Published by The Frank A. Munsey Company, New York, 1925
Seller: biblioboy, North Providence, RI, U.S.A.
First Edition
Single Issue Magazine. Condition: Fair. cover by Paul Stahr (illustrator). First Edition. New York: The Frank A. Munsey Company. 1925. First Edition. Pulp magazine. Pictorial wrappers [about 6.75" x 9.75"], last numbered page is 800 [first numbered page is 641], illustrated. Includes the second of four parts of "The Radio Beasts" by Ralph Milne Farley, the fourth of five parts of "Senor Jingle Bells" by Max Brand, "Staring Eyes" by A. Majors, "The Rise of Homer Tosh" by Robert Terry Shannon, "Left-Handed" by W. O. McGeehan, "The Literature of Escape" by Paul Sand, "The Grabber" by Lucile N. Tate, "The Recklessness of Whistling John" by Don Waters, etc. A complete but fair only Reading/filler copy with the spine chipped at the ends, cover creased and worn with some edge chipping, edge staining to the rear cover, text paper toned as usual. Bx 504.
Published by Edward J. Clode, Inc., New York, 1929
Seller: Willis Monie-Books, ABAA, Cooperstown, NY, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Fair. DJ spine is missing approx. 1 1/2" from the top end and is darkly stained. Stain doesn't touch cover underneath. DJ front has a diagonal tear its entire width across the center, has been taped on the inside. DJ has several chips and very small edge tears, slight rubbing, and is now in a mylar cover. DJ is close to poor, although the color front illustration is mostly intact. Page edges are faintly browned.
Published by The Frank A. Munsey Company, New York, 1928
Seller: biblioboy, North Providence, RI, U.S.A.
First Edition
Single Issue Magazine. Condition: Good. First Edition; First Printing. New York: The Frank A. Munsey Company. Good. 1928.First edition. Pulp magazine. Pictorial wrappers [about 6.75" x 9.75"], last numbered page is 576 [first numbered page is 433], illustrated including a rear cover ad for Camel cigarettes]. Good copy with spine chipped at the ends, usual edgewear/chipping to the cover, 2.5" piece of clear/cellophane tape to the front cover near the lower fore-edge text paper tanned as usual. bx74E.
Published by Frank A. Munsey Co., NY, 1922
Magazine / Periodical
SingleIssueMagazine. Condition: Very Good. Vol. CXLII, No. 1. Pulp magazine. [Edited by Matthew White.] Cover art by [Frank H.] Desch for "The Garden of Eden" (pt. 1 of 6) by Max Brand. Includes "The Lady in Blue" (pt. 2 of 5) by Augusta Groner & Grace Isabel Colbron; "The Tiger Trail" (pt. 3 of 4) by Edison Marshall; "South of Fifty-Three" (pt. 4 of 6) by Jack Bechdolt; "The Flying Fool" (pt. 5 of 5) by Rex Parson; "The Gilded Caravan" (novelette) by Robert Terry Shannon; "The Gloom on Second Base" by Charles Divine; "Thirty Cents More" by Emily Callaway; "The Contract with Conceptione" by Howard Rockey; "A Hundred Thousand in Gold" by Lyon Mearson; "Commen Folks" by Gordon Stiles. Some soiling and minor stains; standard edgewear; a little creasing and light rubbing; tanned; lower foredge corner a little bent from poor stacking.
Published by A. L. Burt Company, New York, 1929
Seller: Monkey House Books, Miller Place, NY, U.S.A.
Condition: Good. Scarce novel of Jazz Age New York City. Published by arrangement with Edward J. Clode, Inc. Textblock sound and square, hinges good. 285 pages, clean and unmarked. Covers and backstrip worn and soiled, boards visible; edges and corners worn and frayed, boards showing. Shannon, 1895-1950, was also a screenwriter during the 1930s and 1940s. Black cloth boards, red/orange stamped cover and spine.
Published by Frank A. Munsey Co., NY, 1925
Magazine / Periodical
SingleIssueMagazine. Condition: Very Good-. Vol. CLXXII, No. 5. Cover by Paul Stahr for "In the Event of Death" (pt. 1 of 4) by Laurie York Erskine. Includes "The Radio Beasts" (pt. 2 of 4) by Ralph Milne Farley; "Senor Jingle Bells" (pt. 4 of 5) by Max Brand; "A Live Man's Widow" (pt. 5 of 5) by Elizabeth York Miller; "Staring Eyes" (novelette) by A. Majors; "The Rise of Homer Tosh" by Robert Terry Shannon; "Left-Handed" by W. O. McGeehan; "The Literature of Escape" by Paul Sand; "The Grabber" by Lucie N. Tate; "The Recklessness of Whistling John" by Don Waters. Poetry: "My Overzealous Friend" by Strickland Gillilan; "Events" by Julia Boynton Green; "Now" by Sophie E. Redford; "The Bootlegger" by Stanley Hart Cauffman; "The Travels of Ulysses - Modern" by Glen Allen; "Our Young Hopeful" by Ella Bentley Arthur. Spine taped; edges a little rough.
Published by The Frank A. Munsey Company, New York, 1921
Seller: biblioboy, North Providence, RI, U.S.A.
First Edition
Paperback. Condition: Good. First Edition. Pictorial wrappers [about 6.75" x 9.75"], last numbered page is 640 [first numbered page is 481], illustrated. Includes the fourth of six parts of "Black Jack" by Max Brand, the first of five parts of "The Green Stain" by Carolyn Wells, "The Drifter" by John Holden, etc. Good to Very Good copy cellophane tape across the spine ends, usual edgewear and a corner tear to the cover, paper tanned bx89.E.
Paperback. Condition: Very Good. First U.k. Paperback Edition. 8vo. pp 32. Original publishers colourful stapled covers. Illustrations by Charles Payzant. Jolly Book distributed by L. Miller & co. in the U.K. Copiously illustrated in colour throughout. Clean, very good.
Published by A.L. Burt Company (c.1931), New York/Chicago, 1931
Seller: ReadInk, ABAA/IOBA, Los Angeles, CA, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. Reprint. (no dust jacket) [modestly shelfworn book, spine very slightly turned, slight bumping to corners of front cover (a touch of fraying to lower corner), some fading/mottling to spine cloth, short rip in cloth at top of spine, vintage price sticker at upper corner of rear pastedown (from San Francisco department store The White House)]. This novel about a rural Southern girl, trying to make it in on her own in New York, who can only find work as a paid dancing partner in a "dancing academy" -- which leads to her getting involved with (successively) a gambler, a dancer, and a millionaire -- was first published as a syndicated newspaper serial beginning in May 1926. M-G-M knew surefire movie material when they saw it, and by the beginning of June it had already been synopsized by the studio's story department; a full scenario was completed by September, and the resulting movie was ready for release by the following March. It was the first film in which a young Joan Crawford received top billing (it was early enough in her career that at the time the story was acquired by the studio, she was still being carried on the payroll under her original name, Lucille LeSueur). It may not have been entirely coincidental that Crawford was cast in a role in which dancing played such a central part: according to many accounts of her career, frustration at her lack of progress towards stardom under her early M-G-M contract led her to embark on her own self-publicity campaign -- a major feature of which was entering (and winning) numerous local dance competitions. The film may have been a major career boost for Crawford, but for the studio it was just a programmer: her co-stars were undistinguished, ditto the director (Harry Millarde, then at the tail end of an unremarkable career), and the movie was clearly not important enough for the issuance of an accompanying "photoplay edition" -- so apart from its original newspaper serialization, the only other time this novel appeared in print was four years after the movie, in an edition by the minor publisher Edward J. Clode, of which this A.L. Burt edition was a cheap reprint. (And just so we're clear: this is *not* a photoplay edition, and in fact makes no reference at all to its earlier publication or to the existence of the movie; I guess it's possible there was some link to it provided on the dust jacket, but alas it ain't here.) So when you look at the entry for the film in the AFI Catalog, and wonder how a 1927 movie could have been based on a "1931" novel -- now you know. Oh, and by the way, the book in any edition is quite scarce: as of this writing, OCLC records only three institutional copies of the Clode edition, and just two of the Burt printing.
Published by Edward J. Clode, NY, 1931
Seller: Dorley House Books, Inc., Hagerstown, MD, U.S.A.
First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. No Jacket. 1st. 1st printing; blue c w/black titles; lite rubbing and wear at exremities; owner's stamp; lite toning of end papers; 255 clean, unmarked pages. Very scarce.
Published by Ronald Feldman Fine Arts, Inc. / The Charing Hill Company Ltd. New York / New York, NY / NY, 1982
Seller: Specific Object / David Platzker, New York, NY, U.S.A.
Signed
[unpaginated]; 32.3 x 32.3 x 2.3 cm.; loose leaves; slipcase; black-and-white; edition size 500; signed and numbered; offset-printed Deluxe boxed edition of the two LP record "Revolutions Per Minute (The Art Record)," produced by Jeff Gordon. Includes audio recordings as well as a portfolio of twenty-one original photo lithographs created as album cover proposals by: Jud Fine, Eleanor Antin, Terry Fox, Margaret Harrison, Les Levine, Hannah Wilke, Douglas Davis, Komar & Melamid, Helen Mayer Harrison, Newton Harrison, Vincenzo Agnetti, Chris Burden, Piotr Kowalski, William Burroughs, Ida Applebroog, Edwin Schlossberg, Site, R. Buckminster Fuller, Thomas Shannon, Conrad Atkinson, David Smyth, Todd Siler, and Joseph Beuys. All prints are signed and numbered by the artists in an edition of 500. Introduction by Dr. Robert C. Morgan. Album cover and text design by Juanita Gordon. Fine. As issued, clean and unmarked. Numbered in pencil on box 499/500 as well as signed and numbered by each artist on the enclosed lithographs. Due to size and weight of this item additional shipping charges will be required for international orders.