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Published by Mentor/New American Library, New York, 1964
Seller: Ed Buryn Books, Nevada City, CA, U.S.A.
Condition: Good unmarked, wear to wraps. 3rd printing. Cl;assic work on myth & magic. Clean tight PB reading copy. 832 pp, index, notes. MM paperback in glossy color illus wraps.
Published by Doubleday Anchor by arr. w/ Criterion., Garden City NY., 1961
Seller: Hedgehog's Whimsey BOOKS etc., Newport, NH, U.S.A.
Trade paperback. Frasconi, Antonio (Cover design by). (illustrator). xx, 426 p. Doubleday Anchor Magnum. A270. Glued binding. Chapter Notes. Index. 7.5x10 in. Color cover art. Near front: Editor! s Foreword, Synopsis, Author's Introduction. Includes bibliographical references. Part I: The Magic of Kings; II: Taboo and the Perils of the Soul; III: Death and Resurrection, Rhythm of Nature; IV: Dying and Reviving Gods; V: Spirits of the Corn and Wild; VI: Riddance of Evil; VII: Between Old and New; VIII: The Golden Bough. Good. Well-bound. Interior clean, unmarked. Cover uniformly soiled. Light edge wear. First edition. No print line, presumed first Anchor abridged. 1.
Published by Anchor Books/Doubleday & Company, Inc., New York, 1961
Seller: Puffin & Bean, Concord, MA, U.S.A.
Book
Soft cover. Condition: Very Good. 2nd Edition. First edition, Doubleday Anchor Magnum in 1961, edited with notes and a foreword by American Biblical scholar, Theodor H. Gaster. Some rubbing and wear on the edges of the front cover and at the bottom of the spine. Some toning around edges. Pages are clean.
Published by Mentor, New York, 1964
Seller: Dragonfly Books, Victoria, BC, Canada
Soft Cover. Condition: Good. No Jacket. First Printing. 832 pages. May require extra postage. Size: Mass Market Paperback. Used.
Published by S.G. Phillips Inc June 1965, NJ, 1965
Seller: Ed Buryn Books, Nevada City, CA, U.S.A.
2nd printing. Nice bright tight clean HB copy. 6-1/4 x 9-1/4, 738 pp, index, notes, b/w embellishments. VeryGood+ unmarked except owner signature inside. Hardcover in black stamped cloth boards w gilt titling, no jacket.
Condition: very good. 4th printing 1972. the abridged edition of the golden bough is a pioneer study in magick and religion. black boards, gilt lettering on spine, binding very good, pages clean, 738 pages, indexed.
Published by Criterion Books, New York, 1959
Seller: Rareeclectic, Pound ridge, NY, U.S.A.
Book
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Very Good Minus. 'A New Abridgment of the Classic Work'. First of this edition (NAP). This book was previously owned by the renowned sociologist, Daniel Bell. He signed his name on the front end paper. He made two parenthetical lines at the margin of one page in the Foreword and afterward put his pen away (at least I didn't find any other markings). The books in very nice condition. The covers don't have any conspicuous soiling. The gilt lettering on the spine is nicely bright. The cover edges and corners are in excellent shape. The spine ends have only minimal crinkling. The page edges look good. The book is large and thick, 730 pages in total. It is also very solidly bound from cover to cover with nicely tight pages throughout and nicely tight covers as well. The pages are exceptionally clean. Scrolling through, I didn't find any instances of soiling. I didn't see any conspicuous creasing. There are no attachments of any kind. Writing and markings is limited to what I have just reported. The dust jacket looks pretty good. You can see in the first few photos. There is one small chip off the top edge of the rear cover, one small chip off the bottom edge of the rear cover. The flaps look very good, very clean, a very thin strip of tan toning of their top edges. The jacket is NOT price-clipped, not clipped at all. It will be fitted with a protective cover after the photos of scanned. From the dust jacket: 'A pioneer study in magic and religion that links the primitive concepts and modes of thought to the many institutions and folk customs they underlie, The Golden Bough was a milestone in the interpretation of man's cultural past. No other work in the field of anthropology contributed so much to the mental and artistic climate of our times-- what Freud did for the individual, Frazer did for civilization as a whole. Tracing the evolution of human behavior from the savage to the civilized through his studies of magic, taboos, sexual practices, superstition, and wizardry, and locating from these the basis and roots of contemporary social, scientific, and religious ideas, Frazer built a magnificent behavioral bridge for the past to the present.'.