Seller: BASEMENT BOOKS, Albuquerque, NM, U.S.A.
First Edition Signed
Trade Paperback. Condition: Fine. 1st Edition. First Edition, First Printing. Trade PB in glossy illustrated wraps. Fine. GENERICALLY INSCRIBED ("I'm sure you'll find the story insightful"), SIGNED AND DATED BY AUTHOR IN YEAR OF PUBLICATION on title page. 309pp inc. Glossary. 322 p. Inscribed, Signed and Dated in Year of Publication. Book.
Published by New York Graphic Society
Seller: Star 'N Space Books, Prescott, AZ, U.S.A.
First Edition Signed
Hardcover. Condition: Near Fine. Dust Jacket Condition: Very Good. First Edition First Printing Stated. Dj In Plastic Is Nicely Taped To Book And Pictorial Eps. Sl. Edgewear/Shelfwear To Dj, Price Clipped. Book Has Sl. Bit Of Edgewear/Shelfwear, Else Very Well Cared For. B/W Illus. P/O Gift Inscription On Ffep. Signed On Dedication Page "Lawrence Clark Powell". Large Oblong Book, May Require Extra Postage For Overseas Or Expedited Shipping. Lovely Book. Signed by Author(s).
Published by Alfred A. Knopf, New York, 1968
Seller: Owl Pen Books, Greenwich, NY, U.S.A.
First Edition Signed
Condition: Very Good-. Dust Jacket Condition: Fair. Signed by Coe and Hurd on FFEP. Jacket is heavily chipped with front flap nearly detached. Writing in pen on front cover between title and subtitle (Forest Glen?). Some soiling, creasing, and foxing. Now covered in mylar. Red and green cloth covered boards with gilt-stamped apple emblem to front cover and gilt spine titling. Cover gilt is stil sharp and bright, a bit of rubbing to spine gilt. Corners are bumped with a little shelfwear to edges. Some fading to edges, especially at red spine. A divot and a spot of soiling at back cover bottom edge. A tiny scrape or flaw to cloth on front cover just below gilt emblem. Foxing to edges of text block and green dyed top edge is faded. Interior is a bit age-toned but otherwise clean.
Language: English
Published by Alfred A. Knopf, New York, 1968
Seller: K & B Books, Tucson, AZ, AZ, U.S.A.
First Edition Signed
Hardcover. Condition: Fine. Dust Jacket Condition: Near Fine. First Edition. 279 pp., maps, photographs. Introduction by Peter Hurd, typesetting by Carl Hertzog. A fine, tight, unmarked, sharp cornered copy appearing to be unread in a near fine, bright unclipped dust jacket. SIGNED BY THE AUTHOR AND INTRODUCER with no inscriptions! A remarkable history of the Coe Ranch on the Ruidoso River of New Mexico. With much on the Lincoln County War and the participants in it including Billy the Kid and Buckshot Roberts. An exceptional condition copy in a unclipped dust jacket! COLLECTOR QUALITY. Signed by Author(s).
Language: Spanish
Published by Editorial Estela, 1968
Seller: Libros Angulo, Madrid, M, Spain
First Edition Signed
Encuadernación de tapa dura. Condition: Bien. 1? Edición. Editorial Estela, México 1968. Colección: Letras Medicas / Colección Literaria de Médicos. JAIME ROIG nació en la ciudad de Reus, próxima a Barcelona, el año 1897. Estudió Medicina en la Universidad catalana y se doctoró en la Central en 1917. Ingresó el mismo año en el Cuerpo de Sanidad Militar (que en España no tiene carrera con cursos independientes) y en esa calidad ejerció en lugares distintos de la Península Ibérica y del Continente africano. Colaboró en diversas revistas profesionales y redactó el Diccionario de Modismos antiguos y clásicos de la Medicina, patrocinado por el Dr. Manuel Corachán. Como cargo militar, durante la Guerra Civil española, fue Director de los Servicios de Evacuación. Como cargo político aceptó el de Subsecretario de Asistencia Social. En México desde 1941, se ha dedicado a la publicidad médica y a traducciones. Publicó la novela "El último de los Tubau", que mereció el Premio Fasternrath. Durante numerosos años ha colaborado en SEMANA MÉDICA DE MÉXICO, dentro de las secciones de "Publiatría" y "De Clio Médica". Pertenece al PEN Club y a la "American Medical Writers' Association". 404 pp. 21 x 14. Tapa dura de editorial ilustrada. Sin subrayados ni anotaciones. Buen estado de conservación. Firmado por el Autor(es).
Published by Alfred A. Knopf, 1968., New York, 1968
Seller: BUCKINGHAM BOOKS, ABAA, ILAB, IOBA, GREENCASTLE, PA, U.S.A.
First Edition Signed
[NEW MEXICO] [CATTLE RANCHING]. First edition. 8vo. Signed on the front fly leaf by Wilbur Coe and Peter Hurd. The signature of Wilbur Coe is very scarce as he died after having signed only a few copies and before the book was fully into distribution. Cloth, olive green colored front and rear endpapers, xviii, 279 pp., 4 maps by Jose Cisneros. Numerous illustrations from old photographs. Two color plates and pictorial dust jacket by Peter Hurd. Well-written account of the history of a ranching family in New Mexico. "The author of this book, the son of Frank Coe, tells of his life as a successful rancher. The early chapters deal with his troubles during the Lincoln County War and his friendship with Billy The Kid.On the whole the book is most interesting."--Ramon Adams. Offers a vivid portrait of frontier life, cowboys, ranch operations, and the transformation of New Mexico Territory into statehood. An excellent work with much information on Billy The Kid. Fine in dust jacket.
Publication Date: 1968
Magazine / Periodical Signed
[Student Activism][New Left] Indicator, three 1968 issues covering campus politics, the Vietnam War, the Mexico City student killings, and the curricular fight over Black Studies. The October 23, November 6, and November 20, 1968 issues lead with headlines including "BATTLE FOR SURVIVAL," "Liberalism is a Casualty of the War," and "Regents to Meet Here," while interior pages name Ronald Reagan, Eldridge Cleaver, George Wallace, Tran Van Dinh, and the UC Regents, making the paper a direct record of student activism in university governance, antiwar organizing, and Black Power debates in the weeks around the 1968 election. Staff boxes in the October and November issues identify editors and contributors including Paula Cate, Byron King, Cathy Rose, G.R.R. Rowl, Tom Baer, Ilene O'Malley, Sue Adams, and Dick Pray. Indicator. La Jolla, California. October 23 to November 20, 1968. Archive of 3 issues of the UC San Diego alternative student newspaper, each folio-format and printed in tabloid newspaper style, with articles, correspondence, staff lists, cartoons, poetry, local advertising, and extended political commentary focused on Regents policy, student organizing, war politics, and campus curricular struggle. [1] Indicator. La Jolla, California: October 23, 1968. Issue opening with "BATTLE FOR SURVIVAL," pairing coverage of a Regents' meeting with a "Mexico teach-in" and announcing "The students of Mexico City: a chronology of events, page 4." Interior pages include Tom Baer's "On the Tactics of Disruption," electoral analysis under "November 5: is there another answer?," Shirley Powell's translated chronology "¡Viva La Victoria Siempre!," and editorial and correspondence sections that tie UCSD politics to repression in Mexico, the presidential election, and disputes over faculty, curriculum, and student participation. [2] Indicator. La Jolla, California: November 6, 1968. Front page headed "Liberalism is a Casualty of the War," printed from an October 17 speech by Fred Gordon, Internal Education Secretary for the Students for a Democratic Society, and accompanied by a large antiwar illustration. Interior pages include "Now That It's Over.," "Humanities Sequence Survey Reveals Need for Innovation," references to Black control of schools and anti-draft protest, and further correspondence on university regulations and political education; the front cover also bears contemporary pen markings at the upper margin reading "Go to C.I. room tomorrow 11 to Revelle Library." [3] Indicator. La Jolla, California: November 20, 1968. Front page announces "Regents to Meet Here" beneath a split portrait juxtaposing Ronald Reagan and UCSD Chancellor William J. McGill with the caption "Heads I win, tails you lose." Interior contents include "Politics of Separation," a sustained argument over academic freedom, Cleaver, and Social Analysis 139X, alongside "Second Floor: Commodities and More Plastics," a gender critique signed by Ilene O'Malley, and notices for "Tran Van Dinh: Inside Vietnam," "Black Studies," "The 'Emancipated' Male - Which Way to Turn?," and "139X: A History," establishing the issue's concentration on race, war, masculinity, and university power. These three issues were printed in the late 1960s, when student newspapers increasingly served as a forum for local discussion of national and international crises. At UC San Diego, the Regents, Reagan, Black Studies, Humanities Sequence reform, SDS language, anti-draft protest, and the memory of the Mexico City repression all appear here as overlapping and interconnected conflicts. Contents also include polemical essays, correspondence, staff listings, and local advertisements. Very good condition overall; light toning and expected horizontal fold lines from original issue format, with the November 6, 1968 issue bearing contemporary pen markings to the upper front cover. A tight three-issue run from the fall of 1968 capturing UCSD student activism on war, race, curriculum, and institutional. Signed.
Language: German
Seller: ralfs-buecherkiste, Herzfelde, MOL, Germany
Signed
Pappe 21*19. Condition: Gut. 63 Seiten altersbedingt guter Zustand, vom Autor signiert 200422052 Sprache: Deutsch Gewicht in Gramm: 250.