The Naked Olympics – the True Story of the Ancient Games by Tony Perrottet. New York: Random House, 2004. First American edition, a paperback original. History of the original Games: inside the competitors’ tents, personalities, corruption; framed by the reasons for, effects of, and with a persuasive push for, the athletes competing naked. Pictorial wrappers. Fine $15.00 209. OLYMPICS. The Ancient Olympics by Nigel Spivey. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004. First English edition. The significance of winning at the Ancient Olympics and the behaviour and strategies that this generated. Fine in dustwrapper. $25.00 210. ONDAATJE, MICHAEL. In the Skin of a Lion. London: Secker and Warburg [1987]. Galley proofs of the first English edition dated 17th February 1987. With the layout simulating the novel’s various narrators in place. Printed wrappers. Covers marked, corners scuffed.Very good. $60.00 The most immediate, influential, inspired and high spirited of all the counterculture periodicals 211. THE ORACLE. The San Francisco Oracle – the Psychedelic Newspaper of the HaightAshbury 1966-1968, edited by Allen Cohen. Berkeley, CA: Regent Press, 1991. Facsimile edition. DELUXE ISSUE #76/200 COPIES SIGNED BY COHEN AND THE LATE RICK GRIFFIN, ARTIST OF MANY OF THE MOST STRIKING ORACLE POSTERS. ONE OF THE 64 COPIES WITH MARBLED ENDSHEETS IN THE REAR BY DANIEL KOTTKE (a little bleed from the marbling along the edge of the blank verso). The history and approximate facsimile of the twelve issues of the original Oracle (385pp.), accompanied by background and historical material by Peter Montgomery, J.M. Jamil Brownson, Ralph Metzner, Abbie Hoffman, Ram Das and Stephen Levine. Unrivalled primary material documenting American social, political, religious and cultural history from September 1966 to February 1968 with contributions from William Burroughs, Allen Cohen, Bruce Conner, Robert Creeley, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Buckminster Fuller, Allen Ginsberg, Ken Kesey, Philip Lamantia, Timothy Leary, Michael McClure, Norman Mailer, Gary Snyder, Alan Watts, Lew Welch, many anonymous; columns and articles include“The Joy of Kooking”, “The Craft of Masturbation”, “Comments on the Trips Festival”, “Notes of a Dirty Bookseller”, “The Gossiping Guru”, “Methedrine Use and Abuse in San Francisco”, “Hip Jobs”; advertisements for Lucifer Rising, The Grateful Dead, City Lights Bookshop, Big Brother and the Holding Company, happenings, readings, events, cafes, health food and free shops; all interwoven with artworks, comics, collages, graphics, illustrations, personals, photographs, photomontages and spectacular full page illustrations. Beautifully reproduced in colour and b&w throughout. TOGETHER WITH THE SEPARATE PORTFOLIO CONTAINING THIRTEEN QUALITY REPRODUCTIONS ON STIFF CARD (EACH 36 X 28CMS.) OF ALL THE COVERS OF THE ORACLE AND ONE ISSUE OF P.O. Frisco. Qto. Maroon and green cloth. Bookplate, else fine in slipcase as issued. Small label residue in corner of one panel of the slipcase. Separate portfolio of facsimiles, with the same bookplate, all fine. $2,000.00 OVERLOOKED AND UNDERRATED. See Lisa Alther, Ancients, Saint Bernard, Ambrose Bierce, Kyril Bonfiglioli, John Horne Burns, Roy Campbell, Karel Capek, Peter Claver, Robert Crumb, Father Damien, Eccentrics, Otto Friedrich, Paul Fussell, Gaberbocchus Press, Alex Gildzen, Francine du Plessix Gray, James HamiltonPaterson, James Hanley, Chester Himes,Tadeusz Konwicki,Tim Krabbé,The New Yorker, Gordon Parks, Portraits, Federico De Roberto (under Sicily), Raymond Roussel, Fred Schepisi, Leonardo Sciascia, Jorge Semprun, Jean Stafford, Italo Svevo, Pramoedya Ananta Toer and Jules Verne 212. PARIS. Beauty is in the Street: A Visual Record of the May '68 Paris Uprising edited by Johan Kugelberg and Philippe Vermès. London: Four Corners Books, 2011. First English edition. “An assemblage of militant handbills, wall posters, cartoons, manifestos, and photographs (many documenting graffiti) is both a chunk of history and a material paradox: Agitprop has seldom been better designed, ephemera never seemed more substantial” (Jim Hoberman). 200+ reproductions. Qto. Pictorial boards. Fine as issued with wraparound band. $60.00 PARIS. See Bookselling, Chester Himes, Richard Le Gallienne and Portraits In Paris through the 20th century with a heady combination of expatriates: most with literary ambitions, some to write, others to publish, diverse social types – impoverished, trustafarians, persecuted – and including Margaret Anderson, George Antheil, John Ashbery, James Baldwin, Sylvia Beach, Samuel Beckett, Kay Boyle, William Burroughs, Harry and Caresse Crosby, Nancy Cunard, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, F.Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald, Janet Flanner, Allen Ginsberg, Maurice Girodias, Ernest Hemingway, Chester Himes, James Jones, James Joyce, Jack Kahane, Robert McAlmon, Harry Mathews, Henry Miller,Vladimir Nabokov, George Plimpton, Norman Rubington aka immortally Akbar del Piombo, Terry Southern, Harold Stearns, Gertrude Stein, William Styron, Edward Titus, Alexander Trocchi and Richard Wright 213. PARIS – 20TH CENTURY EXPATRIATES. Published in Paris by Hugh Ford. New York: Macmillan, 1975. First American edition. Foreword by Janet Flanner. Three Mountains, Plain Editions, Black Sun, Contact Publishing, Twenty-Four Hours – the private presses of Paris and the expatriate writers whom they published between the Wars. Fine in near fine dustwrapper. $60.00 214. PARIS – 20TH CENTURY EXPATRIATES. Four Lives in Paris by Hugh Ford. San Francisco: North Point Press, 1987. First American edition. Four Americans from the periphery of the Parisian stage: Margaret Anderson, George Antheil, Kay Boyle and Harold Stearns. Fine in dustwrapper. $45.00 215. PARIS – 20TH CENTURY EXPATRIATES. The Continual Pilgrimage – American Writers in Paris, 1944-1960 by Christopher Sawyer-Lauçanno. New York: Grove Press, 1992. Afro-Americans, Beats, mostly males, many on the run, and all drawn to the City of Light. $35.00 216. PARIS – 20TH CENTURY EXPATRIATES. Venus Bound – the Erotic Voyage of the Olympia Press and Its Writers by John De St Jorre. New York: Random House, 1994. First American edition. Includes a checklist of Olympia Press publications between 1953 and 1965. Fine in dustwrapper. $45.00 217. PARIS – 20TH CENTURY EXPATRIATES. Exiled in Paris – Richard Wright, James Baldwin, Samuel Beckett and Others on the Left Bank by James Campbell. New York: Scribner, 1995. First American edition. The post World War Two wave of expatriate writers in Paris. Fine in dustwrapper. $35.00 218. PARKS, GORDON. A Hungry Heart. New York: Atria, 2005. First American edition. The autobiography of the great AfroAmerican activist and photographer who moonlighted as a novelist, poet, musician and directed the original version of Shaft. Fine in dustwrapper. $30.00 219. (PASOLINI, PIER PAOLO.) The Gospel According to St.Matthew. Program to accompany the season of Pasolini’s movie at the Gala Cinema, Sydney (October – November 1967). Cast, other credits, photographs from shooting and full page image of the movie’s dedication, “To the dear familiar memory of John XXIII”, 16pp. Qto. Pictorial wrappers, stapled. Fine. $35.00 220. PASOLINI, PIER PAOLO. The Ragazzi. New York: Grove Press, 1968. First American edition. The author’s first novel after two collections of poetry. Riccetto’s life on the streets of Rome and adding fuel to the author’s notoriety and divisiveness. Fine in dustwrapper. $85.00 221. PASOLINI, PIER PAOLO. A Violent Life. London: Cape, 1968. First English edition. Translated by William Weaver. The author’s second novel, volume two of a proposed trilogy beginning with The Ragazzi, with a Roman pimp as protagonist, reworked soon after by Pasolini into Accatone, his first movie. Fine in dustwrapper darkened on the spine and with foxing on the edges of the flaps. $75.00 222. (PASOLINI, PIER PAOLO.) Pier Paolo Pasolini – the Poetics of Heresy, edited by Beverly Allen. Saratoga, CA: Anima Libri, 1982. First American edition. Twelve essays about aspects of Pasolini’s career by, among others, Michel Foucault, Roland Barthes, Italo Calvino and Leonardo Sciascia, together with ten previously untranslated essays and poems by Pasolini, and bibliography. Pictorial wrappers.Very good. $45.00 223. PASOLINI, PIER PAOLO. Lutheran Letters. Manchester: Carcanet, Dublin: Raven Arts Press, 1983. First English edition. Translated by Stuart Hood. Twenty-nine essays, opinion, autobiographical and polemical pieces, most originally published in Corriere della Sera [the Milanese daily], during 1975, and setting out Pasolini’s feelings for contemporary Italy. Tiny mark to prelims, else fine in dustwrapper. $60.00 224. PASOLINI, PIER PAOLO. Pier Paolo Pasolini – Drawings and Paintings, compiled and edited by Johannes Reiter and Giuseppe Zigaina. Berkeley, CA: University Art Museum, 1984. First American edition. Exhibition catalogue from the touring Pasolini exhibition: 104 colour, full page reproductions: many self portraits, all of his series of portraits of Maria Callas; two essays and Pasolini’s own note on recommencing painting. Qto. Plain wrappers.Very good in dustwrapper nicked at crown of spine and with a closed tear along the fold of the front flap. $60.00 225. PASOLINI, PIER PAOLO. Roman Nights and Other Stories. Marlboro,VT: the Marlboro Press, 1986. First American edition. Translated by John Shipley. Five stories, three written in 1951, the remainder during the late 1950s and early 1960s, about the author’s beloved parts of Rome. Near fine in dustwrapper. $45.00 226. PASOLINI, PIER PAOLO. The Letters of Pier Paolo Pasolini,Vol.1: 1940-1954. London: Quartet, 1992. First English edition. Translated by Stuart Hood. Introduction by Nico Naldini, 90pp., and containing long extracts from Pasolini’s diaries. Letters from age eighteen until his move to the Monteverde quarter of Rome as a thirty-two year old. Fine in dustwrapper. $35.00 227. PASOLINI, PIER PAOLO. Petrolio. New York: Pantheon, 1997. First American edition. Begun in 1972, unfinished at the author’s death in 1975, and published here with outline, notes and a letter to Alberto Moravia re the manuscript. Fine in dustwrapper. $30.00 228. PAZ, OCTAVIO. JACQUES ROUBAUD, EDOARDO SANGUINETTI, CHARLES TOMLINSON. Renga – a Chain of Poems. Harmondsworth, Middlesex: Penguin, 1979. First English edition. Introduction by Paz, essays on the tradition by Roubaud, background to this collaboration by Tomlinson. A modern version of the Japanese collaborative poem. Parallel text. Pictorial wrappers. Prelims foxed, extremities evenly tanned.Very good. $25.00 229. PENGUIN. The Penguin‘s Adventures by Grace L.Sacre. [Sydney: no publisher, 1944]. First Australian edition. A penguin‘s adventures in verse with eight colour and six full page illustrations by the author. Oblong 8vo. Heavy pictorial boards. Covers lightly marked, gift inscription from 1944, short closed tear on title page.Very good. MUIR 6554 $30.00 230. PENGUIN. Penguin Special – the Story of Allen Lane, the Founder of Penguin Books and the Man Who Changed Publishing Forever by Jeremy Lewis. New York: Penguin, 2005. First American edition. Fine in dustwrapper. $30.00 PHOTOGRAPHY. See Richard Avedon, David Bailey, Bruce Chatwin, Lee Friedlander, Ralph Gibson, Japan, Gordon Parks, Herbert G. Ponting, Portraits, Josef Sudek, Hiroshi Sugimoto and Émile Zola 231. PIAGET, JEAN. The Moral Judgment of the Child. Glencoe, ILL: The Free Press, 1949. First American edition. Children’s methods of learning and practising ethics and philosophy. Fine in near fine dustwrapper. $50.00 232. PIAGET, JEAN. The Child’s Conception of the World. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1951. Reprint, first published in English in 1929. Where children's and adult's perceptions part ways. Binding beginning to crack, very good in dustwrapper rubbed and chipped at edges. $40.00 233. PIRANDELLO, LUIGI. One None and a Hundred Thousand. New York: Dutton, 1933. First American edition. More on identity, perception and our carefully made masks, Pirandello’s last novel. Offsetting to prelims.Very good in dustwrapper darkened on the spine and with a couple of chips. $175.00 234. PONGE, FRANCIS. The Voice of Things. New York: McGraw Hill, 1972. First American edition. Prose pieces, 190pp., edited, translated and introduced by Beth Archer. Laid in is a typed note, SIGNED BY WRITER JOYCE JOHNSON,THEN AN EDITOR AT MCGRAW HILL to an academic at Hunter College, New York seeking a comment. Edgewear else very good in dustwrapper sunned and with a short closed tear to the top of the front panel. $85.00 235. (PONGE, FRANCIS.) Francis Ponge – the Reality of Things, edited by Ivar Ivask. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, 1974. Books Abroad,Vol. 48, No. 4, Autumn 1974 devoted to Ponge. Three texts by Ponge, ten essays and tributes about and for him, record of the presentation ceremony and of Ponge’s visit to Oklahoma. Printed wrappers. Fine. $30.00 236. PONTING, HERBERT G. In LotusLand Japan. London: Macmillan, 1910. First English edition. ISADORE BRODSKY‘S COPY WITH HIS SIGNATURE. From San Francisco to Yokohama and then on through the country. Eight tipped in colour plates and 96 b&w full page photographs. Qto. Pictorial red cloth stamped in gold. Covers marked, bottom half of spine professionally restored. Edges of pages foxed, not affecting images.Very good. $250.00 237. PORTRAITS. Headhunting in the Solomon Islands by Caroline Mytinger. New York: Macmillan, 1942. First American edition. Margaret Warner and the author’s travels in the Southwest Pacific with the aim of producing portraits of the indigenous peoples whom they encountered. Illustrated. Short contemporary inscription, else fine in near fine dustwrapper missing a tiny piece from the bottom of the front panel. $60.00 238. PORTRAITS. The Animals by Garry Winogrand. New York: Museum of Modern Art, 1969. First American edition. Afterword by John Szarkowski. The photographer’s first book, forty-three images of the residents and visitors of the Bronx Zoo and Coney Island Aquarium. Oblong 8vo. Pictorial wrappers. Fine. $200.00 239. PORTRAITS. Portraits by Richard Avedon. London: Thames and Hudson, 1976. First English edition. Introductory essay by Harold Rosenberg. Forty-three full page portraits, many now emblematic of their subjects, and including Groucho Marx, Jasper Johns, Truman Capote, William Burroughs, Carson McCullers; 4 foldouts netting Igor Stravinsky, the Chicago Seven, members of Andy Warhol’s Factory and The Mission Council; 16 smaller portraits including Marcel Duchamrp, Ezra Pound and the Everly Brothers; and 7 portraits of Jacob Avedon, the photographer’s father, taken during the last five years of his life. Qto. Offsetting to prelims and scattered foxing to covers.Very good in lightly rubbed dustwrapper. $150.00 240. PORTRAITS. Faces – a Narrative History of the Portrait in Photography by Ben Maddow. Boston, MA: New York Graphic Society, 1977. First American edition. From the middle of the 19th century onwards: individuals and groups, nudes and death masks, celebrities and anonymous, 380 reproductions compiled and edited by Constance Sullivan. Qto. Fine in dustwrapper. $75.00 241. PORTRAITS. Theater and Dance Photographs by Lotte Jacobi. Woodstock,VT: Countryman Press, 1982. First American edition. Berlin in the 20s and 30s: Anna May Wong, René Clair, Anton Walbrook, Emil Jannings, Kurt Weil and defining images of Peter Lorre and Lotte Lenya. Plain wrappers. Fine in dustwrapper. $45.00 242. PORTRAITS. A Photographer’s Scrapbook by Louise Dahl-Wolfe. London: Quartet, 1984. First English edition. Pictorial autobiography with many of her influential images for Harper’s Bazaar and portraits including Carole Lombard, Paul Robeson, Orson Welles, Carson McCullers and Colette. Small square qto. Review copy with local publisher’s slip laid in. Near fine in dustwrapper with endorsements from Richard Avedon, Horst, Diana Vreeland, Arnold Newman and Cecil Beaton. $60.00 243. PORTRAITS. Man Ray’s Paris Portraits: 1921-1939, edited by Timothy Baum. Washington, DC: Middendorf Gallery, 1989. First American paper edition. Reproduces 74 portraits: Dora Maar, Léon Blum,Virgil Thomson, Marie Laurencin, Nusch Eluard and their more well known contemporaries. Qto. Pictorial wrappers. Fine. $45.00 244. PORTRAITS. Evidence by Luc Sante. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1992. First American edition. Fifty-five reproductions of photographs taken by the New York Police Department between 1914 and 1918: most corpses, others of the scene of a crime; and further into the author’s study of New York’s history and underbelly. Small oblong qto. Fine in dustwrapper. $150.00 PORTRAITS. See Richard Avedon, Robert Crumb, Lee Friedlander, Pier Paolo Pasolini and Émile Zola 245. POUND, EZRA. Poems 1918-21. New York: Boni and Liveright, 1921. First American edition. First American appearance of several of Pound’s greatest poems: “Hugh Selwyn Mauberley”, “Homage to Sextus Propertius”, “Langue D’Oc”, early versions of Cantos 4-6 and very close to the final version of Canto 7. MABEL NORMAN’S COPY WITH HER SIGNATURE – book collector, silent movie star, writer, director and, reputedly, the person who persuaded the indifferent Mack Sennett to persevere with Charlie Chaplin. Mock vellum spine and grey blue boards. One corner bumped and spine darkening. Near fine. GALLUP A21 $250.00 246. PRITCHETT, V.S. The Complete Short Stories. London: Chatto and Windus, 1990. First English edition. Eighty-two stories. Fine in dustwrapper. $75.00 247. PRITCHETT, V.S. Complete Collected Essays. New York: Random House, 1991. First American edition. Two hundred and four essays and reviews, all literary, 1,319pp. Remainder dot bottom edge, else fine in dustwrapper. $60.00 248. PYNCHON, THOMAS. Vineland. Boston, MA: Little Brown, 1990. First American edition. Nixon to Reagan in California. Fine in dustwrapper. $40.00 249. (PYNCHON, THOMAS.) The Vineland Papers – Critical Takes on Pynchon’s Novel, edited by Geoffrey Green, Donald J. Greiner and Larry McCaffery. Normal, ILL: Dalkey Archive Press, 1994. First American edition. Twelve essays on Pynchon’s novel and Clifford Mead’s updating of his bibliography. Fine in dustwrapper. $40.00 250. RESTAURANT. La Maison – the History of Pruniers by Madame Prunier. London: Longmans, Green and Co., 1957. First English edition. The story of the famous London restaurant from its opening in 1934. Brief gift inscription, else fine in dustwrapper. $45.00 251. REZNIKOFF, CHARLES. Testimony: The United States 1885-1890 Recitative. New York: New Directions and San Francisco: San Francisco Review, 1965. First American edition. “Stories and fragments taken from court transcripts, sorted into thematic categories and broken into verse”, Reznikoff’s first instalment. Fine in dustwrapper darkened on the spine. $45.00 252. RITSOS, YANNIS. Romiossini and Other Poems. Madison, WI: Quixote Press [1969]. First American edition. Translations by Dan Georgakas and Eleni Paidoussi; parallel Greek English text. Small qto. Pictorial wrappers, stapled. Fine. $50.00 253. RITSOS, YANNIS. Gestures and Other Poems 1968-1970. London and New York: Cape Goliard/Grossman, 1971. First American edition. Illustrations by the poet and translations by Nikos Stangos. Near fine in dustwrapper with light edgewear. $75.00 254. RITSOS, YANNIS. Ritsos in Parentheses. Princeton: Princeton University Press (1979). First American paper edition. Translations and introduction by Edmund Keeley; parallel Greek English text. Pictorial wrappers. Fine. $25.00 255. RITSOS, YANNIS. Subterranean Horses. Athens, OH: Ohio University Press, 1980. Reprint. Illustrations by the poet, translations by Minas Savvas and introduction by Vassilis Vassilikos. Review copy with publisher’s slip laid in. Fine in near fine dustwrapper lightly sunned around perimeter. $35.00 256. RITSOS, YANNIS. The House Vacated. La Jolla, CA: Parentheses (1989). First American edition. Translations by Minas Savvas. Printed wrappers, stapled. Fine. $35.00 257. (ROBESON, PAUL.) Paul Robeson by Martin Bauml Duberman. New York: Knopf, 1988. First American edition. The life of the distinguished Afro-American scholar, athlete, singer, actor and equal rights activist. Fine in dustwrapper. $50.00 258. ROUSSEL, RAYMOND. Impressions of Africa. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1967. First American edition of the first English translation by Lindy Foord and Rayner Heppenstall, her father. First published in 1910, written in the author’s then secret process of puns and double entendres, concerned with the performances provided by a shipwrecked group to entertain Chief Talou, and recognised fifty years later by the Oulipo as an example of “anticipatory plagiarism”. Edgewear, else fine in dustwrapper. $85.00 259. ROUSSEL, RAYMOND. Locus Solus. London: Calder and Boyars, 1970. First English edition. Translated by Rupert Copeland Cunningham. First published in 1914, set on the country estate which gives the novel its title, and to date the only appearance in literature of the drug “resurrectine: which when injected into a fresh corpse causes it to continuously act out the most important incident of its life. Near fine in dustwrapper with a small abrasion on its rear panel. $100.00 I have always been meaning to explain the way in which I came to write certain of my books [including the previous two items] ... It involved a very special method ... Raymond Roussel. 260. ROUSSEL, RAYMOND. How I Wrote Certain of My Books. New York: Sun, 1977. First American printing of this expanded edition (previously published in 1975). Roussel’s explanation, Canto III of New Impressions of Africa, translated by Kenneth Koch, two essays on Roussel by John Ashbery, and a bibliography by Trevor Winkfield. Pictorial wrappers. Near fine. $30.00 261. ROUSSEL, RAYMOND. How I Wrote Certain of My Books. Boston: Exact Change, 1995. First American edition. An expanded edition of the previous item containing new translations by John Ashbery (two pieces), Harry Mathews (2), Trevor Winkfield (1) of work by Roussel. Pictorial wrappers. Fine. $30.00 262. RUDD, STEELE. The Poor Parson. Sydney: the N.S.W. Bookstall, 1907. First Australian edition. 30 full page b&w illustrations by Syd Smith and Harry Julius. Pictorial cloth. Edgewear and extremities darkened, very good in dustwrapper chipped at edges. $200.00 SAINTS. See Bernard of Clarivaux, Peter Claver and Father Damien 263. (SCHEPISI, FRED.) The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith (1978). Original English poster for Fred Schepsi’s adaptation of Thomas Keneally’s novel. A key Australian movie of the 1970s which, at the time of its release, was the most expensive movie made here. As often happens for these movies, it became a hostage-victim of its hype and its other qualities were overlooked. Poster measures 76 x 100cms., folded three times. Fine. $250.00 264. SCHWITTERS, KURT. On Eve Blossom. [Minneapolis, MN] (the) Moonkosh Press [1986]. #39/47 FROM AN EDITION OF 50 COPIES. Broadside of Schwitter’s own English translation of "An Anna Blume", his notorious poem, first published in Der Sturm in 1919. Broadside measures 31 x 45cms., folded twice, printed both sides in five colours on handmade paper and according to the colophon, “using a bit of everything, but mostly 12 point Gil Sans”. Fine. $200.00 This means that, directly and indirectly, he [Leonardo Sciascia] has had to contend all his life with the Mafia and the Church, with fascism and communism, with the family, history. During the last quarter of a century, Sciascia has made out of his curious Sicilian experience a literature that is not quite like anything else ever done by a European – because Sicily is not part of Europe? – and certainly unlike anything done by a North American. Gore Vidal Needless to say, there is no character or event in this book which bears anything but a fortuitous resemblance to any real person or occurrence. Leonardo Sciascia 265. SCIASCIA, LEONARDO. Mafia Vendetta. New York: Knopf, 1964. First American edition. Translated by Archibald Colquhoun and Arthur Oliver. The author’s first book to appear in English. From Sciascia’s series of detective novels: Captain Bellodi arrives from Milan to investigate a murder in Sicily and demonstrates why the Mafia refer to police as la sonnambola, the sleepwalker. Fine in dustwrapper with a tiny nick on the rear panel. $125.00 266. SCIASCIA, LEONARDO. The Council of Egypt. London: Cape, 1966. First English edition. Translated by Adrienne Foulke. And from his historical novels: Palermo in the late 18th century and the struggle between a priest and a lawyer. Fine in dustwrapper. $100.00 267. SCIASCIA, LEONARDO. A Man’s Blessing. New York: Harper and Row, 1968. First American edition. Translated by Adrienne Foulke. Another Mafia murder, now better known as To Each His Own, the title of its second English edition. Fne in dustwrapper. $75.00 268. SCIASCIA, LEONARDO. Salt in the Wound. New York: Orion, 1969. First American edition. Translated by Judith Green. And non-fiction: eight pieces on the history and mores of Regalpetra, a composite Sicilian town or, according to the author, “[a] book which probes the wounds of past and present and develops as the history of the continuous defeat of reason and of those who have been personally overcome and annihilated in that defeat.” Together with Death of the Inquisitor, an episode from the Inquisition during the 17th century. Fine in dustwrapper. $125.00 269. SCIASCIA, LEONARDO. Equal Danger. New York: Harper and Row, 1973. First American edition. Translated by Adrienne Foulke. Set in an unnamed country and featuring a number of recognisable murders and intrigues. Basis for Illustrious Corpses directed by Francesco Rosi. Fine in dustwrapper. $75.00 270. SCIASCIA, LEONARDO. Equal Danger. London: Cape, 1974. First English edition. Offsetting to prelims, else fine in dustwrapper. $75.00 276. SETH, VIKRAM. An Equal Music. London: Phoenix House, 1999. First English edition. SIGNED BY THE AUTHOR. Uncorrected proof copy. Pictorial wrappers. Fine. $45.00 271. SCIASCIA, LEONARDO. One Way or Another. New York: Harper and Row, 1977. First American edition. Translated by Adrienne Foulke, illustrations by Kathy Jacobi. A murder at a retreat in a former monastery now hotel; Sciascia’s last fictional thriller. Spots of foxing to foredge, else near fine in very good dustwrapper. $45.00 277. SETH, VIKRAM. An Equal Music. London: Phoenix House, 1999. First English edition. SIGNED BY THE AUTHOR. A triangular love story framed by European musical capitals. Fine in dustwrapper reworking the elements and layout from the cover of the proof copy. $60.00 272. SCIASCIA, LEONARDO. The Day of the Owl and Equal Danger. Manchester: Carcanet, 1984. First omnibus and second English editions of both these titles, The Day of the Owl [Il giorno della civetta in Italian] previously published as Mafia Vendetta twenty years earlier. Afterword by Frank Kermode. A couple of marks to half title, else fine in dustwrapper. $45.00 273. SCIASCIA, LEONARDO. Sicilian Uncles. Manchester: Carcanet, 1986. First English edition. Translated by N.S.Thompson. Four historical Sicilian stories set during 1848, the Spanish Civil War, the Allied invasion and the death of Stalin respectively; first published in Italian in 1958. Spots of foxing to foredge, else fine in dustwrapper lightly sunned on spine. $45.00 SCIASCIA, LEONARDO. See Pier Paolo Pasolini and Sicily 274. SEMPRUN, JORGE. Literature and Life. New York:Viking, 1997. First American edition. The autobiography of the Spanish writer and politician, scriptwriter for Resnais, Costa-Gavras, and Joseph Losey, and aiming to exorcise his three years in Buchenwald concentration camp. Fine in dustwrapper. $35.00 275. SENDAK, MAURICE. The Miami Giant by Arthur Yorinks. New York: HarperCollins, 1995. First American edition. Illustrations by Sendak. Among other things, a reworking of the Christopher Columbus story. Square qto. Fine in dustwrapper. $35.00 278. SEVERIN, TIM. Viking. London: Macmillan, 2005. First English editions. 3vols. Odinn’s Child, Sworn Brother,The Heroes of the North Live On, EACH VOLUME SIGNED BY THE AUTHOR. The explorer and historian’s first novel: a trilogy following the Viking Thorgils Leifsson’s wanderings and adventures. All fine in dustwrappers. The 3vols. $100.00 279. SHAFFER, PETER. Amadeus. London: Andre Deutsch, 1980. First English edition. Antonio Salieri steps forward. Errata slip tipped-in. Top edge dusty, else fine in dustwrapper. $85.00 280. SHARP, MARTIN. ‘Sharp Art Show’ – a Progressive Retrospective 1956-1986 (at least) etc. etc. by Martin Sharp. Sydney: Roslyn Oxley9, 1987. Dimensions, formats and prices of 97 items. A4 size, 7pp. Pictorial wrappers. Fine. $60.00 281. SHARP, MARTIN. Survey 14 – Martin Sharp. Melbourne: NGV, 1981. Essay by Robert Lindsay. A4 size, 6pp., illustrated. Pictorial wrappers, stapled. Fine. $35.00 282. SHEET MUSIC. The King’s Breakfast, music by H.Fraser-Simson and lyrics by A.A. Milne. London: Methuen and Ascherberg, Hopwood and Crew, 1926. Second edition, first published the previous year. Illustrations by E.H. Shepard. Introduction by the lyricist and music and lyrics also to “Feed-My-Cow”. Very good in dustwrapper sunned around perimeter and with local publisher’s stamp on front panel. $75.00 283. SHEET MUSIC. Bronx Ballads by Robert N.Simon. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1927. First American edition. Music and lyrics to eleven songs by The New Yorker‘s music critic, occasional novelist and translator. Songs include "All My Wife‘s Relations“, "Big Bouncing Bertha“, "Rosenthal Ain‘t Rosenthal No More“; a full page cartoon by Harry Herschfield accompanies each song.Very good in dustwrapper chipped along edges and darkened on spine. $50.00 285. SHEET MUSIC. The Yellow Rose of Texas - the Story of a Song by Martha Anne Turner. El Paso, TX: the University of Texas at El Paso, 1971. Southwestern Studies Monograph, No.31. Music and lyrics, composition, background, editions; illustrated, 19pp. Pictorial wrappers, stapled. Fine. $20.00 SHEET MUSIC. See Australia 286. SHEPARD, SAM. Action and The Unseen Hand. London: Faber, 1975. First English edition. Two early plays from 1975 and 1969 respectively. Pictorial wrappers. Near fine. $45.00 287. SHEPARD, SAM. Cruising Paradise. New York: Knopf, 1996. First American edition. Forty short tales of charged Shepard moments. Fine in dustwrapper. $40.00 288. SICILY. The Viceroys by Federico De Roberto. London: MacGibbon and Kee, 1962. First English edition. Translated and introduced by Archibald Colquhoun, illustrations by James Boswell. Published in Italian in 1894 and, like The Leopard, concerned with an aristocratic Sicilian family at the moment of unification. Prelims and extremities foxed, else very good in dustwrapper. $60.00 289. SICILY. Pirandello - a Biography by Gaspare Giudice. London: Oxford University Press, 1975. First English edition. The life of the prolific Sicilian novelist, playwright and short story writer who, like Lampedusa, spent his professional life outside Sicily. Fine in near fine dustwrapper. $45.00 284. SHEET MUSIC. Aeroplane Jelly Song, [music and lyrics by Albert Lenertz]. No publication details, sponsored by “Traders Tonic Tune Sessions” [c.1935], and with a large jelly surrounded by pieces of fruit on the cover rather than the young boy looking wistfully at a packet of the jelly crystals. Single sheet, 24 x 32.5cms., folded once to make 4pp.Very good. $35.00 290. SICILY. The Last Leopard - a Life of Giuseppe di Lampedusa by David Gilmour. London: Quartet Books, 1988. First English edition. The life of the famous Sicilian novelist –childhood, military service, life in Rome and final return to Palermo. Pages evenly tanned, else fine in dustwrapper. $40.00 291. SICILY. Sicily as Metaphor, conversations between Leonardo Sciascia and Marcello Padovani. Marlboro,VT: The Marlboro Press, 1994. First American edition. Five long conversations – biographical, Sicily, the Mafia, “the writer’s truth” and “concerning power, Communist power especially” – with Sciascia, recorded in the late 1970s and first published in France in 1979. Fine in dustwrapper. $45.00 SICILY. See Luigi Pirandello and Leonardo Sciascia SIGNED BOOKS BY. Lisa Alther, Ray Bradbury, Sonja Bullaty (under Josef Sudek), Peter Carey,William Corbett (Philip Guston), Richard Ford, Nicolas Freeling, Alex Gildzen, Janet Gleeson, Edward Gorey (Bookselling), Francine du Plessix Gray, James Hanley, Lian Hearn, Joyce Johnson (Francis Ponge), Spud Johnson, Alice Kaplan (Louis-Ferdinand Céline), R.B. Kitaj (T.S.Eliot), Kerwin Maegraith (Building), Justin Schiller (Edward Lear), Haldane MacFall, Mabel Norman (Ezra Pound), Sharon Olds,Vikram Seth, Tim Severin, Martin Sharp (Richard Neville), Thomas Staley (Italo Svevo), Frances Steloff (Bookselling), Pramoedya Ananta Toer, Bev Turner (Eucalyptus), Richard Wilbur (Alexander Calder), Jonathan Williams and William Carlos Williams 292. SILKO, LESLIE MARMON. Almanac of the Dead. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1991. First American edition. Native Americans’ contemporary America, the author’s second novel. Fine in dustwrapper. $40.00 293. SIMENON, GEORGES. Chit of a Girl. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1949. First English edition. Two novels: Le Marie du Port (published 1938) becomes Chit of a Girl and Cours d’Assises (1941) Justice.Very good in dustwrapper with 5/- sticker obscuring original price. $60.00 294. SIMENON, GEORGES. The Stain on the Snow. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1953. First English edition. France during the Occupation, originally published as La Neige était sale (1948).Very good in dustwrapper. $60.00 295. SIMENON, GEORGES. The Outlaw. New York: Harcourt, Brace and Jovanovich, 1987. First American edition. originally published as L’Outlaw in 1941. Review copy with publisher’s slip and publicity portrait, 17 x 12cms., of Simenon laid in. Fine in dustwrapper. $45.00 296. SIMS, GEORGE. A Life in Catalogues. Philadelphia, PA: Holmes Publishing Co., 1994. First American edition. Twelve essays, subjects include: his own catalogues (with illustrations), Ernest Dowson, Charlotte Mew, “Cyril Connolly as a Customer”, Christopher Millard’s catalogues and thoughts and details on B.Traven. Fine in dustwrapper with telling photographs of the author before and after 40 years of bookselling. 650 copies. $60.00 297. SINGER, ISAAC BASHEVIS. The Wicked City. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1973. First American edition. Illustrations by Leonard Everett Fisher. Singer’s version for children of the Sodom and Gomorrah story. Small qto. Fine in dustwrapper. $60.00 298. SINGER, ISAAC BASHEVIS. Nobel Lecture. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1979. First American edition. The author’s Nobel lecture in English and Yiddish, the Prize Citation, a critical work on Singer and his own “Why I Write for Children”. Fine in dustwrapper. $45.00 299. SINGER, ISAAC BASHEVIS. Shadows on the Hudson. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1998. First American edition. Jewish refugees in post World War Two New York. Fine in dustwrapper. $45.00 Ten years, 10 books. Each book 30 chapters, 300 chapters in all. Every one centred on the same group of middle-aged, mostly unprepossessing policemen in Stockholm‘s National Homicide Department. ...Their mission – or "the project“ as the authors call it – is to hold up a mirror to social problems in 1960s Sweden. ...The books are set in an era when everyone smoked; there were no mobile phones, or DNA samples, or the internet. .. I wonder if the society they feared has come to pass. "Yes, all of it,“ she replies. "Everything we feared happened, faster. People think of themselves not as human beings but consumers.The market rules and it was not that obvious in the 1960s, but you could see it coming.“ Louise France and Maj Sjöwall, 2009. 304. SJÖWALL, MAJ and PER WAHLÖÖ. The Terrorists. New York: Pantheon, 1976. First American edition. The last Martin Beck, completed shortly before Per Wahlöö’s death. Fine in dustwrapper. $60.00 300. SJÖWALL, MAJ and PER WAHLÖÖ. The Man Who Went Up in Smoke. New York: Pantheon, 1969. First American edition. The second of the ten Martin Beck novels and third to appear in English. Fine in near fine dustwrapper with a tiny mark on the front panel. $85.00 306. SPAIN. The War in Spain by Ramón Sender. London: Faber and Faber, 1937. First English edition. A first hand account. Fine in very good dustwrapper chipped at edges and crown of spine. $150.00 305. SOCIAL CREDIT. The Next War or The Alternative by A.E. Linney, Ex 44th Batt. A.I.F. North Bondi, NSW: the author, 1933. General thoughts, quotations, facts and fallacies, aphorisms and recent history of war, banking, politics, all leading into an endorsement of Major Douglas’ Social Credit philosophy. Printed wrappers, stapled. Front cover almost detached, edges chipped, internally clean. Good. $35.00 301. SJÖWALL, MAJ and PER WAHLÖÖ. Murder at the Savoy. New York: Pantheon, 1971. First American edition. The sixth Martin Beck to be published and appear in English. Fine in near fine dustwrapper with a couple of tiny marks on the rear panel. $85.00 302. SJÖWALL, MAJ and PER WAHLÖÖ. The Fire Engine That Disappeared. Newton Abbot, Devon: Crime Fiction Book Club, 1973. Second English edition, published by Gollancz in 1972. The fifth Martin Beck. Fine in dustwrapper. $35.00 303. SJÖWALL, MAJ and PER WAHLÖÖ. The Locked Room. New York: Pantheon, 1973. First American edition. The eighth Martin Beck. Fine in dustwrapper with a stamp promoting Stuart Rosenberg’s American movie version featuring Walter Matthau as Sgt. Jake Martin, aka Beck. $60.00 307. STAFFORD, JEAN. Children Are Bored on Sunday. New York: Harcourt, Brace and Company, 1953. First American edition. Ten stories, including “The Interior Castle”, her most famous story, concerned with the period in hospital after a car accident caused by Robert Lowell, her first husband. Fine in dustwrapper with slight wear at one tip. $75.00 308. (STAFFORD, JEAN.) The Interior Castle - the Art and Life of Jean Stafford by Ann Hulbert. New York: Knopf, 1992. First American edition. Review copy with publisher‘s slip laid in. Fine in dustwrapper. $40.00 311. SVEVO, ITALO. A Life. New York: Knopf, 1963. First American edition. Svevo’s first novel originally published in Italy in 1892. Fine in very good dustwrapper, designed by Milton Glaser, darkened on the spine and around the perimeter. $40.00 309. (SUDEK, JOSEF.) Sudek by Sonja Bullaty. New York: Clarkson N. Potter, 1978. First American edition. INSCRIBED BY SONJA BULLATY. The first monograph on the Czech photographer: 76 plates, essay and memoir, autobiographical piece by Sudek, chronology and notes on the plates. Qto. Fine in dustwrapper. $150.00 312. SVEVO, ITALO. James Joyce. San Francisco: City Lights Books [1968]. Second American edition. Originally published as a keepsake by New Directions in 1950. Text of Svevo’s talk delivered in Milan in 1927 and translated by Stanislaus Joyce, the subject’s brother. Pictorial wrappers. Spine darkened, else fine. $20.00 Naming things has something to do with human awareness, with the separation of the entire world from you. So with the Seascapes, I was thinking about the most ancient of human impressions.The time when man first named the world around him. Hiroshi Sugimoto 313. (SVEVO, ITALO.) Essays on Italo Svevo, edited by Thomas F. Staley. Tulsa, OK: the University of Tulsa, 1969. First American edition. INSCRIBED BY THE EDITOR IN 1973. Eight essays on Svevo’s literary career, the first in English, and Inferiority, a play written by Svevo in 1921. Pictorial wrappers. Fine. $25.00 310. SUGIMOTO, HIROSHI. 7 Days / 7 Nights. New York: Gagosian Gallery, 2008. First American edition. Catalogue of the 14 images from the photographer’s famous series of Seascapes. One sheet, 23 x 252cms., folded accordion style to make 18pp., and with the 14 colour reproductions (each 23 x 27.5cms.) printed on rectos and versos; tipped into an oblong qto binding of grey linen and printed paper covered boards. All fine. $175.00 314. SVEVO, ITALO. Further Confessions of Zeno. London: Secker and Warburg, 1969. First English edition. The surviving fragment of the sequel to Svevo’s best known work (61pp.) and three other pieces. Prelims and extremities foxed.Very good in dustwrapper. $30.00 315. (SVEVO, ITALO.) Memoir of Italo Svevo by Livia Veneziani Svevo. Marlboro,VT: Marlboro, 1990. First American paperback edition. Originally published in Trieste in 1950, this is the text of the second revised edition published in Milan in 1958. Literary history and memoir by Svevo’s wife. Pictorial wrappers. Near fine. $20.00 316. SWIMMING. Start Your Youngster and Teach Yourself to Swim the Easy Way by Leroy Kylars. [Taringa, Qld: the author, 1956]. Beginning with showers at 2 months, followed by illustrated step by step instructions, and published in the year of the Melbourne Olympics, 16pp. Pictorial wrappers, stapled. Near fine. $35.00 317. SYDNEY. Skinny’s Taxi by J.W. Heming. Sydney: Currawong [c.1945]. First Australian edition. The second of Skinny’s adventures, a change of career after Skinny the Fixer; from the publisher’s series of 9d novels. Printed wrappers, stapled. Fine. $45.00 318. TANIZAKI, JUNICHIRÕ. Childhood Years: a Memoir. New York: Kodansha, 1988. First American edition. Memories of Tokyo at the end of the 19th and early 20th centuries. Fine in dustwrapper. $40.00 In these days of stress, when Australia‘s very existence depends upon the nature‘s war effort, which means fundamentally the efficiency of every individual Australian, no matter what his or her occupation, no one can afford the luxury of ill-health, and so dental disease becomes an enemy within, to be fought with every weapon in our power. Joan K. Savage, B.D.S., Director of the Australian Dental Association. 319. TEETH. Healthy Mouths. Sydney: Australian Dental Association, 1943. Description, functions and stages in the life of teeth; illnesses, cleaning, preventative practices, diet; though somewhere short of the "enemy within“ of Dr. Savage‘s wartime claim; 32pp. Pictorial wrappers, stapled. Small annotation on rear cover, else very good. $35.00 320. (TEMPLE, SHIRLEY.) How I Raised Shirley Temple by Her Mother as told to Mary Sharon. Akron, OH: Saalfield Publishing, nd. Reprinted from Silver Screen. Biography from birth to age seven of, according to the title page, “the baby who captured the world”. Is this the youngest person ever to generate a biography, even one of this nature? Illustrated. Small qto. Pictorial wrappers. Mark to top of front cover, else fine. $35.00 321. TEMPLARS. The New Knighthood – a History of the Order of the Temple by Malcolm Barber. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1994. First English edition. Suppressed in 1312, archive lost in the 16th century; an “after-history” from the Templars founding in 1119 and with the aim of explaining its mysteries and separating off the conspiracy theories which have dogged the Order for 700 years. Fine in dustwrapper. $50.00 322. TOER, PRAMOEDYA ANANTA. Child of All Nations. New York: Morrow, 1991 First American edition. SIGNED BY THE AUTHOR. Translated by Max Lane. The final volume of the Buru Quartet. Fine in dustwrapper. $200.00 323. TOLSTOY, TATIANA. The Tolstoy Home – the Diaries of Tatiana Tolstoy. London: Harvill Press, 1951. Second impression. The diaries of the novelist’s eldest daughter, begun on November 11, 1878 (at age twelve) and the last entry on April 6, 1911. Offsetting to prelims, spots of foxing to extremities. Very good in dustwrapper. $45.00 324. TREES. The Junior Tree Warden. Asquith, NSW: Tree Wardens’ League, 1960. Issue No.13 which begins with their manifesto, “This League exists for the purpose of assisting teachers to train Australian children in a true understanding of their civic responsibilities by an appreciation of their own tree flora. In this way it is hoped that a new generation will arise, conscious of the beauty of nature around them, with a consequent desire to conserve what remains of the flora and to make a world lovelier to dwell in by the presence of more and still more trees.” and followed by 100pp. of good practices, tips and keys to identifying trees. Pictorial wrappers, stapled.Very good. $20.00 Diana Trilling Dies at 150.Widow of Distinguished Professor and Literary Critic Lionel Trilling. Diana Trilling speculating on The New York Times’ headline for her obituary. 325. TRILLINGS. The Beginning of the Journey – the Marriage of Diana and Lionel Trilling by Diana Trilling. New York: Harcourt, Brace and Company, 1993. First American edition. Trilling’s memoir of her marriage, literary New York through the 1930s to 1970s, and a rebuttal of those who fixed her as a sidekick to her husband of 46 years. Fine in dustwrapper. $35.00 326. TRUFFAUT, FRANÇOIS. The Adventures of Antoine Doinel. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1971. First American edition. Work notes, treatments, final screenplays for The 400 Blows, Love at Twenty, Stolen Kisses and Bed and Board. Images from the movies. Edgewear.Very good in dustwrapper creased at edges. $45.00 327. TRUFFAUT, FRANÇOIS. The Films in My Life. London: Allen Lane, 1980. First English edition. Collects Truffaut’s reviews and essays with thoughts and judgements on most French and American directors; dedicated to Jacques Rivette. Fine in dustwrapper. $45.00 Childhood: I still retain from that time a great anxiety, and the movies are bound up with an anxiety, with an idea of something clandestine. François Truffaut 328. TRUFFAUT, FRANÇOIS. Truffaut by Truffaut, texts and documents compiled by Dominique Rabourdin. New York: Abrams, 1987. First American edition. Pictorial biography constructed from writings, remarks, interviews by and with Truffaut; and 500 illustrations from his life and movies. Qto. Fine in like dustwrapper. $45.00 329. TRUFFAUT, FRANÇOIS. Letters. London: Faber and Faber, 1989. First English edition. Edited by Gilles Jacob and Claude de Givray, translated and edited by Gilbert Adair, foreword by Jean-Luc Godard. Letters to Eric Rohmer, Robert Lachenay, Luc Moullet, Lotte Eisner, Alfred Hitchcock, Helen Scott, the book’s dedicatee, and many others; 588pp., photographs and drawings. Fine in dustwrapper. $40.00 330. (TRUFFAUT, FRANÇOIS). Truffaut - a Biography by Antoine De Baecque and Serge Toubiana. New York: Knopf, 1999. First American edition. Fine in dustwrapper. $35.00 331. UPFIELD, ARTHUR W. Valley of Smugglers. Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1960. First American edition. Published as Bony and the Kelly Gang in Australia and England; Bony tangles with Mike Conway and Red Kelly, descendant of .... Fine in very good dust jacket chipped at spine ends and along folds. $100.00 332. UPFIELD, ARTHUR W. The House of Cain. San Francisco: Dennis McMillan, 1983. Second American edition, first published in 1929. Upfield’s first book, first printing of the Dennis McMillan edition and the first book from his singular press. Introduction by Philip José Farmer identifying this as the author’s “pre-osteomantic novel”. Endpapers by William L. McMillan; dustwrapper, establishing the immediately identifiable McMillan house style, by George Barr. Fine in dustwrapper. 1,000 copies. $300.00 333. VAN TILBURG CLARK, WALTER. The Track of the Cat. New York: Random House, 1949. First American edition. The author’s third novel, an archetypal story of warring brothers and a predatory panther in a 19th century frontier winter. Dustwrapper by E.McKnight Kauffer. Edgewear, abrasion to front pastedown, very good in dustwrapper chipped at crown of spine, edges and missing a piece from the rear panel. $45.00 334. VERNE, JULES. Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea. New York: Crowell, 1976. First American edition of the restored and annotated edition. Introduction, restoration and annotations by Walter James Miller with 150+ reproductions of contemporary illustrations throughout. Qto. Fine in near fine dustwrapper. $50.00 TWO QUESTIONS ON THE WAR IN VIETNAM ANSWERED BY THE AUTHORS OF SEVERAL NATIONS. 335. VIETNAM. Authors Take Sides on Vietnam, edited by Cecil Woolf and John Bagguley. London: Peter Owen, 1967. First English edition. Respondents include W.H.Auden, A.J.Ayer, Martin Boyd, Russell Braddon, Italo Calvino, Doris Lessing, Philip Roth, Simon Raven, Christina Stead, Olivia Manning, Hannah Arendt and 248 others. Very good in dustwrapper. $50.00 336. VOLPONI, PAOLO. My Troubles Began. New York: Grossman, 1964. First American edition. The author’s first novel after three collections of poetry. Fine in dustwrapper. $45.00 337. VOLPONI, PAOLO. The Worldwide Machine. London: Calder and Boyars, 1969. First English edition. The author’s second novel. Near fine in very good dustwrapper rubbed on rear panel. $35.00 A SIX LETTERS A DAY WOMAN DURING HER ADULT LIFE 338. WHARTON, EDITH. The Letters of Edith Wharton, edited by R.W.B. Lewis and Nancy Lewis. New York: Scribner’s, 1988. First American edition. Selected from the 4,000+ surviving letters. Fine in dustwrapper. $45.00 339. (WHARTON, EDITH.) Edith Wharton an Extraordinary Life: an Illustrated Biography by Eleanor Dwight. New York: Abrams, 1994. First American edition. Travel, gardening, architecture, art: American money and literature from the 19th into the 20th century. Qto. Fine in dustwrapper. $50.00 340. (WHARTON, EDITH.) Edith Wharton in Provence by Richard Jones. Menlo Park, CA: Occasional Works, 2003. First American edition and the third of the publisher’s series of chapbooks. The American writer’s winter home. Printed wrappers. Fine. 100 copies. $30.00 341. (WHARTON, EDITH.) Edith Wharton by Hermione Lee. London: Chatto and Windus, 2007. First American edition. The latest life by the English critic and biographer. Fine in dustwrapper. $40.00 342. WILLIAMS, BILLY. Our Hero No.III. Canberra: [the author] 1947. Second revised edition of Brumby Land, No.1, published the previous year, by the self-proclaimed "Australasia‘s Leading Poet“. "Our Hero is an original character, Australasian by birth, who lives to love his country, who fought on desert sand-fought in the jungle (North), with one objective in mind VICTORY FOR THE ALLIES, that the shores of FREE AUSTRALIA, may never fall into the wrong hands ...“ Twenty-one poems. Pictorial wrappers, stapled. A couple of marks to cover, else fine. $35.00 After all these ruinous decades writing “poems”, I have had to invent a form that doesn’t seem like poetry at all: the “Metafour”. It’s crazy, it’s nonsense, it’s the anti-poem, it’s the impurepoem etc. But it strikes me that it can be “read” dammit, because the line is strangely fresh. Count it out: four words in every line.You must be kidding? Jonathan Williams 343. WILLIAMS, JONATHAN. Metafours For Mysophobes. Twickenham, Middlesex and Wakefield, West Yorkshire: North and South, 1990. First English trade edition. INSCRIBED BY THE AUTHOR TO CHARLES HENRI FORD AND INDRA TAMANG BY THE AUTHOR IN THE YEAR OF PUBLICATION. Pictorial wrappers. Top edge slightly sunned, else fine. $85.00 [The Knife of the Times is] all about people I knew in the town, portraits of people who were my friends. I was impressed by the picture of the times, depression years, the plight of the poor . . . I wrote it down as I saw it.The times - that was the knife that was killing them. – I Wanted To Write A Poem by William Carlos Williams 344. WILLIAMS, WILLIAM CARLOS. The Knife of the Times and Other Stories. Ithaca, NY: The Dragon Press [1932]. First American edition. SIGNED BY THE AUTHOR. The poet’s first book of short stories, Offsetting to prelims from dustwrapper flaps, else fine in dustwrapper darkening on the spine. 500 copies. $1,500.00 345. WILLIAMS, WILLIAM CARLOS. I Wanted to Write a Poem. Boston: Beacon Press, 1958. First American edition. Sub-titled “The Autobiography of the Works of a Poet”, reported and edited by Edith Heal. Fine in very good dustwrapper with a short closed tear and tape bleed on front panel. $75.00 346. WILLIAMS, WILLIAM CARLOS. Paterson: Revised edition. New York: New Directions, 1992. First American edition. Revised edition prepared by Christopher MacGowan. Collects the five Paterson volumes, Book VI, notes and annotations and an introductory statement by Williams on the poem. Fine in dustwrapper. $60.00 347. WOOL. The Wool Trade - a Collection of Sketches by E. Pearce. Brisbane [the author, c.1914]. One hundred and ten caricatures and portraits of individuals from the Australian Wool Trade; all captioned, most Sydney or Melbourne and a small no. from northern England. Small qto. Original maroon cloth, title stamped in gold. Near fine. $85.00 348. WORLD WARS. The Dardanelles – Colour Sketches from Gallipoli, written and drawn by Norman Wilkinson. London: Longmans, Green and Co., 1915. First English edition. Thirty-six colour plates and b&w reproductions of line drawings. Pictorial cloth. Top edge gilt, tissue guards for colour plates, Covers marked, edgewear, offsetting to prelims, foxing to text, good only; all plates clean. $85.00 349. WORLD WARS. The Jew in Prophecy Especially in the Light of War Happenings by L.Sale-Harrison. Sydney: The Australian Baptist Publishing House, 1919. First Australian edition. Jewish history as portrayed by the Bible leading into documenting the manner in which Britain planned to establish a Jewish state in Palestine; 70pp. Printed wrappers. Missing small pieces at crown and base of spine, scattered foxing, covers marked. Good. $45.00 VERBAL BARRAGES LIMITED TO THREE MINUTES 350. WORLD WARS. Smoko – Commonwealth Bank Exservicemen’s Reunion, 12th July 1947. Reunion for the bank staff who served in both World Wars, held at Sydney Town Hall. Program for the evening, menu, speakers, performers, lyrics to 16 standards to be performed on the night, cartoons, space for autographs, and the above directive; 14pp. Pictorial wrappers, stapled. Rear cover marked, near fine. $60.00 352. ZINFANDEL. Zinfandel Nouveau Chez Panisse. [Berkeley]: Chez Panisse, 1978. Menu for the week of December 5th to 9th 1978, in honour of winemaker Walter Schug of Joseph Phelps Vinyards, Napa Valley. Set menu of four courses, changing daily, costing between $15.00 and $20.00 per person (including a fifth of “Zin” per couple) from the famous Berkeley restaurant, often cited as the birthplace of contemporary California cuisine. Broadside measuring 42 x 20cms., letterpress printed in two colours. Fine. $60.00 353. ZOLA, ÉMILE. Zola: Photographer by Francois Emile-Zola dn Massin. New York: Henry Holt, 1988. First American edition. 200+ reproductions of photographs by the great French novelist – portraits, street scenes, buildings, trains and railways – interspersed with extracts from Zola‘s correspondence and diaries, assembled by Francois, his grandson. Qto. Review copy with publisher‘s slip laid in. Fine in dustwrapper. $45.00 351. WRIGHT, JUDITH. The Day the Mountains Played. Brisbane: Jacaranda Press, 1960. First Australian edition. Illustrated by Annette Wright, the author’s sister. Pictorial boards. Brief contemporary gift inscription, one corner bumped.Very good. muir 8182. $30.00