Hope Marx (3 results)

Proceedings of the New England-St. Lawrence Valley Geographical Society Annual Meeting [Blizzard of '78] 1978
Rickard, Timothy and John Harmon. A. L. Rydant, Peter Marx, Robert French, Kenneth Cranston, Mark Monmonier & George Schnell, Maxine Farkas, Hope Currier & George Lewis, Paul Frederick, Emanuel Maier, Malcolm Fairwather, Reed Stewart, Leon Yacher
Published by NESLVGS 1979
- Softcover
Seller: Braintree Book Rack, Cohasset, MA, U.S.A.Braintree Book Rack
Contact seller4-star sellerCondition: Used - Good
US$ 14.99
US$ 5.99 shippingShips within U.S.A.Quantity: 1 available
Softcover. Condition: Good. 11" x 8.5", 77pp.

- Hardcover
- First Edition
Seller: Librairie Vignes Online, Paris, FranceLibrairie Vignes Online
Contact seller5-star sellerAssociation member: ILAB
Condition: Used - Fine
US$ 23.40
US$ 45.45 shippingShips from France to U.S.A.Quantity: 1 available
Condition: Très bon état. in-8, cartonnage sous jaquette illustrée, 480 pp., quelques photos en noir hors-texte. Edition originale. Texte en anglais. Très bon exemplaire provenant de la bibliothèque d'Alain Resnais.
More imagesCapital. Vol. I: Capitalistic Production; Vol. II: Capitalistic Circulation; Vol. III: Capitalist Production as a Whole
[COMMUNISM] MARX, Karl [KERR, Charles Hope; UNTERMANN, Ernest]
Published by Charles H. Kerr & Co. [London: Swan Sonnenschein & Co.] 1906, 1907, 1909, Chicago, Ill 1906
- First Edition
Seller: Lorne Bair Rare Books, ABAA, Winchester, VA, U.S.A.Lorne Bair Rare Books, ABAA
Contact seller5-star sellerFirst Editions, First Printings. Three Volumes. Octavo. 22.5cm. Publisher's deep maroon ribbed cloth titled in gilt to spines and ruled in blind to boards. 869pp.; 618pp.; 1048pp. Generally strong and tight; mild scuffing and to spine ends and corners and a few minor exterior stains. Spine gilt is significantly oxidized to Vol I…I, as is usually seen on the first printing; internally clean and fresh, some very light spotting in places, mainly confined to the page edges. A very good, handsome set of first printings. A full set of first printings of this bibliographically complex edition, issued over the course of three years. Marx published the first volume of his epic analysis of capitalism, in German, in 1867. The first translation into English was of Volume 1 only, and was accomplished by Edward Aveling and Samuel Moore in 1887, based on the revised 4th German edition as edited by Engels. The 1906 first American printing under the Charles Kerr impint (as here) largely follows this translation, with the subsequent translation work for Volumes II and III being performed by Ernest Untermann. Thus, the earliest printings of the Kerr edition comprise the first complete edition of Capital in the English language. The printing was done in Chicago by James Higgins, Kerr's printer of choice, making this also the first complete edition of Capital to be printed entirely by a union-run print shop. Untermann did most of his translation work from remote Florida, beginning the effort in 1905, discovering in the process a number of indices, footnotes, and at least ten pages of text that Aveling and Moore had not included in their London edition - making the Kerr edition the most complete up to its time. Kerr burned through the first two-thousand copy print run of Volume I almost immediately, and rushed to get Volume II out by July 1907. It's very possible that financial constraints were already making themselves known by Volume II, as Kerr was selling the books at a loss to encourage sales; the almost ubiquitous oxidation of the gilt on Vol II is likely a result of experimental economy that swiftly failed. Vol III returns to the higher standards of the first volume. The bindings on the first printings also feature a triple blind rule to the ribbed cloth boards, with subsequent printings having double rules. Kerr's reprint system seems to have incorporated dates on the title pages for some length of time, with the dates on the copyright pages remaining unchanged; after a certain point, around the early 1920's, reprints were issued without dates to the title pages, and any volume without a date can safely be deemed a post-1920s reprint. Issues of Kerr's International Socialist Review from the period of printing recount in detail some of his problems and concerns publishing and selling the work, with detailed data on dates, numbers of copies, and the firm's hopes for the completed book. Genuine first printing sets of this important edition are tremendously scarce in commerce. The lack of any real bibliographical authority for the American edition, combined with Kerr's generally lax approach to differentiating printings, has over the years led to frequent errors and misjudgments on the part of cataloguers (including, in full disclosure, ourselves). After a good deal of research, most in the advertising pages of the International Socialist Review, we're confident we've finally got it right.