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The Last Thing the Revered Mahatma Gandhi Ever Wrote Known to Be in Private Hands

The Last Thing the Revered Mahatma Gandhi Ever Wrote Known to Be in Private Hands by Mahatma Gandhi

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Seller: The Raab Collection
Title
The Last Thing the Revered Mahatma Gandhi Ever Wrote Known to Be in Private Hands
Author
Mahatma Gandhi
Seller
The Raab Collection (United States)
Description
22/01/1948. This fragment states that “leaders doing the [right thing] was proving infectious”Mahatma Gandhi was assassinated on January 30, 1948. Gandhi had been an astute political campaigner who fought for and won Indian independence from British rule, and championed the rights of the Indian poor. His example of non-violent protest set the example for Martin Luther King and others, and is still revered throughout the world today.Gandhi’s biography states: “He stopped at the thresholds of the huts of the thousands of dispossessed, dressed like one of their own. He spoke to them in their own language. Here was living truth at last, and not only quotations from books, for this reason the Mahatma [Great Soul], the name given to him by the people of India, is his real name. Who else has felt like him that all Indians are his own flesh and blood? When love came to the door of India, that door was opened wide. At Gandhi's call India blossomed forth to new greatness, just as once before, in earlier times, when Buddha proclaimed the truth of fellow-feeling and compassion among all living creatures.”In early September 1947, Gandhi moved to Delhi to help stem the rioting there and in the neighboring province of East Punjab. The rioting had come in the wake of the British partition of India into a largely Hindu India and largely Muslim Pakistan. The creation of the new independent dominions of India and Pakistan involved large, chaotic transfers of population between them, and there was violence and uprooted populations. Some Hindus saw the sufferings of Hindu refugees escaping from Pakistan as unbearable.Meanwhile, by late 1947, India and Pakistan were already at war over the province of Kashmir. The government of India, led by Congress Party leaders, had withheld a payment due to Pakistan in January 1948 because it did not want to finance Pakistan, which was at war with India at that time. Gandhi opposed the decision to freeze the payment as inconsistent with agreement, and on January 13, 1948, went on a fast-unto-death to pressure the Indian government to release the payment to Pakistan. The Indian government, yielding to Gandhi, reversed this decision, and Hindu extremists interpreted this sequence of events to be a case of Gandhi controlling power and hurting India and Hindus. The very day Gandhi went on his hunger strike the plot to assassinate him began to be planned. The hunger strike ended January 18.On January 20, 1948, two days after the termination of the fast, an attempt was made to throw a bomb at Gandhi as he was addressing a prayer meeting in the Birla House compound. The bomb exploded some fifty yards away from where he was sitting, but nobody was injured. A Hindu youth, described as a refugee from the West Punjab, was arrested and an unexploded hand-grenade was recovered from his pocket. The explosion was loud enough to be heard at a far-off distance. Gandhi remained unruffled. When Gandhi spoke, he referred to his statement that he might now proceed to visit Pakistan. But that, he explained, could only happen, if the Pakistan Government were convinced that he was a man of peace and friend of the Muslims and would, therefore, like him to go to Pakistan. He would, however, in any case, have to wait, till the doctors declared him fit to undertake the journey. This willingness to go to Pakistan further angered Hindu extremists. He also stated, referring to the sufferings of the Hindu and the Sikh refugees, that Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru was doing all that was possible in order to bring them speedy relief.Gandhi’s biography offers this description: “Speaking after prayers on January 21, Gandhi referred to the previous day’s bomb explosion. He had been receiving anxious inquiries and praise for being unruffled during the accident. He thought that it was military practice and, therefore, nothing to worry about. He had not realized, till after the prayers, that it was a bomb explosion and that the bomb was meant against him. God only knew how he would have behaved in front of a bomb aimed at him and exploding. Therefore, he deserved no praise….What he wanted to convey was that no one should look down upon the misguided young man who had thrown the bomb. He probably looked upon the speaker [Gandhi] as an enemy of Hinduism. After all, had not the Gita said that whenever there was an evil-minded person damaging religion, God sent some one to put an end to his life?“The youth should realize that those who differed from him were not necessarily evil…Continuing he said, that some Sikh friends came and said that he should not think that the Sikhs had anything to do with the bomb explosion. He knew that the youth was not a Sikh. But what did it matter, whether he was a Sikh or a Hindu or a Muslim? He wished well to all perpetrators. He had told the Inspector-General of Police also, not to harass the youth in any way. They should try to win him over and convert him to right thinking and doing. He hoped that the youth as well as his guides would realize their error. For, it was a wrong done to Hinduism and to the country. He expected the audience to go on with the prayers, in spite of bomb explosions or a shower of bullets.”The next day, January 22, was the first time after the fast that Gandhi was able to walk to the prayer ground. He said in his prayer speech that he was slowly gaining strength and, God willing, he hoped to return to his normal health before long. Again quoting from his biography, Gandhi’s remarks were in part related to government leaders setting the right example. The fragment offered here is highlighted in bold.Autograph manuscript fragment, written on scrap paper, being edits Gandhi was making for publication of his January 22 speech. It is undated but it is after January 22, so in the last 8 days of his life. Gandhi said that a friend had written to him that although Pandit Nehru and other ministers and the officials might lodge some refugees in their houses, that would not even touch the fringe of the refugee problem. The speaker agreed that the ministers and the officials together could not house more than a few thousands at the most. The virtue of the offer consisted not in the ""number so to be accommodated, but in the fact that the example of the leaders doing the act was proving infectious."" All civilized people, Gandhi went on to say, would appreciate and value such acts of leaders of men.8 days later, he was killed by an assassin.Our research cannot find any example in Gandhi’s hand, whether letter, manuscript, or document, dated after this one having reached the public market. This may well be the last thing Gandhi ever wrote in private hands.
Theodore Roosevelt's Original Handheld Manuscript Victory Message on Election Night 1898, The Key Moment in His Rise, As His Election As Governor Was Assured

Theodore Roosevelt's Original Handheld Manuscript Victory Message on Election Night 1898, The Key Moment in His Rise, As His Election As Governor Was Assured by Theodore Roosevelt

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Seller: The Raab Collection
Title
Theodore Roosevelt's Original Handheld Manuscript Victory Message on Election Night 1898, The Key Moment in His Rise, As His Election As Governor Was Assured
Author
Theodore Roosevelt
Seller
The Raab Collection (United States)
Description
08/11/1898. ""I shall do all in my power to redeem every promise I have made, expressed or implied…I believe I can best serve the Republican Party by doing everything I can to help it serve the state. I shall strive to administer the office of governor in the interests of the whole people. It is by so doing that I can best show my appreciation of the support given me by the independents and Democrats…""[embed size=""full""]https://player.vimeo.com/511644882[/embed] Wrote Edward F. O'Keefe, CEO of the Theodore Roosevelt Presidential Library Foundation, of this document: ""Though his exploits in Cuba made him a global celebrity, Theodore Roosevelt’s election as New York’s governor in 1898 was hardly assured. The Rough Rider reformer Republican won by less than 18,000 votes. The campaign was hard-fought. Democrats questioned his citizenship and legal right to run for governor since he paid taxes in Washington, D.C., not New York prior to his military service. I write in The Loves of Theodore Roosevelt about how TR’s younger sister countered the offensive by secretly giving her brother’s wartime letters to the press to 'further fan the flames of her brother’s celebrity.' This remarkable document reminds us there is a thin line between victory and defeat. Had Theodore lost that very close election in 1898, his political career would have been over before it reignited. TR knew he owed his victory to more than just Republicans: 'I shall strive to administer the office of the governor in the interests of the whole people. It is by so doing that I can best show my appreciation of the support given to me by the independents and Democrats….'""At the start of Roosevelt's political career, he served three years as a member of the New York State Assembly. His next post was as a member of the U.S. Civil Service Commission (of which he later became head). In 1895 he undertook the direction of the New York City Police Department. Then in 1897 he joined President McKinley's administration as assistant secretary of the Navy. None of these offices were stepping stones to a major political career, nor were they ones that placed the holder in the spotlight.While in the Navy Department he had the foresight to see the Spanish-American War coming, and when it broke out in 1898, he found active service in Cuba as lieutenant colonel of a regiment of volunteer cavalry that he himself had raised from an unlikely combination of sons of prominent families in the East and hunters and cowboys in the West. He won great fame as leader of these - the Rough-Riders - the most renowned unit in the Spanish-American War. News of their exploits dominated the newspaper headlines during the conflict, and the men (and foremost their leader Roosevelt) were widely acclaimed upon their return home from Cuba. The Rough Riders were mustered out of the U.S. service in New York on September 15, 1898. At that time, New York was the most populous state in the nation, and it had the most electoral votes. Business and industry were headquartered there, and the most influential press were concentrated there.  Its governor was in a position to exercise power, to regularly obtain visibility on a national scale, and for an ambitious man, to be considered as a serious presidential candidate. TR appreciated all this, and back in New York, he immediately announced his candidacy for governor. With the gubernatorial election just two months away, he planned his campaign with astuteness and cleverness. Tom Platt and the other Republican Party bosses, the men who would select the Republican nominee, were well aware of TR's popularity and saw his electability. But they also knew that TR was not a machine Republican, was known to have in mind the uprooting of Republican ""spoilsmen"", and would be hard to control.  Roosevelt went around them and approached the independent Citizens Union and suggested the nomination of a state ticket that would challenge bosses of both manor parties, and the independents liked the idea and planned to proceed. In doing this Roosevelt outmaneuvered Platt and the bosses, because the bosses realized that if Roosevelt ran as a third party candidate and divided the Republican vote, they would surely lose (which would cost them all their patronage and be even worse than having to deal with TR). So Platt met with TR, and after TR agreed to consult him on appointments to office and important policy matters, he offered Roosevelt the Republican nomination.The election was held on November 8, 1898, and it was very close. Roosevelt, who had campaigned on a promise to run a ""clean"" administration, won by just 19,000 votes out of some 1.3 million cast. But he won and his career was launched.  The night of November 8, with the returns in, TR received word of his victory and sat down to prepare a statement to reporters, one that would reach and speak to readers not only in New York but all around the country. As a newspaper reported at the time, with full transcript of TR's remarks, they were ""…said after all doubt as to his election had been removed.""This is that very statement, held by him and made to the press as the most important election of Roosevelt's life was successfully concluded. Autograph Manuscript, New York, November 8, 1898, containing his entire election night victory remarks to the press and nation. ""I appreciate the honor very deeply, and I appreciate even more deeply the responsibility involved in the honor. I shall do all in my power to redeem every promise I have made, expressed or implied. I am a good Republican, and I believe I can best serve the Republican Party by doing everything I can to help it serve the state. I shall strive to administer the office of governor in the interests of the whole people. It is by so doing that I can best show my appreciation of the support given me by the independents and Democrats who have themselves put the welfare of the state first, declining to follow those of their leaders who in this crisis either ranged themselves outright on the side of the forces of dishonesty or else supported them in effect by standing aside from the real contest."" This manuscript has been for very many years in a private collection. We understand that it first reached the market via legendary late 19th / early 20th century autograph dealer Walter Benjamin.Of course, TR's service as governor of New York led directly to his nomination for vice president of the United States in 1900, just a year and a half later, and his assumption of the presidency upon the assassination of President McKinley in September 1901. His election in 1898 was the key moment in his career.
William Eastlake Papers and Archive: Manuscripts and Letters

William Eastlake Papers and Archive: Manuscripts and Letters by EASTLAKE, William

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Seller: Between the Covers- Rare Books, Inc. ABAA
Title
William Eastlake Papers and Archive: Manuscripts and Letters
Author
EASTLAKE, William
Seller
Between the Covers- Rare Books, Inc. ABAA (United States)
Condition
Near Fine
Description
1995. Near Fine. Archive of the American author William Eastlake consisting of several original book length manuscripts, corrected proofs, and over 100 letters to him, and other associated documents. Included are corrected typescript manuscripts for five of his major novels, including the first two novels of his acclaimed Checkerboard Trilogy: *Go in Beauty* and *The Bronc People*. Among the letters are 28 from Edward Abbey, author of *The Monkey Wrench Gang*, together with multiple letters from other leading contemporary authors and personal friends, including William Van Tilburg Clark, Jim Harrison, John Nichols, Martha Gelhorn, Barry Lopez, Ray Carver, Gary Snyder, Studs Terkel, Tim O'Brien, Robert Redford, and others, all rich in literary and personal content. Larry McCaffery noted: "Back in the late 50s and early 60s, William Eastlake was single-handedly changing the scope, poetic range, thematic assumptions, and treatment of character - especially that of Native Americans - of the Western genre. His surreal, humorous, was a decisive influence on later novelists such as Larry McMurtry and Tom McGuane." It can be argued that Eastlake had an influence on Cormac McCarthy as well. Born in Brooklyn in 1917, and raised in Caldwell, New Jersey (as an infant he and his older brother Gordon were sent to Bonnie Brae, an Episcopal boarding school in nearby Liberty Corners, New Jersey). Eastlake hitchhiked across the United States and made his way to Los Angeles in the early 1940s, where he worked at the Stanley Rose bookstore: frequented by the writers Nathanael West, John Steinbeck and William Saroyan, and the artist Martha Simpson, whom he married in 1943. During the war Eastlake enlisted in the U.S. Army and was stationed at Camp Ord in California, where he was assigned to oversee draftees of Japanese ancestry into the U.S. Army. He led a battalion at the Battle of the Bulge and was awarded the Bronze Star. After the war he stayed in Europe and became an editor for the literary magazine *Essai*, to which he contributed his first published short story: "Ishimoto's Land," about his experiences with Japanese American soldiers. He lived in Paris and returned to southern California in 1950. In 1955, he and his wife purchased a ranch near Cuba, New Mexico, with four hundred acres of land, which became a mecca for several writers and artists, including Edward Abbey, Julian and Juliette Huxley, and many others whose letters are retained in the collection. At his ranch near Cuba, Eastlake wrote many of his novels set in New Mexico and the Southwest, including the manuscripts for three novels in this collection: *Go in Beauty* (1956), *The Bronc People* (1958), and *Dancers in the Scalp House* (1975). At the height of the Vietnam War Eastlake was a correspondent for *The Nation*, stationed in Vietnam (1968-69) [cf. letter from Ernie Pyle]. Eastlake also wrote war novels and political novels, of which this collection includes the manuscripts of *Castle Keep* (1965: a "Gothic mystery, savage modern satire, heroic epic" set during World War II), and *The Bamboo Bed* (1969: one of the first novels to dramatize the insanity of the Vietnam War). Eastlake's *Castle Keep*, about U.S. soldiers trying to defend a Belgian castle filled with art treasures during the Battle of the Bulge was made into a 1969 movie directed by Sydney Pollack, and starring Burt Lancaster and Peter Falk. Other collection highlights among the manuscripts include: the screenplay and two corrected typescripts (an early draft and final setting copy) of *Castle Keep*; together with corrected typescripts of *The Bamboo Bed* and *Dancers in the Scalp House*. Also notable is publisher William Bamberger's retained archive of Eastlake's short story collection: *Jack Armstrong in Tangier* (1984), consisting of typescripts, pre-publication drafts and galleys, and associated correspondence. Among the letters in the collection, most were written to Eastlake by contemporary authors in Eastlake's literary circle, and most are notable for their remarkable literary and personal content. Here is but a small taste from the 28 letters by Edward Abbey, most of which date from the mid-1970s, when his most famous novel *The Monkey Wrench Gang* was in publication: Kanab, Utah, February 22, 1971: "... I wonder if you or Doug Peacock could refer me to some of the literature on sabotage - industrial and civil, bridges, power plants, dams, etc. What I need is detailed information on techniques and materials. For a novel only - not for real. I've about decided to postpone work on my Pennsylvania agricultural Tolstoyan novel ... and do now an idea which I've had in my head for years. To be called The Monkey Wrench Gang - or maybe The Wooden Shoe Mob ... Destroy this letter. (I am 87% paranoid these days) ..." Two letters from the novelist Martha Gellhorn include reflections on Russian literature, Vietnam, Iraq, and a lengthy discussion of her relationship with Ernest Hemingway: "... As for E.H. and being an artist. I cannot separate artist from man .... I believe that the quality of the man must come through into his art. The artist is, and must be, more of an egotist than most because no one protects him in the long early stages, so he protects himself like mad ... But somehow, despite that professional deformation, the heart has to stay pretty clean or else a faint smell of corruption lingers about the work. I tried to make Ernest be something I could admire; an idiot undertaking ..." Jim Harrison's three letters include his views on writing and Edward Abbey, and four letters from Barry Lopez contain references to his current works in progress, including an essay on "the native American mind," his appearance on the Dick Cavett show, and Lopez's forthcoming collection of fiction *River Notes*. Here is what the sculptor and writer Juliette Huxley (wife of British naturalist Julian Huxley), writes in one of two remarkable letters from 1966-67: "This book of yours, Castle Keep. It is like a gothic carving, not of saints, but of men of ordinary flesh ... The words are shot with poetry, the blood blossoms and flowers as it is split. It is a strange and rare experience to read such a book, where the unique craft of the writer is disguised but transcends, the violence is made acceptable by the craft, and exploding death becomes a thing of utter beauty ... I have just finished it, and Julian read it first, as spellbound as I am." Four long letters from the novelist John Nichols, one of which includes drawings, are refreshingly obscene, especially in regard to his own work, and in a letter from 1979, Robert Redford expresses his regret that he could not make Eastlake's novel *Portrait of an Artist with Twenty-Six Horses* into a film, stating (in part): "I have long been an admirer of your writing, particularly 'Castle Keep,' and thus read 'Twenty-Six Horses'... Unfortunately, in this particular script I just couldn't see the story on screen ... I'm sorry not to be able to take on this project but I'm grateful for the chance to see material with such vision and insight. Perhaps the future will see us working together on something ..." A remarkable collection, rich in content with numerous manuscripts and letters, documenting the works and life of this important American writer. A detailed finding aid to the archive is available upon request.
Rare document of Newport Jewish leader Moses Seixas – who wrote address that elicited George Washington’s most famous statement on religious freedom and citizenship

Rare document of Newport Jewish leader Moses Seixas – who wrote address that elicited George Washington’s most famous statement on religious freedom and citizenship by MOSES SEIXAS

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Seller: Seth Kaller, Inc.
Title
Rare document of Newport Jewish leader Moses Seixas – who wrote address that elicited George Washington’s most famous statement on religious freedom and citizenship
Author
MOSES SEIXAS
Seller
Seth Kaller, Inc. (United States)
Condition
Fine
Description
Seixas' 1790 letter of welcome elicited the first president's most compelling statement on religious liberty, "to bigotry no sanction." In this 1788 receipt, Seixas signs a receipt documenting payment for carpet by William Channing, the state's new attorney general. MOSES SEIXAS. Manuscript Document Signed, to William Channing, December 18, 1788. Receipt for carpeting. 1 p., 7¼ x 4 in. Complete Transcript Newport Decr 19, 1788 William Channing Esq Bot [Bought] of Moses Seixas / 17 yds Carpeting . . . . . . . . . . .4/1 yd. £3..9. 5. Received payment In full / Moses Seixas [Docketing on verso, in another hand:] Moses Seixas Moses Mendes Seixas (1744-1809) was born in New York into a Jewish family. His father immigrated from Portugal to New York about 1730 and became a merchant. The family moved to Newport, Rhode Island, in 1765. Moses Seixas married Jochebed Levy in 1770, and they had eight children. He was one of the organizers and first cashier of the Bank of Rhode Island, which conducted business in his house until 1818. After the British occupied Newport during the Revolutionary War, Seixas remained in Newport but was among the signers of a document supporting the patriot cause. In 1790, he was the president of the Congregation Yeshuat Israel (later Touro Synagogue) in Newport. He was also a charter member and first grand master of St. John's Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons in Newport. William Channing (1751-1793) was born in Newport, Rhode Island, and graduated from the College of New Jersey (Princeton) in 1769. In 1773, he married Lucy Ellery, daughter of William Ellery, a Newport lawyer who signed the Declaration of Independence, and they had nine children. Channing was elected Attorney General of Rhode Island in 1777, and when Rhode Island ratified the U.S. Constitution in 1790, Channing became the first federal District Attorney. One of his sons was the famous Unitarian preacher William Ellery Channing (1780-1742). Historical Background From 15 Sephardic families who arrived in 1658, Newport, Rhode Island's Jewish community grew to be the largest in the colonies. Many Jews left during the Revolutionary War when Newport was occupied by the British. A significant number returned when the British left in 1779. By the time Rhode Island became a state, there were approximately 300 Jews in the thriving Newport community. Starting while on his way to New York to assume the presidency in April of 1789, George Washington received many messages from civic, fraternal and religious organizations offering congratulations, praise of his deeds in war, peace, and politics, prayers on behalf of congregations or constituents. Washington's replies justly count among his most famous pronouncements, setting a boldly inclusive tone that helped our new nation survive and expand. After the first session of the first Congress, Washington set out on a tour of the New England states, except for Rhode Island, which had yet to ratify the Constitution. It finally did so in May of 1790, and three days after the second session of Congress adjourned, Washington, Jefferson and others set out to visit Newport. On August 18, Washington and his entourage were greeted with four addresses, written as open letters, and read in a public ceremony. First the town, then from all the Christian clergy, then the Masonic order, and finally from the Hebrew Congregation. Moses Seixas, on behalf of the Congregation Kahal Kadosh Yeshuat Israel, congratulated Washington on his ascendancy to the Presidency. He invoked the language of the Revolution in arguing that Jews should be entitled to the same privileges as an American of any other religious denomination. Having been previously "deprived…of the invaluable rights of free Citizens," Seixas expressed his hopes for the success of the new "government erected by the majesty of the people, a government which to bigotry gives no sanction—to persecution no assistance; but generously affording to all liberty of conscience." Seixas' letter moved President Washington, who echoed Seixas' words, and built on them, to make his most celebrated statement on religious freedom. He responded as soon as he returned to the capital, New York, assuring the Hebrew congregation that "happily the Government of the United States, which gives to bigotry no sanction, to persecution no assistance, requires only that they who live under its protection should demean themselves as good citizens, in giving it on all occasions their effectual support. It would be inconsistent with the frankness of my character not to avow that I am pleased with your favorable opinion of my Administration, and fervent wishes for my felicity. May the Children of the Stock of Abraham, who dwell in this land, continue to merit and enjoy the good will of the other Inhabitants; while every one shall sit in safety under his own vine and fig tree, and there shall be none to make him afraid." Washington's addresses responding to religious congregations included those of Baptist, Congregational, Dutch Reformed, Episcopalian, German Lutheran, German Reformed, Jewish, Protestant, Presbyterian, Quaker, Roman Catholic, and other denominations. Today, we understand that Washington and his fellow Founding Fathers were oblivious to the realities of other kinds of oppression. Knowing what we know now, how can we still value these slave-owners' declamations on freedom? While acknowledging Washington's ownership of his full share of the universal biases of his age, we can and should still treasure his "to bigotry no sanction" letter as a powerful testament to the promise of America. In the 218 years since Washington responded to Seixas' address, has anyone come up with a better definition of the benefits and responsibilities of American citizenship? Washington's original letter was acquired by the Morris Morgenstern Foundation in 1948, and is on long-term loan to the National Museum of American Jewish History in Philadelphia. Seixas' letter to Washington is in the Library of Congress, and Seixas' retained copy was acquired by the Morgenstern Foundation in 1949 and is with Washington's letter. Condition Fine condition, with intersecting folds and slight bit of foxing.
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Poèmes by Beckett, Samuel

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$150.00
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Seller: Thomas A Goldwasser Rare Books
Title
Poèmes
Author
Beckett, Samuel
Seller
Thomas A Goldwasser Rare Books (United States)
Description
[Paris]: Les Éditions de Minuit, 1968. First edition. 2 p.l., 9-30 p., 1 l. 20 cm. Wrappers. One of 550 numbered copies from a total edition of 762 copies on Rives. Fine, unopened.
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Rona Barrett's Hollywood. April 1975. by Barrett, Rona.

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Seller: Nicholas D. Riccio Rare Books & Prints
Title
Rona Barrett's Hollywood. April 1975.
Author
Barrett, Rona.
Seller
Nicholas D. Riccio Rare Books & Prints (United States)
Description
Magazine, glossy covers, illustrated, 82 pp. A little spine and cover wear, normal aging of contents; otherwise very good plus. This is an issue that covers The Godfather Part II. Also, coverage of Linda Blair and the Earthquake film