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Verlag: Union Square Kids (edition 9.5.2010), 2010
ISBN 10: 1402772181ISBN 13: 9781402772184
Anbieter: BooksRun, Philadelphia, PA, USA
Buch
Hardcover. Zustand: Fair. 9.5.2010. Ship within 24hrs. Satisfaction 100% guaranteed. APO/FPO addresses supported.
Verlag: Harvard Square Editions 9/4/2020, 2020
ISBN 10: 1941861687ISBN 13: 9781941861684
Anbieter: BargainBookStores, Grand Rapids, MI, USA
Buch
Paperback or Softback. Zustand: New. The Road Not Taken 0.7. Book.
Verlag: Harvard Square Editions 7/9/2015, 2015
ISBN 10: 1941861075ISBN 13: 9781941861073
Anbieter: BargainBookStores, Grand Rapids, MI, USA
Buch
Paperback or Softback. Zustand: New. Faggot: An Appalachian Tale Surviving Bullying 0.18. Book.
Verlag: Harvard Square Editions 9/13/2022, 2022
ISBN 10: 1941861881ISBN 13: 9781941861882
Anbieter: BargainBookStores, Grand Rapids, MI, USA
Buch
Paperback or Softback. Zustand: New. Rocked in Time 0.97. Book.
Verlag: Published by Hugh Evelyn Ltd., 9 Fitzroy Square, London First Thus Edition . 1968., 1968
Anbieter: Little Stour Books PBFA Member, Canterbury, Vereinigtes Königreich
Verbandsmitglied: PBFA
Erstausgabe
First 1968 edition of an 1880 title hard back binding in publisher's original brick red cloth covers, gilt title and author lettering to the spine. Landscape 7½'' x 9¼''. Contains 72 printed pages of text with monochrome engravings and archive illustrations throughout. Very Good condition book in Very Good condition dust wrapper, not price clipped. Dust wrapper supplied in archive acetate film protection. Member of the P.B.F.A. ISBN 023878908X RAILWAYS & LOCOMOTIVES.
Verlag: LES EDITIONS DU SQUARE 9 SEPTEMBRE 1974, 1974
Pas de couverture. Zustand: bon. ROD0070198: 9 SEPTEMBRE 1974. In-4. En feuillets. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 14 pages illustrées de dessins N&B. Le premier plat de couverture contient une illustration N&B. . . . Classification Dewey : 70.441-Journaux satiriques anciens.
Verlag: David McKay Company, Washington Square, , 1st US trade edition, blue cloth, gilt titles on board and spine, a pasted on plate of a little girl in blue plaid, plain endpapers, half titles for each story and 12 plates as issued; 9.5 x 12.25"; 105 pp., Philadelphia, 1925
Anbieter: Truman Price & Suzanne Price / oldchildrensbooks, Monmouth, OR, USA
Erstausgabe
/H. Willebeek le Mair,(Saida) illustrator. (illustrator). CONDITION: Very Good without jacket; traces of owner stamp ffep, no other marks, plate a bit toned but neat, tight and straight, light rubs on extrems, 3/8"cloth rip on bottom corner edge, rub and tiny split on spine foot, pages and plates clean and unwrinkled. Light shadows of laid in photo on rear endpaper. Juvenile hardback These whimsical stories about children were inspired by a beautiful series of Deco illustrations created by le Mair (as Saida, her Sufi name) for a Colgate FAB detergent advertizing campaign. True, but hard to believe as one looks at the delicate images. Milne, a well known playright, had previously published the children's poetry book When We Were Very Young (1924) but this was his first book of prose. Winnie-the-Pooh followed in 1926. A March 1926 newspaper photo of Christopher and his mother is laid in (dated by the Maria Altieri shipwreck on back)All twelve are here, "The Princess and the Apple-Tree", "Sparrow Tree Square", "The Twins", "Miss Waterlow in Bed", "Sand Babies", "Poor Anne", "A Voyage to India", "Barbara's Birthday", "The Baby Show", "The Magic Hill", "The Three Daughters of M. Dupont", "Castles by the Sea" ABE Heritage Seller, since 1996: Search ABE Keyword: oldchildrensbooks. Conservative AB condition grading, secure packing, international shipping. /H. Willebeek le Mair,(Saida) illustrator.
Verlag: 9 Square Editions, New Haven, CT, 2004
Anbieter: APPLEDORE BOOKS, ABAA, WACCABUC, NY, USA
Erstausgabe
Cloth. Zustand: Collectible; Fine. Zustand des Schutzumschlags: Fine. 1st. A handsome copy of this 2004 monograph. WARMLY INSCRIBED BY PETER KURT WOERNER on the front free endpaper. Clean and Fine in a bright, Near Fine dustjacket. Tall quarto, 256 pgs., crisp color illustrations thruout of the architect's work.
Verlag: 9 Square Editions, New Haven, 2010
ISBN 10: 0976212722ISBN 13: 9780976212720
Anbieter: Samuel Lasenby Bookseller, Corona del Mar, CA, USA
Buch Erstausgabe
Hardcover. Zustand: Fine. Zustand des Schutzumschlags: Fine. 1st Edition. Black boards [6]+184p,cp,pep. Comes in publishers slip case Very heavy and long book -20" Extra shipping will be required.
Verlag: 9 Square Editions, 2004
ISBN 10: 0976212706ISBN 13: 9780976212706
Anbieter: Wizard Books, Long Beach, CA, USA
Buch
Hardcover. Zustand: new. New.
Mehr Angebote von anderen Verkäufern bei AbeBooks
Neu ab EUR 338,41
Verlag: Benbow Printer and Publisher Lord Byron's Head 9 Castle Street Leicester Square. London 8vo. Pirated edition, 1822
Anbieter: Patrick Pollak Rare Books ABA ILAB, SOUTH BRENT, DEVON, Vereinigtes Königreich
pp. vi, (v)-xi, (i) Explanation of the Plates, 500. Frontispiece and 11 plates [5 aquatints, 7 engraved and folding, all with the Benbow imprint]. Original cloth-backed boards, lower corners of the boards repaired, rebacked, occasional discoloured margin, the multi-folding plates somewhat foxed, creased at the edges and one is torn at the attachment without loss, entirely uncut, overall a good copy. *William Lawrence first delivered these Lectures at the Royal College of Surgeons in 1817, and was roundly attacked by his mentor, Abernethy, in his publication 'Physiological Lectures.'. Lawrence declared at the start of the above Lectures that had Abernethy's charges been restricted to the lecture theatre, he would have been content to refute them there but as they had been subsequently offered in print, he felt obliged to do the same. The charge accused Lawrence of perverting '. the honourable office, intrusted to [him] by this Court, to the very unworthy design of propagating opinions detrimental to society, and of endeavouring to enforce them for the purpose of loosening those restraints, on which the welfare of mankind depends.' Given Lawrence's conclusions and the political context in which they were uttered, Abernethy's accusation, coming from the heart of the establishment, was not at all surprising. Lawrence had stated that all physical, moral and mental differences in man were inherited, that the races of man had arisen by mutation, that sexual selection had improved the beauty of 'advanced' races and the governing classes, that what we now think of as genetic isolation had acted to preserve racial characters by establishing breeding barriers, that differences between races of man can never be due to differences in external conditions such as food, climate or government, that, just as domestic animals were improved by selective breeding, so could improvements or conversely deleterious effects, be transmitted in man, as evidenced in many royal families and aristocracies - and, finally, that only by objective study, such as zoological, could the treatment of man as an animal amongst animals, provide the proper foundation for teaching and research in medicine, in morals, and in politics. Delivered at a time when the reverberations of the French Revolution were still in evidence, it is not surprising that there should be a reaction. The Church and the Universities which they controlled were horrified - radical opinion, however, was delighted and the more outrageous individuals gave the most irreverent responses. Thomas Love Peacock, the novelist, bought a barontecy for an Orang-Utan. There was a rush to publish anti-Lawrence tracts and of course, opportunist publishers like Benbow and Smith capitalised on public interest by pirating the original Callow imprint. Lawrence obtained an injunction against Smith for publishing without consent but in the subsequent Chancery Court case, it was found against him, in that the publication denied Christianity and Revelation, contrary to public policy and morality. He had thus forfeited copyright in the work and the piracy was upheld. The outcry against Lawrence was such as to force him to consider his position and his future. He faced possible prosecution, certain persecution and probable ruin - he therefore retracted and suppressed the book, survived the crisis and in later years became President of the Royal College of Surgeons, Sergeant-Surgeon to Queen Victoria and, before he died in 1867, a baronet. Therein lies a message. shortly before he died, he warned Huxley not to publish anything on the evolution of man, but, of course, the atmosphere had changed totally since his early days. Even today, however, Lawrence scarcely rates a mention in Darwinian commentaries. Only C. D. DARLINGTON in Darwin's Place in History, 1959, seems to have been prepared to spend time on him and he notes drily that Lawrence made three mistakes - he acknowledged the work of his predecessors, he based his views on man and pointed out the implications for the social politics of his time. Regarding the first point, Darlington points out the indebtedness of Patrick Mathew to Lawrence - '. in an appendix to a work on the growth of timber for warships, Mathew, in a few brilliant pages irrelevant to his main theme, had expounded a complete theory of evolution. In the same book he had also introduced a few equally irrelevant but equally illuminating views on the evolution of race and class in man and the decay of aristocracies. These opinions as a whole are related to only one source, to the conclusions which Lawrence had derived by close reasoning from the evidence.'.