Published by rand mcnally & co, 1946
Seller: ODDS & ENDS BOOKS, Sherwood Forest, CA, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: Good. No Jacket. 1946 hardcover book GOOD clean copy no writing in or on book, has wear to cover corners, binding is worn no jacket issued.
Condition: New. 2002. paperback. . . . . .
Condition: New. 2002. paperback. . . . . . Books ship from the US and Ireland.
Paperback. Condition: Good. Paperback, Good, some edgewear/marking, creasing to spine, contents clean and tight, pp80.
Language: English
Published by George Harrap and Co. Ltd., London, 1931
Seller: Tarrington Books, Tarrington, HEF, United Kingdom
US$ 35.87
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketHardback. Printed pages: 59. Condition: Very Good. 5th Impression. Brown paper covered boards with colour illustrated panel by Willy Pogany to front board. Fading to spine. Foxing to page edges, light tanning to free endpapers. A few occasional spots of foxing to text. Illustrations within the text plus four colour plates. Previous owner's name to front free endpaper. Scarce. Overall condition is Very Good. Size: 4.25 x 6.25 inches (11.5 x 16 cm).
Language: English
Published by Des Plaines, Illinois, U.S.A.: Waterbrook Pr, 2001
ISBN 10: 1578565413 ISBN 13: 9781578565412
Seller: ODDS & ENDS BOOKS, Sherwood Forest, CA, U.S.A.
First Edition Signed
Hardcover. Condition: As New. Dust Jacket Condition: As New. 1st Edition. 1ST PRINTING STATED hardcover LIKE NEW / dust jacket LIKE NEW brodart covered, includes a Free Promo Bookmark, SIGNED on the FULL title page by author LISA TAWN BERGREN. Signed by Author(s).
Published by Osprey Botley 2006, 2006
Seller: Andrew Barnes Books / Military Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC, Australia
reprint stiff wrappers As New lge. octavo 64pp., colour & b/w plates, text ills., bibliog., index, Osprey Warrior series 7.
Cloth. Condition: G/P. Black & White Illustrations (illustrator). Los Angeles, CA: Powell Publishing. G/P. (1929). . Cloth. 8vo., 465 pp., dj taped, .
Published by Obpacher Brothers, Munich & New York, 1885
Paperback. Condition: Very Good-. Series No. 1792; Chromo-lithograph & ; Oblong 8vo 8" to 9" tall; 16 pages; No date given. Circa 1885. Obpacher Brothers. Series # 1792. Slim oblong format paperback in pictorial card stock covers with string binding. Illustrated with 7 unique chromolitho winter scenes and about 9 toned litho pages from the same design. Each page with a verse or set of verses from a poet, including Emerson, Longfellow, Bryant etc. Light shelf rubbing to cover edges and light toning to cover surfaces. Quite uncommon color plate gift book. VG-.
Published by childrens press inc chicago il usa, 1947
Seller: ODDS & ENDS BOOKS, Sherwood Forest, CA, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. No Jacket. 1947 Edition hardcover book VERY GOOD has some minor wear to book pages are nice and clean no writing on pages, binding is solid minor cracking on edging, cover has edge/corner wear, minor wear to cover, erase mark inside back, cover, no dustjacket issued.
Published by James Cundee at Albion Press for Longman, Hurst, Reese, and Orme; and C. Chapple, London, 1806
Seller: Arader Books, New York, NY, U.S.A.
First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: Good. First. A RARE SURVIVAL IN BOARDS. Two volumes. London: James Cundee at Albion Press for Longman, Hurst, Reese, and Orme; and C. Chapple; 1806. "First and only edition." Quarto (12 1/8" x 9 ½", 307mm x 242mm). [Full collation available.] With 57 plates in toto: an etched portrait frontispiece, 2 etched title-pages and 54 pictorial plates, of which 1 is woodcut, 7 engraved and 46 aquatint, of which 11 are folding (as well as several aquatint and woodcut culs-de-lampe). Bound in the publisher's drab boards backed in blue tape. With octagonal paper labels to the front of each volume. On the spines, author, title and number in ink manuscript. All edges of the text-block untrimmed. Worn, with chips and losses along the spine. Fore-corners bumped, with chipping. The front hinge of vol. II starting. A little soiling generally, with rubbing and wear to the paper-labels. Foxing to the portrait and engraved titles, and occasionally at the plates, but altogether quite clean with excellent margins (including unopened gatherings at I.b1-2 and II.P3-4). Vol. II quire S and its three plates starting, and quire 2L (pp. 257-260) laid in. A wholly unsophisticated set. The relationship between France and Britain, traditional foes, realigned over the course of the XVIIIc, first from the losses of the large parts of their American empires (the French in the Seven Years' War ending 1763, the British from 1776), and then from the French Revolution. These forged a connection between the aristocrats (or former aristocrats, in the case of France) of the two nations, such that the Napoleonic Wars were set against an oddly chummy relationship between belligerents. Colonel Thomas Thornton (1751/2-1823) inherited his father's Yorkshire estates when still a teenager, and became an accomplished, indeed renowned sportsman (a blurry term, but referring to hunting and shooting, as well as to gentlemen's other outdoor pursuits). From George III's second son Prince Frederick, ("The Grand Old") Duke of York, Thornton bought the estate of Allerton Park in 1789 and renamed it Thornville Royal. Court-martialed after a dispute with his regiment's officers, he resigned his colonelcy and set off for the Continent during the Peace of Amiens (March 1802-May 1803), which marks the break between the Revolutionary Wars and the Napoleonic Wars. Thornton was the archetypal Regency sporting gentleman; he reintroduced falconry into the modern era, and was a crack shot -- indeed, he presented a pair of Durs Egg pistols to Napoleon, and commissioned volley guns, including a 14-barrel rifle. On this basis he toured France (mostly in the north) and corresponded with the Earl of Darlington (William Henry Vane, later first Duke of Cleveland) about his varied experiences, from hunts and shoots on estates including the Châteaux of Versailles and Chantilly, to experiences in French restaurants, including wine lists and evaluations of the handsome women serving at Parisian coffee-houses. The epistolary format must surely have been a mere conceit, as Thornton had with him the British artist Joshua Bryant as well as the French Monsieur Lucas (among others), whose drawings of sporting scenes, buildings, landscapes, events, fashions and types found throughout France have been translated to engravings and, more notably, into aquatints. It was asserted as early as Schwerdt's Hunting, Hawking, Shooting (1928-1937) that this 1806 imprint was the "first and only edition" of the work. The British Library, however, held a set -- destroyed in the Blitz -- with 1805 title-pages, although the dedication is dated 31 March 1806. Abbey opines that some sets were issued before the Earl of Darlington agreed to the dedication, but that the presswork is uniform; the whole work is on wove paper, and the plates do not appear to be watermarked, but some of the letterpress is watermarked 1804. Abbey, Travel I.84; Schwerdt II.259-261; Tooley, English Books 488.