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Le Sex Shop (Two original photographs from the 1972 film)

Le Sex Shop (Two original photographs from the 1972 film) by Claude Berri (director, screenwriter, starring); Jean-Pierre Marielle, Juliet Berto, Francesca Romana Coluzzi (starring)

7 to 14 days for delivery
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$150.00
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Seller: Royal Books
Title
Le Sex Shop (Two original photographs from the 1972 film)
Author
Claude Berri (director, screenwriter, starring); Jean-Pierre Marielle, Juliet Berto, Francesca Romana Coluzzi (starring)
Seller
Royal Books (United States)
Description
N.p.: Peppercorn-Wormser, 1973. Two vintage studio still photographs from the US release of the 1972 French film. Claude, a married man and father of two, decides to transform his bookstore into a sex shop. Shot on location in Paris. 8 x 10 inches. Near Fine.
Vienna Blood and Other Poems (First Edition, inscribed by the author)

Vienna Blood and Other Poems (First Edition, inscribed by the author) by Jerome Rothenberg

7 to 14 days for delivery
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$25.00
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Seller: Royal Books
Title
Vienna Blood and Other Poems (First Edition, inscribed by the author)
Author
Jerome Rothenberg
Seller
Royal Books (United States)
ISBN
9780811207591
Description
New York: New Directions, 1980. First Edition. First Edition, a trade paperback original. INSCRIBED by the author on the half-title page: "for Joyce / in friendship / Jerry / San Diego / 1984." Very Good plus in perfect-bound wrappers.
Autograph Letter Signed, New York, December 20, 1845, to his uncle, Luther Jewett, and Aunt, Portland, Maine

Autograph Letter Signed, New York, December 20, 1845, to his uncle, Luther Jewett, and Aunt, Portland, Maine by Jewett, James C.

7 to 14 days for delivery
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$150.00
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Seller: Michael Brown Rare Books, LLC
Title
Autograph Letter Signed, New York, December 20, 1845, to his uncle, Luther Jewett, and Aunt, Portland, Maine
Author
Jewett, James C.
Seller
Michael Brown Rare Books, LLC (United States)
Description
Quarto, 2 ½ pages, plus stamp less address leaf, formerly folded, in very good, clean and legible condition. Jointly written to his uncle and aunt in Portland. Letter from young Maine sea captain who became a "salor of fortune" ad nearly drove Daniel Webster into War. "My dear Uncle, The wind now being fair, my crew all on board, in a few hours more, I shall be once more afloat. I am awaiting turn of the tide to get out. Would to heaven I have but this one voyage to make and then quite for ever the vexation and anxiety, the disappointments and hardships of such a life as this Sailors life…it comes hard to me but what can I do. It is this or nothing. My freight list is still open, the shippers being…numerous… negligent … it cannot be closed until the last moment and as yet I cannot tall the amount. My expenses are as little as I could make them, still too large, why could not Mr. Moulton have sold this small vessel and give me one if I am to go freighting…I shall drive on and get back as soon as possible for this voyage will not amount to much I now foresee…But what can I do in a butter box freighting…what suffering in a little ship all under water but he who puts his hand to the plough must never look back. one thing the mild and balmy air of the tropics will fan our brows, that must be the offset to the cold northerly winds of the coast…I would like to hear from you in New Orleans you must write me soon as I hope in twenty days to be there and twenty more to be away. Business rather dull… and money scarce… [To his aunt:] I am now ready for sea. I feel low spirited as I suppose all do who are about to go where they cannot foresee what the day or the hour may bring forth. This the time of year is that when I should have good weather but I am a Jonah on the deep, or the [ship] Floyd is, I can't tell which. I must now forewarn you that you must expect to hear on my arrival the old story of Gales and Storms…You ask how I have spent my evenings? [in New York]… I have been sick…I some time wobbled into Broadway and looked into the windows and walked for miles, tired I went to bed and read myself to sleep…I never have felt so homesick since I first left Portland, mind to turn back and stay longer. I am tired of going to sea, the novelty has worn away and now I only think when will I be able to stay at home again. That will be a long day to that time I fear…. I hope my present voyage will soon be ended. I shall try hard to be back here…I may possibly go to Cuba before I return but I shall come north if possible as I want to go home again very much. I want another vessel and must try and get one under way then, to be ready for me in the fall. I shall write Mr. [Albert?] Averill what I want perhaps I may succeed in buying the one he speaks of…" Jewett did sail to Cuba in the ship Floyd, but it was only the beginning of his seafaring career. He found a bigger vessel, the Bark Philomela, began making regular runs from Mobile to Cuba and the West Indies during the Mexican-American War – and soon ran afoul of US authorities, being indicted in Boston in 1849 for having one of his sailors jailed for a week in Curacao "without cause". He may have escaped punishment because he was soon busy ferrying adventurers "around the Horn" from Maine to San Francisco during the California Gold Rush. Then, two years later, he began an escapade that nearly caused a war. It began when Jewett, captain of the Bark Philomela, wrote to Secretary of State Daniel Webster, asking if some tiny islands, small barren rocks in the ocean lying off Peru's coastline, were open to "exploitation" by US citizens. The islands were rich with guano – the nitrogen-rich dung of sea birds used extensively as fertilizer by American farmers, especially southern cotton growers. Peru had a treaty agreement with the US guaranteeing its monopoly of the guano exports to America, worth more than their weight in gold. Thousands of American farmers had vocally complained to Washington about the monopolistic cost of the fertilizer, but Peru had refused to budge on lowering the price. That was when Jewett, in partnership with a New York entrepreneur, made his inquiry, which seemed innocent enough, merely asking if American citizens had a right to take guano from the few "uninhabited and unoccupied" islands which were not the principal source of Peruvian guano - but held the potential of many millions of dollars for anyone who could exploit the resource. Webster, misinformed, believing that those islands had originally been "discovered" long before by an American sea captain, and were not, therefore, Peruvian territory, decided that it was the "duty" of the Government to use US Naval force to protect American citizens who wanted to exploit the islands. With the approval of President Fillmore, he so informed Jewett. With Webster's official assurances in hand, Jewett and his partner assembled a flotilla of forty ships, armed with cannon, to take possession of the islands, land a work party of a hundred men, and, if necessary, solicit US Naval support. The President, informed of these plans, remarked that it would take a "miracle" to avoid war with Peru. Webster, alarmed, quickly countermanded orders to the Navy to support Jewett's filibustering expedition, and, through slow diplomacy, eventually contradicted his own letter to Jewett, officially conceding Peru's sovereignty over the islands. Meanwhile, he informed Jewett (who, he insisted, had misled him) that he would receive no US military support for any adventure he might launch off the Peruvian coast. The crisis ended, with Webster later confiding to a friend that no other diplomatic snafu, during his years at the State Department, had given him so much trouble. There is no historical record of the personal consequences of this crisis for Jewett or the fate of his maritime expedition, but it was not his last appearance on the historical stage. In 1858, Mexico, being quietly eyed by France's Napoleon III for future conquest, was thrown into a three- year civil war. Jewett was hired by the Mexican Government to help suppress a conservative insurrection, using a steamer he owned to convey troops to Vera Cruz, in return for the opportunity to buy thousands of tons of scrap iron from the Government at bargain prices. He carried out his mission, capturing two rebel vessels and the noblemen who had led the revolt. But when he came to take the iron, he had been promised it had already been sold. Not until thirty years later did Jewett receive recompense after filing a court suit. Meanwhile, he had other plans. When the American Civil War began, he sold some of the ships he owned, which had been carrying cargoes to China, to the US Navy. As he also owned a New York shipyard, he then contracted with the Imperial Chinese Government to build gunboats, on the American model, for the Chinese Navy – the first Chinese warships ever constructed on American soil Some of these actually made it to China; others were snapped up by the US Navy to use in battle with the Confederacy. After the War ended, Jewett had enough wealth to form a Steamship Navigation Company which intended building vessels to sail the world over – to China, Egypt and Africa. There is no record of whether Jewett died a rich man in 1900. But it was certainly clear that the young Captain who had complained to his uncle fifty years earlier that he had tired of going to sea, overcame those youthful reservations.
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SPEECH...IN REPLY TO MR. HAYNE, OF SOUTH CAROLINA:; The resolution of Mr. Foot, of Connecticut, relative to the public lands, being under consideration. Delivered in the Senate, January 26, 1830 by WEBSTER, Daniel

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$132.00
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Seller: Second Life Books Inc
Title
SPEECH...IN REPLY TO MR. HAYNE, OF SOUTH CAROLINA:; The resolution of Mr. Foot, of Connecticut, relative to the public lands, being under consideration. Delivered in the Senate, January 26, 1830
Author
WEBSTER, Daniel
Seller
Second Life Books Inc (United States)
Description
NY: Elliott & Palmer, 1830. 8vo, pp. 72. sewn, self wraps, foredge chipped, title page soiled, name on title page, good. S&S 5382 (4).
State of Maine [Honorable Discharge]

State of Maine [Honorable Discharge]

2 to 8 days for delivery
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$75.00
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Seller: Sandra L Hoekstra Bookseller, ABAA, ILAB, IOBA
Title
State of Maine [Honorable Discharge]
Seller
Sandra L Hoekstra Bookseller, ABAA, ILAB, IOBA (United States)
Condition
Very good
Description
1832. Document no binding. Very good. 7 ½" x 12 ½". Printed sheet with hand-written details filling in the spaces. State of Maine Head-Quarters, Augusta Sept. 24, 1832. The Commander in Chief has accepted the RESIDNTAION of Lieutenant John Mayo of the Second Regiment, in the First brigade, and Fourth Division of the Militia of this Stae; and he is hereby HONORABLY DISCHARGED at his own request, from the Office aforesaid. By the Commander in chief: L. [?] G. Ladd, Adjutant General.
Scientific American, New York, November 25, 1899., Volume LXXXL,, No. 22

Scientific American, New York, November 25, 1899., Volume LXXXL,, No. 22

2 to 8 days for delivery
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$35.00
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Seller: Sandra L Hoekstra Bookseller, ABAA, ILAB, IOBA
Title
Scientific American, New York, November 25, 1899., Volume LXXXL,, No. 22
Seller
Sandra L Hoekstra Bookseller, ABAA, ILAB, IOBA (United States)
Condition
Very good
Description
New York: Munn & Co., No. 361 Broadway, 1899. Ephemera no binding. Very good. Folio (16 ¼" x 11 ¼"); pp338-352; illustrated wrapper; 4" split at tail of wrapper fold, hand-soiling and shelf-wear to wrapper; very good. Advertised as a Weekly Journal of Practical Information, Art, Science, Mechanics, Chemistry and Manufactures. Contents include: Present Condition of the Paris Exposition of 1900: The Future of South Africa, The Vienna Meteorite Collection; Industrial Invasion of Great Britain; The Meteor Display; Bids for 16 ½ knox Cruisers Accepted at the Naval Board of Construction; Railroads in Asia; Wireless Telegraphy Between Balloons; Meeting of the National Academy of Sciences; A Discussion of the Superimposed Turret for Warships; New Letterbox Indicator; Methods of Revolving the Optical Apparatus for Lighthouses; The Scientific Extermination of Locusts [locust fungus]; Automobile News; American Armor Plate for a Russian Battleship; Effect of Heat on Scorpions; the Gypsy Moth; Long-Scale Measuring Instruments; Annual Meeting of the Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers; Recording Meteor-Paths by Photography; New Artificial Paving Stone; The Year's Progress in Agriculture; Successful Trials of the Holland Submarine Boat; Hamilton Young Castner (chemist); "Don Coyote" (American Wild Dog of the Far West); Cameron's Branding Instrument; A Simple Slide-Valve for Steam-Engines [Damerell's]; and Index of Inventions.
Despotism in America: The Nature, Results, and Legal Basis of the Slave-Holding System in the United States

Despotism in America: The Nature, Results, and Legal Basis of the Slave-Holding System in the United States by Hildreth, Richard, 1807-1865

3 to 6 days for delivery
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$100.00
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Seller: McBlain Books
Title
Despotism in America: The Nature, Results, and Legal Basis of the Slave-Holding System in the United States
Author
Hildreth, Richard, 1807-1865
Seller
McBlain Books (United States)
Condition
Very Good
Description
Boston: John P. Jewett and Company; Cleveland: Jewett, Proctor & Worthington; NY: Sheldon, Lamport & Blakeman, 1854. Hardcover. Very Good. frontis, title vignette, 6 plates, 302p. Original brown cloth. 20cm. Some chipping at ends of backstrip. Loss of cloth at corner tips. Lacks front free endpaper. Upper right corner neatly clipped on title-leaf. "Despotism in America was first published in 1840 with the author identified only as the author of "Archy Moore," a white-authored novel purporting to be the memoir of a slave which went through seven editions between 1836 and 1848 and which seems generally regarded as the first anti-slavery novel. This 1854 edition of "Despotism in America is almost twice the length of the 1840 edition thanks to the addition of a lengthy fifth chapter titled "Legal Basis of the Slave-Holding System" (pages 169-303) followed by a brief (four-page) Appendix quoting important language from Daniel Webster and ending with the fact that the author of that language voted for the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850.
The Formalist: A Journal of Metrical Poetry – Volume 2, Issue 1, 1991

The Formalist: A Journal of Metrical Poetry – Volume 2, Issue 1, 1991 by BAER, William, edited by

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Seller: Between the Covers- Rare Books, Inc. ABAA
Title
The Formalist: A Journal of Metrical Poetry – Volume 2, Issue 1, 1991
Author
BAER, William, edited by
Seller
Between the Covers- Rare Books, Inc. ABAA (United States)
Condition
Fine
Description
(Evansville, Indiana): The Formalist, 1991. Softcover. Fine. First edition. Wrappers (variant for a contributor). 128pp. Fine with poet Daniel Hoffman's penciled notation on front wrapper. A contributor's copy with a typed letter and Inscribed by Baer to poet Daniel Hoffman. Contributions by Robert Richman, Annie Finch, John J. Brugaletta, Lawrence Minet, Victor A. Peterson, X.J. Kennedy, Francois Villon, Samuel Maio, May Swenson, Daniel Hoffman, Francois Coppee, Lewis Turco, G.P. Skratz, Phillip B. Anderson, J. Weintraub, Paul Verlaine, Judson Jerome, Louise Labe, C. Webster Wheelock, Howard Nemerov, John Updike, Samuel Johnson, and many more. Scarce.
Lightning Joe; An Autobiography

Lightning Joe; An Autobiography by Collins, General J. Lawton

7 to 14 days for delivery
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Seller: James & Mary Laurie Booksellers (A.B.A.A.)
Title
Lightning Joe; An Autobiography
Author
Collins, General J. Lawton
Seller
James & Mary Laurie Booksellers (A.B.A.A.) (United States)
Condition
Very good
Description
Baton Rouge: Louisiana State, 1979. 1st. Hardcover. Very good/Good. Bound in publisher's original green cloth with spine stamped in silver and red. Illustrated with black and white photographs. Light wear to extremities and head and heel of spine, wear to dust jacket. 6 x 9 inches. 462 pages.
Cruel and Unusual: Bush / Cheney's New World Order

Cruel and Unusual: Bush / Cheney's New World Order by MILLER, Mark Crispin

6 to 14 days for delivery
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Seller: Argosy Book Store
Title
Cruel and Unusual: Bush / Cheney's New World Order
Author
MILLER, Mark Crispin
Seller
Argosy Book Store (United States)
Condition
near fine
Description
New York: Norton, 2004. First. hardcover. near fine/near fine. 343 pages. 8vo, two-toned boards (barely sunned along edges), pictorial d.w. New York: Norton, (2004). First edition. A near fine copy in a near fine dust wrapper.
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Logan Canyon Climbing by Monsell, Tim

5 to 14 days for delivery
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Seller: Weller Book Works ABAA/ILAB
Title
Logan Canyon Climbing
Author
Monsell, Tim
Seller
Weller Book Works ABAA/ILAB (United States)
Condition
Very Good
Description
The Trailhead, 1998. Very Good. Monsell, Tim. Logan Canyon Climbing. Logan, Utah: The Trailhead, 1998. 72pp. Indexed. Illustrated. 12mo. Paperback. Book condition: Very good with light bumping and rubbing.