Published by The American Weekly, New York, 1958
Seller: sonalsorises, Los angeles, CA, U.S.A.
First Edition Signed
Original Cloth. Condition: Very Good Plus. First Edition. First Edition. Original blue cloth, very good plus with minor wear to spine, small bump on top right corner of front cover, decoration to front cover still visible and modestly bright. This copy is inscribed and SIGNED by Kantor to Bill Targ, the publisher. By Author.
Published by Doubleday, Garden City, 1969
Seller: sonalsorises, Los angeles, CA, U.S.A.
First Edition
Condition: Near Fine. Dust Jacket Condition: Near Fine. First Edition. First Edition. Original boards, spine very slightly faded, near fine in near fine dust jacket with the original price intact on the front flap. REVIEW COPY stamped on the front pastedown " With the compliments of Doubleday & Company, Inc." Very scarce thus.
Published by American Poetry Magazine, Milwaukee, 1926
Seller: sonalsorises, Los angeles, CA, U.S.A.
First Edition
Condition: Fine. First Edition. First Edition. Original wire-stapled wrappers, illustrated covers, fine. Contains "The Big Parade" by MacKinlay Kantor, which precedes his first book publication. We could locate no other copies of this rare magazine.
Published by Coward McAnn Inc, New York, 1935
Seller: sonalsorises, Los angeles, CA, U.S.A.
First Edition
Condition: Near Very Good. Will Crawford (illustrator). First Edition. First Edition. Original two-cloth covers, moderately sunned. Interesting presentation copy signed in full by Mackinlay Kantor: "For Elizabeth Sanderson, nee Betty Sanders - Who used to write some mighty good verse - and when will she write some more? 'O Betty, my heart is aching; O Betty, my heart is yearing!' Done on Compo Road, in a perfect blaze of affection, this 29th day of May, 1935 - from MacKinlay Kantor. and send me a copy of the verse." With Kantor's drawing of a man pointing to "Page 45." Page 45 has the poem "Hettie Hooker." On the second black page is the following: "To Betty Sanders. Hell I didn't know her as Betty Sanderson but after all I gave her this tome which I'd have never have done if I'd known she knew the 'author'. One of the reasons one knows authors or perhaps "authors" is so you can get dedication volumes which I have found destroys their value (the volume no the "author".) as ever Uncle Tobias. Quite scarce signed thus. By Author.