Product Type
Condition
Binding
Collectible Attributes
Seller Location
Seller Rating
Published by Blackie & Son Limited, 1938
Seller: World of Rare Books, Goring-by-Sea, SXW, United Kingdom
Condition: Good. 1938. Reprinted. 88 pages. No dust jacket. Red cloth covered boards. Black and white photographs throughout - flick-book. Pages with some foxing and tanning, particularly to endpapers and textblock edges. Binding remains firm. Minor pencil inscriptions to front free endpaper. Boards have heavy shelf wear with bumping and fraying to corners and crushing and fraying to spine ends. All surfaces tanned and sunned, particularly spine. Some additional marks and staining to surfaces. Boards are slightly bowed.
Published by Blackie & Son, London, 1937
Seller: Matheson Sports International Limited, Auckland, New Zealand
Book First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. No Jacket. First Edition. Pam Barton, top womens golfer reveals the secrets of her success, 88 pages, Blackie's Sports Series.
Published by Blackie & Sons, UK, 1937
Seller: Books for Collectors, Lancashire, United Kingdom
Book First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: Good. 1st Edition. This is a UK first edition hardcover published by Blackie & Sons in 1937 as part of their Sports Series. The book is in Good condition for its age with a straight spine, sharp corners and firm spine ends. However the boards are very grubby. The page edges are toned but the interior text block is clean. The end paper has a previous owner inscription. The binding is tight and the book has 88 pages. The copyright page states first published in 1937.
Published by Blackie and Son, 1937
Seller: Cambridge Rare Books, Cambridge, GLOUC, United Kingdom
Hardcover. Condition: GOOD. 1937-01-01. Blackie and Son. Hardcover. GOOD Black titles, red boards. Edgewear. 7x7.
Published by Blackie & Son Limited, London, 1938
Seller: Jacques Gander, Fairford, United Kingdom
Reprint. Red cloth with black lettering, prelims plus 88 pages, Illustrated with four flick book "moving pictures" made up of photos of golfing strokes, plus diagrams. 6.5 X 7.25 inches. Very good book with fading to the spine and shoulders, small ink mark on the front board. No dustwrapper.
Published by Blackie & Son, London, England; Glasgow, Scotland, 1937
Seller: Gold Beach Books & Art Gallery LLC, Gold Beach, OR, U.S.A.
Book
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good Minus. Dust Jacket Condition: Good. 24mo. 88 pages. Red cloth, black spine and front titles; black & white frontispiece, black & white illustrations; red pictorial dust jacket, not price-clipped, now protected in clear plastic. Light wear to extremities, area of light discoloration to front; interior clean; sunning to spine and opening side of front, wrinkling to upper extremity, fold to lower front corner, scattered blemishes. A very good minus copy in a good jacket. This early golf instruction manual contains "flip motion" photographs of the author swinging her club.
Published by Blackie & Son, London, UK, 1938
Seller: Antiquarian Golf, Pepperell, MA, U.S.A.
First Edition
Cloth. Condition: Good Plus. Illustrated. 88 pages. Wonderful player who gave her life for the Queen during WWII. Four different "flicker" series of "moving pictures" incorporated in this volume along with quality instruction. This is the companion book to Jack McLean's "Why Not Beat Bogey" published the same year in the same flicker book format. Lightening lower covers from liquid spill, pastedowns with color bleed along the edges from that spill else clean throughout. Covers protected in mylar. Size: 12mo - over 6¾" - 7¾" tall.
Published by Blackie & Son, London, 1937
Seller: Fine Golf Books, St. Andrews, Fife, United Kingdom
88p, cloth. Four different "flicker" series of "moving pictures" incorporated in this volume along with quality instruction. Winner of the 1936 US Womens Amatuer and British Amatuer taking the latter in 1939 as well, twice curtis cup player. In 1939 Pam Barton won her second British Ladies Amateur Golf Championship but following the outbreak of World War II she immediately signed up as an ambulance driver and served in London through the Battle of Britain. In early 1941 she joined the Women's Auxiliary Air Force (WAAF) with which she served as a Flight Officer in command of a staff of more than 600 at one of the largest stations. In November of 1943, 26-year-old Pam Barton was killed in the service of her country in an air crash. What kind of record would she have had if not for the war? D&J B7900.