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Étrennes plaisantes, ou Almanach nouveau contenant les plus jolies Chansons sur différens sujets comiques et sérieux; avec des proverbes chantans. Par un auteur réformé

Étrennes plaisantes, ou Almanach nouveau contenant les plus jolies Chansons sur différens sujets comiques et sérieux; avec des proverbes chantans. Par un auteur réformé by GOLD-EMBROIDERED AND PAINTED BINDING

3 to 7 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $15.00
Details
$12,500.00
( US$)
Seller: Musinsky Rare Books, Inc.
Title
Étrennes plaisantes, ou Almanach nouveau contenant les plus jolies Chansons sur différens sujets comiques et sérieux; avec des proverbes chantans. Par un auteur réformé
Author
GOLD-EMBROIDERED AND PAINTED BINDING
Seller
Musinsky Rare Books, Inc. (United States)
Description
“Au Parnasse,” et se trouve à Paris: Cuissard, 1762. 24mo (binding size 96 x 55 mm). [80] pp. Rule page borders (fore-edges cut close, some borders shaved, small hole in title). Text block stitched into a contemporary gold-embroidered case binding with two original watercolor drawings: both covers with large asymmetrical curving goldwork design couched on a gold basketwork ground, embroidered on a plain textile (visible at board edges), the design incorporating an abstract plant or cornucopia, and framing on each cover a different watercolor emblem of fidelity, painted on glazed paper (or possibly vellum): on the front cover a putto holds a bow and arrow, while a dog rests behind him, below a neat manuscript caption in majuscules, “Fidel jusqu’à la mort”; on the rear cover a blindfolded putto with his quiver on his back is led by a dog on a pink leash through a coastal landscape, with caption “La Fidelité me conduit”; the covers edged with vermeil strips, spine with sinuous couched goldwork band, edges gilt, dark purple silk liners; housed in a contemporary two-part morocco pull-off case, lined in color-blocked paper. In near-perfect condition (very slight darkening of some of the goldwork on lower cover).*** A superb example of one of the earliest and most sought-after types of French luxury almanac bindings. A single, probably Parisian atelier, active in the 1760s, seems to have been responsible for a group of innovative small bindings featuring small painted love-emblems on vellum, enclosed in glowing rococo frames composed of padded fretwork covered in gold-wrapped thread which entirely hides the plain textile cover. These inventive and successful bindings inspired emulators, paving the way for an explosion of imaginative almanac bindings over the next three decades, incorporating silk, embroidery, paintings, glass, mica, metal foil, and other materials, as well as the more traditional leathers, arranged in an enticing variety of patterns and designs and creating a full-fledged industry of these little books, produced by stationer-binders, who sub-contracted their textile bindings to professional embroiderers. It may seem extraordinary that such an elaborate binding would be used for a small, cheap publication like the present almanac, printed by Léonard Cuissart soon after 5 November 1762 (date of the printing permission on the last page). Containing songs, proverbs, and a calendar of Saints’ days, it is an unillustrated precursor to the more elaborate almanachs galants produced during the next few decades. Like them, it would have been given as a New Year’s gift (étrenne), and indeed a love-gift. This fact explains the apparent paradox of such a labor-intensive production method for the cover decoration of an ephemeral publication: “The status of gifts held by these little works ... quickly conferred upon them, in the eyes of an elite clientele, the double role of bibelot [bauble] and of an object of gallantry likely to become a precious souvenir, and thus worthy of receiving a decoration formerly reserved only for the most precious publications” (Fabienne le Bars, no. 35b, Éloge de la rareté, trans.). It was in the 1760s that the fashion for such palm-sized treasure books first surfaced.  A few later imitations of this “goldwork” style are known, of somewhat inferior workmanship, on almanacs from the 1770s (see, for example, no. 35b in the Bibliothèque nationale de France 2014 exhibition catalogue Eloge de la rareté). The frequent misattribution of this type of goldwork binding to the Low Countries seems to be based on a few examples of those emulative bindings from the 1770s, found on almanacs from Liège (see, for example, Livres en broderie, no. 176). Whether or not those later imitations were indeed produced in or near Liège, the original examples of these goldwork bindings, such as this one, were almost certainly produced in Paris, as is evident from the almanacs they cover: see, for example, a group of four such almanacs, offered by Patrice Rossignol, in his catalogue 18, no. 25, all on Paris almanacs from 1760 to 1769 (with a fifth, inferior example from 1773). Most surviving goldwork bindings have suffered from handling, and are worn or darkened; thanks to its original case, the present lovely binding has been exceptionally well preserved. I locate no other copies of the almanac, which was not recorded by Grand Carteret. Cf. Bibliothèque nationale de France, Éloge de la rareté: cent trésors de la Réserve des livres rares (Paris: BnF, 2014) and ibid., Livres en broderie (Paris: BnF, 1995-96).
Bhratri [Vol. 2, No. 2 (July 1934)]

Bhratri [Vol. 2, No. 2 (July 1934)]

7 to 14 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $8.00
Details
$3,000.00
( US$)
Seller: Langdon Manor Books LLC
Title
Bhratri [Vol. 2, No. 2 (July 1934)]
Seller
Langdon Manor Books LLC (United States)
Condition
Very good -
Description
San Francisco, California: The League of Y.M.B.A. of North America and North American Federation of Y.W.B.A. Leagues, 1934. Very good -. 10 " x 7¾". Paper wrappers. Pp. [vi], 228 + [iv], 36 in Japanese from rear. Very good minus: shaken, text block detached from front hinge and some quires loose but intact at rear hinge; 3" tear to one leaf splitting the lower edge of one image and affecting a few words of text with no loss of meaning. This is an incredible, heavily illustrated resource, a rare issue of the official publication of the Young Men's and Young Women's Buddhist Associations of America, Bhratri. It is brimming with chapter histories and news, photographic images, literary creations and membership rosters, along with ads for hundreds of Japanese-owned businesses in California. Like so many to migrate to American shores, those of Japanese ancestry brought with them their religion. Buddhist temples and organizations provided invaluable services and solidarity to both the first-generation Issei and secondgeneration Nissei, helping to counter the prejudice that pervaded their lives and navigate making America home. The Young Men's Buddhist Association (YMBA) was formed in Sri Lanka in 1898 and soon spread to other countries. It reached San Francisco the same year, an offshoot of the Buddhist Churches of America (BCA), which had been founded by Japanese immigrants and missionaries. By the mid-1920s both the young men's and women's groups were active throughout California. The Sanskrit word "Bhratri" means "fraternal" or "brother," an apt name for this official organ of the YM and WBAs, with its stated goal to keep "the members informed of the activities of the various organizations . . . In an indirect manner the book brings about changes for the betterment of the Leagues." An editorial section notes that "The future of our churches depends entirely upon us, the younger followers of Buddhism," with short features like "Where Do We Go From Here?", "Our Challenge!" and "We Carry On." The book also holds advice and input such as "A Message to the Second Generation Japanese from Consul General Shuh Tomii" and an article on "California Alien Land Law" written by a San Francisco attorney. This issue contains a whopping 190 photographic images, revealing local chapters, conventions and sports teams, with "snapshots" of members at work and at play. It has lists and portraits of the 29 Bhratri staff members (14 of whom, including an assistant editor, were women) and a four-page "Local Organization Officers' Chart." The book provides "Newsy Bits, District by District" and detailed reports of the 8th and 7th annual meetings, respectively, of YMBA and YWBA in 1933 and the "Proceedings of the First Canada-Hawaii-America Conference" held in San Francisco in 1932. There are histories of the various leagues, as well as a "Research" section with articles on the "Great Enlightenment," "The Inward Eye," "The Sunday Schools of America" and the women's take on "Preparation for Life." A "Literary" section shows a painting of Yosemite and short stories by group members, and 20 original poems are scattered throughout. There are also "Memorials," "Humor" and "Athletic Activity Reports Chapter by Chapter." Of special note is a directory and advertising section, illumined by this editor's note: "In conformity with the resolution passed at the 1933 Conference . . . the Bhratri staff presents this Master Directory of its membership . . . in the next forty and odd pages, you will find the names of about three thousand active members with incomplete list of former members of our North American Leagues of both Y.M. and Y.W.B.A." There are also 238 ads for (presumably) Issei- and/or Nisseiowned California businesses, 107 of which were either bilingual or wholly Japanese. These include the "N.Y.K. Line (Japan Mail)" head office in Tokyo and branches in four states, as well as local photography studios, launderers, florists, optometrists, dentists, markets and undertakers. A rare, remarkable resource on first- and second-generation Japanese Americans and student organizations in California. Not recorded in OCLC. A web search revealed one issue (not this one) within a collection of BCA records at UCLA.
Excerpt from the Journal of Charles Pickney [sic] of South Carolina, of the proceedings of the Constitutional Convention of 1789 [sic], regarding the statement of Benjamin Franklin at the Convention, concerning Jewish immigration. [Caption title]

Excerpt from the Journal of Charles Pickney [sic] of South Carolina, of the proceedings of the Constitutional Convention of 1789 [sic], regarding the statement of Benjamin Franklin at the Convention, concerning Jewish immigration. [Caption title]

7 to 14 days for delivery
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Details
$750.00
( US$)
Seller: Langdon Manor Books LLC
Title
Excerpt from the Journal of Charles Pickney [sic] of South Carolina, of the proceedings of the Constitutional Convention of 1789 [sic], regarding the statement of Benjamin Franklin at the Convention, concerning Jewish immigration. [Caption title]
Seller
Langdon Manor Books LLC (United States)
Condition
Very good
Description
N.P.: N.P., 1950. Very good. 8½" x 5¼". Single sheet, text recto only. Very good with old folds. This is a rare copy of an antisemitic rant that never happened and was attributed to Benjamin Franklin, decrying the emigration of Jewish people to the United States. Allegedly transcribed by South Carolina politician Charles Pinckney during the Constitutional Convention of 1787, the speech first appeared in a 1934 issue of the Silver Legion Nazi sympathizer magazine Liberation. The vicious speech, purportedly made by Franklin at the Convention, calls Jewish people "vampires" and argues that "if the Jews are not excluded within 200 years, our children will be working in the fields to feed the Jews while they remain in the counting house gleefully rubbing their hands." The American Jewish Congress (AJC) published a complete exoneration of Franklin in 1938, authored by noted Franklin scholars, but damage had already been done. The speech, which came to be known as "The Franklin Prophecy," was incorporated into the Handbuch der Judenfrage (referred to as the "Nazi Bible") and was repeatedly broadcast over the radio and in the press in Germany and Italy. The AJC publication noted that: "In America, its circulation is on the increase. Getting its start from official Nazi propaganda, it turns up in the form of chain letters. Printed copies, sometimes containing grammatical and typographical errors, are found in railway stations, trains, buses, and other public places. It was circulated in New York State during the recent election campaign." OCLC locates nothing similar. While Singerman at 274 references the printing of the speech in Liberation and the subsequent scholarship debunking it, it does not find this handbill. A rare 20th century example of a problem that continues on a grand scale today.
LGBTQ+ Activism and AIDS Crisis Response in San Francisco Pride Publications, 1981-1987

LGBTQ+ Activism and AIDS Crisis Response in San Francisco Pride Publications, 1981-1987 by AIDS Crisis LGBTQ Activism

2 to 8 days for delivery
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$700.00
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Seller: Max Rambod Inc.
Title
LGBTQ+ Activism and AIDS Crisis Response in San Francisco Pride Publications, 1981-1987
Author
AIDS Crisis LGBTQ Activism
Seller
Max Rambod Inc. (United States)
Description
1981. Various authors and issuers, group of LGBTQ+ publications, 1981-1987, documenting community organizing, political advocacy, and public health response during the early years of the AIDS crisis in the United States. The material operates in Cultural/Representational Mode, illustrating how LGBTQ+ communities articulated identity, protest, and survival strategies through print media, and providing insight into the shift from liberation-focused discourse to urgent health and civil rights advocacy. Centered on San Francisco's Lesbian/Gay Freedom Day events alongside a federal publication, the archive reflects both grassroots and governmental perspectives on the epidemic and its social consequences. Various authors. Group of five publications. San Francisco and Washington, D.C.: Lesbian/Gay Freedom Day Committee and U.S. Congress, 1981-1987. Archive includes: [1] Front Line of Freedom (1981), 104 pages, official program for the International Lesbian/Gay Freedom Day held June 28, containing essays on Black queer visibility, disability, policing, immigration, and a memorial to murdered Black children in Atlanta, with contributions including activist David Macias; [2] International Lesbian/Gay Freedom Day: Parade and Celebration (1982), 120 pages, including statements by public officials and early discussions of "Gay Men's Health," reflecting emerging awareness of AIDS; [3] Parade and Celebration '86: Forward Together, No Turning Back (1986), 40 pages, emphasizing AIDS activism through visual design and messaging, including imagery linking civil liberties and queer rights; [4] Update on AIDS (1987), a four-page newsletter issued by Congressman George W. Gekas, summarizing federal policy, statistical projections, and legislative responses to the epidemic; [5] Parade '87: Proud / Strong / United (1987), 48 pages, including editorials, advocacy materials, and an interview with Christopher Isherwood conducted by Armistead Maupin, alongside promotion of the 1987 March on Washington for Lesbian and Gay Rights. Across the archive, content includes essays, health information, political statements, interviews, and event programming. These publications span a critical period in LGBTQ+ history marked by the emergence and escalation of the AIDS crisis, documenting how community institutions adapted to address widespread illness, stigma, and government inaction. Early materials reflect a continuation of pride and coalition politics, while later issues demonstrate a pronounced shift toward health advocacy, memorialization, and direct political engagement. The inclusion of both grassroots publications and a federal report highlights contrasting approaches to the epidemic, offering a multidimensional record of response and discourse. Light wear with minor handling marks; overall very good to near fine condition. A cohesive grouping illustrating LGBTQ+ resilience, activism, and community transformation during the first decade of the AIDS crisis.
MON VILLAGE, CEUX QUI N’OUBLIENT PAS

MON VILLAGE, CEUX QUI N’OUBLIENT PAS by Oncle Hansi (Jean-Jacques Waltz)

5 to 14 days for delivery
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Details
$250.00
( US$)
Seller: Black Swan Books, Inc.
Title
MON VILLAGE, CEUX QUI N’OUBLIENT PAS
Author
Oncle Hansi (Jean-Jacques Waltz)
Seller
Black Swan Books, Inc. (United States)
Condition
Very Good binding
Description
Paris: H. Floury, 1913. First Edition. Hard Cover. Very Good binding. Oblong quarto; in the publisher’s blue boards decorated in a pattern reminiscent of calico, with titling in gilt and in black, and a charming image of a young girl in Alsatian costume and in a variety of colors.; 31, [5] pages, with evocative illustrations, many of them full page. Laid in is a manuscript translation of the text into English -- 25 pages, plus a title leaf, in beautiful handwriting. Bottom corner is bumped, but this is a more than presentable copy, with no marks of any kind. With promotion of the Edition de Luxe on the verso of the title page. ~~“Images et commentaires” by “L’Oncle Hansi”, otherwise known as Jean-Jacques Waltz, an Alsatian artist and staunchly pro-French activist. As only the French can do, he started publishing in the early 1900’s satirical works making fun of the German tourists. His drawings for children’s books are charming, none more so than in Mon Village. “There is a little village deep in the countryside of Alsace in France. To find it, get off the train at a small station decorated with flowers, and walk down a narrow road between some orchards...” Need we say more? Very Good binding.
Set of 8 Chromolithographed Die-Cut Paper Ornaments

Set of 8 Chromolithographed Die-Cut Paper Ornaments

2 to 8 days for delivery
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Details
$175.00
( US$)
Seller: Sandra L Hoekstra Bookseller, ABAA, ILAB, IOBA
Title
Set of 8 Chromolithographed Die-Cut Paper Ornaments
Seller
Sandra L Hoekstra Bookseller, ABAA, ILAB, IOBA (United States)
Condition
Very good +
Description
No place listed: No publisher or printer noted, 1890. Ephemera no binding. Very good +. [HOLIDAY] [CHRISTMAS] [ORNAMENTS]. Eight die-cut stiff paper ornaments printed recto and verso, chromolithographed in bright pastel colors, small hole for ornament hook at top; colors bright; no tears but a few light creases on some. Very good plus. 1) Girl with gift-wrapped packages, wearing a red stocking cap and green scarf, tall buttoned spats over her shoes, and riding on a flying dove. (2 7/8" x 7"). Light creasing to one wing tip. 2) Girl wearing a tam hat and plaid scarf, carrying a sprig of holly and riding a bird with a red head. (2 5/8" x 7 3/8") Light creasing to both wing tips. 3) Girl wearing a red hat and white stockings with white pumps, carrying gift-wrapped packages and a small sprig of holly, riding a blue bird with a red breast. (3" x 6 1/8") 4) Girl wearing a mustard-colored hat and coat, blue-dotted scarf, carrying gift-wrapped packages, riding a red bird with green wing feathers. (4" x 5 ½") Light creasing to both wing tips. 5) Girl wearing a gold coat with a white bow at her neck, carrying a gift-wrapped package and sprig of holly, riding a red bird with green wings. (2 5/8" x 6") Four creases to one wing. 6) Child wearing a green coat holding a gift-wrapped package, riding a red bird with purple on its wings. (4 7/8" x 4 5/8") Light creasing on one wing. 7) Girl wearing a red hat, carrying a sprig of holly and gift-wrapped package, riding a pale blue bird with a red breast. ( 2 ¾" x 6") Light crease to one wing tip; printing on verso misaligned. 8) An early-style Santa wearing his pants tucked into tall black boots, carrying gift-wrapped packages, riding a blue bird with red wings. Bird is carrying a large sprig of holly. (3 1/8" x 6") Printing on verso misaligned.
No image available

The Tower of London, A Historical Romance by Ainsworth, William Harrison; Cruikshank, George (illus.)

7 to 14 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $3.99
Details
$175.00
( US$)
Seller: Sanctuary Books
Title
The Tower of London, A Historical Romance
Author
Ainsworth, William Harrison; Cruikshank, George (illus.)
Seller
Sanctuary Books (United States)
Condition
Very Good+
Description
London: Richard Bentley, 1840. Hardcover. Very Good+. Bound by Wallis & Lloyd. Gilt-ruled calf, gilt-stamped ornament direct in spine compartments (5 raised bands), gilt-stamped lettering in red leather spine label, a.e.g.; 8vo; pp. xvi, 439, with 53 wood engravings in text, plus 40 plates. Spine dry, bottom spine compartment split and pulling away. Otherwise a lovely copy. Sadleir, 31; Wolff, 76a.
Timetipping [Signed - Association Copy]

Timetipping [Signed - Association Copy] by Dann, Jack (1945- ) Introduction by Roger Zelazny (1937-1995)

4 to 8 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $6.00
Details
$150.00
( EU VAT US$0)
Seller: Blind Horse Books [ABAA - FABA]
Title
Timetipping [Signed - Association Copy]
Author
Dann, Jack (1945- ) Introduction by Roger Zelazny (1937-1995)
Seller
Blind Horse Books [ABAA - FABA] (United States)
Condition
Fine
Description
New York: Doubleday & Co, 1980. First Edition, First Printing. Fine/Fine. SIGNED FOR SF CRITIC D. DOUGLAS FRATZ - TIME TRAVEL, SURREALISM, AND THE NEW WAVE IMAGINATION Jack Dann's Timetipping is an inventive collection of speculative fiction stories blending science fiction, fantasy, mysticism, and psychological surrealism. Signed by Dann on the personal bookplate of influential science-fiction editor, reviewer, and publisher D. Douglas Fratz, this copy carries strong association value within late twentieth-century speculative-fiction circles. With an introduction by Roger Zelazny, the collection explores shifting identities, fractured realities, time dislocation, Jewish mysticism, and urban estrangement through fourteen ambitious stories. Dann's work occupies the literary edge of modern speculative fiction, where philosophical inquiry and emotional unease replace conventional genre boundaries. PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION: Black cloth-backed boards with metallic spine titles. Octavo format. Hardcover with original illustrated dust jacket designed by Margo Herr. First Edition, First Printing. Laid-in Doubleday review slip present. Signed by Jack Dann on D. Douglas Fratz bookplate. CONDITION: No flaws or blemishes beyond minimal shelf handling. Dust jacket bright and well-preserved. An excellent collector copy, still gift quality. From the library of D. Douglas Fratz. HISTORICAL SIGNIFICANCE - Jack Dann emerged as one of the important literary voices of modern speculative fiction, helping expand the genre beyond traditional adventure narratives into psychologically complex and experimental territory. The stories in Timetipping blend science fiction, fantasy, mysticism, and surrealism, often using time travel and metaphysical settings to explore memory, identity, alienation, and consciousness rather than technology alone. Stories such as The Dybbuk Dolls weave Jewish folklore into psychological horror, while Junction transforms New York City into a symbolic landscape of fractured perception and urban isolation. Roger Zelazny's introduction places Dann within the New Wave movement that reshaped speculative fiction during the 1960s and 1970s. This signed copy, from the library of influential SF reviewer and editor D. Douglas Fratz and retaining its original Doubleday review slip, remains closely tied to the professional reviewing and fandom culture that sustained literary science fiction in the late twentieth century. SUBJECTS: Jack Dann, Roger Zelazny, D. Douglas Fratz, time travel fiction, speculative fiction, Jewish mysticism in fiction, surrealism, urban alienation, literary science fiction, signed science fiction, New Wave SF, fantasy literature, review copies, Science Fiction, Fantasy, Speculative Fiction, Surrealist Fiction, Literary SF.
No image available

A Plus Hault Sens L'Esoterisme Spirituel Et Charnel De Rabelais (2 vol.) by Gaignebet, Claude

7 to 14 days for delivery
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$150.00
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Seller: Brattle Book Shop
Title
A Plus Hault Sens L'Esoterisme Spirituel Et Charnel De Rabelais (2 vol.)
Author
Gaignebet, Claude
Seller
Brattle Book Shop (United States)
Condition
Used - Very Good
Description
Paris: Maisonneuve Et Larose 1986. Softcover. French. Two volumes. 10.5" x 8". xlvi, [1], 473, [1]; 584, [6] pp. Illustrations among text. Red wraps. Shelf wear to both volumes, sunning to spines, crease on Vol 1 spine, interiors unmarked. Good. ISBN 270680923 . Used - Very Good. Paperback .
The Chaste Planet

The Chaste Planet by UPDIKE, John

3 to 7 days for delivery
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$90.00
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Seller: Riverrun Books & Manuscripts
Title
The Chaste Planet
Author
UPDIKE, John
Seller
Riverrun Books & Manuscripts (United States)
Condition
A near-fine copy, lightly curled but bright and clean
Description
Worcester: Metacom Press, 1980. A near-fine copy, lightly curled but bright and clean. 8vo. 16, [1] pp. Sewn in original blue marbled wrappers, printed paper label on front cover. FIRST EDITION, LIMITED ISSUE, number 132 of 300 copies signed by Updike from an edition of 326. This is Metacom Limited Editions Series, no. 1. With publisher's slip laid-in explaining the printing.
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Mercury, A Short Story. by AGEE, Jonis.

5 to 14 days for delivery
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$75.00
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Seller: Jeff Maser, Bookseller-ABAA
Title
Mercury, A Short Story.
Author
AGEE, Jonis.
Seller
Jeff Maser, Bookseller-ABAA (United States)
Description
West Branch: Toothpaste Press,, 1981.. First edition, signed hardcover issue.. [20 pp]. Fine in full cloth with pasted-on cover label. No dust jacket, as issued. Illustrated with drawings by Robert Ferguson. One of 50 copies on Frankfurt White paper SIGNED by Agee and Ferguson.
Emma Willard Association Twenty - Fourth Annual Report, November, 1914 ; Constitution, By-Laws and List of Members

Emma Willard Association Twenty - Fourth Annual Report, November, 1914 ; Constitution, By-Laws and List of Members

7 to 14 days for delivery
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$37.50
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Seller: Dale Steffey Books, ABAA
Title
Emma Willard Association Twenty - Fourth Annual Report, November, 1914 ; Constitution, By-Laws and List of Members
Seller
Dale Steffey Books, ABAA (United States)
Condition
Very Good
Description
Troy, New York: Emma Willard Association, 1914. Book. Very Good. Pictorial Printed Wrappers. First Edition. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. Uncommon. 90 pp. Very Good, wrappers toned, bottom corner chipped, bottom 1" of spine with paper loss. The Emma Willard School is a private day and boarding high school for girls in Troy, New York, and a leader in girls' education for over 200 years..
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Native New England Cooking: Indian recipes for the Modern Kitchen by Carson, Dale

5 to 14 days for delivery
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$10.00
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Seller: Weller Book Works ABAA/ILAB
Title
Native New England Cooking: Indian recipes for the Modern Kitchen
Author
Carson, Dale
Seller
Weller Book Works ABAA/ILAB (United States)
Condition
Very Good
Description
Peregrine, 1980. Very Good. Carson, Dale. Native New England Cooking: Indian recipes for the Modern Kitchen. Old Saybrook, CT: Peregrine, 1980. 139pp. Illustrated. 12mo. Paperback with comb binding. Book condition: Very good with rubbed and yellowed edges.
No image available

El Nuevo Testamento De Nuestro Senor Y Salvador Jesucristo

5 to 14 days for delivery
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$5.00
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Seller: Weller Book Works ABAA/ILAB
Title
El Nuevo Testamento De Nuestro Senor Y Salvador Jesucristo
Seller
Weller Book Works ABAA/ILAB (United States)
Condition
Very Good
Description
Las Sagradas Escrituras Para Todos. Very Good. El Nuevo Testamento De Nuestro Senor Y Salvador Jesucristo. NP: Las Sagradas Escrituras Para Todos, ND. 248pp. 12mo. Paperback. Book condition: Very good with yellowing.
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Dialogue : A Journal of Mormon Thought. Vol. 24, No. 1, Spring 1991

5 to 14 days for delivery
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$5.00
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Seller: Weller Book Works ABAA/ILAB
Title
Dialogue : A Journal of Mormon Thought. Vol. 24, No. 1, Spring 1991
Seller
Weller Book Works ABAA/ILAB (United States)
Condition
Very Good
Description
Dialogue Foundation, 1991. Very Good. Dialogue : A Journal of Mormon Thought. Vol. 24, No. 1, Spring 1991. Salt Lake City: Dialogue Foundation, 1991. 160pp. 8vo. Paperback. Book condition: Very good.