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Bauman Rare Books, Philadelphia, PA, USA
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"ROOSEVELT, Franklin D. Typed letter initialed. Washington, 1942. Single sheet of light green White House letterhead, measuring 7 by 9 inches; p. 1. $7500.Fascinating typed and hand-initialed letter written during World War II from President Franklin D. Roosevelt to his uncle, the Honorable Frederic A. Delano, thanking his uncle for sending a clipping on Tom Paine and stating that Paine's principal mistake was opposing Washington in the election of 1796.The letter, typed on light green White House stationery, dated "August 25, 1942," and addressed to FDR's uncle, the Honorable Frederic A. Delano, reads in full: "Dear Uncle Fred:- Many thanks for sending me that clipping about Tom Paine. I , too, have always had a keen interest in him. His principle mistake lay in his rather violent opposition to Washington in the campaign of 1792 [i.e. 1796]. Affectionately, [hand-initialed] FDR." This letter actually refers to the campaign of 1796, rather than the non-existent campaign of 1792; Washington was unanimously re-elected without a campaign in 1792. By 1796, circumstances were very different: two political parties had been formed. Federalists supported John Adams, while anti-Federalists (also known as Republicans and Democratic-Republicans) supported Thomas Jefferson. In 1791, Paine had been avidly pro-Washington. In fact, he dedicated the first part of Rights of Man to him. On May 6, 1792, a similarly admiring Washington wrote Paine, in part: "My thanks for the token of your remembrance, in the 50 copies of Rights of Man… I rejoice in the information of your personal prosperity."Then, in 1793, Paine was arrested in Paris. A long-naturalized American citizen, he had fled to Paris from Britain where an arrest warrant had been issued due to the anti-government principles espoused in his work. While he came to France unable to speak the language, he was eventually elected to the French National Convention. Paine gained enemies there. Viewed as a Girondist, his political beliefs were a stark contrast to those of Robespierre and his allies. When Robespierre came to power, Paine was arrested and thrown in jail to await execution. After a lengthy imprisonment and a lucky escape from the guillotine, Paine's feelings toward Washington changed. He was deeply aggrieved, asserting that there had been a conspiracy between Washington and Robespierre to imprison him. Without that rationalization, Paine simply could not understand the betrayal of his best friend. He wrote him angrily without receiving any response. Ultimately, Paine contacted his longtime publisher, the anti-Federalist Benjamin Bache, requesting that he publish his Letter to George Washington in 1796. In the publication, Paine attacked Washington as "an apostate or an impostor," question whether he had "abandoned good principles or whether [he] ever had any."Roosevelt had a deep fascination with Paine. In fact, in one of his most famous Fireside Chats, on February 23, 1942 during the darkest days of the war, just after the bombing of Pearl Harbor, began with a lengthy invocation of the Revolutionary War and quoted Paine ("These are the times that try men's souls…"). "Paine enjoyed a brief revival in the 1940s, after F.D.R. quoted The American Crisis… and an excellent two-volume set, The Complete Writings of Thomas Paine, edited by Philip Foner, was published in 1945" (New Yorker).This letter was written to the Honorable Frederic A. Delano, a railroad magnate who held numerous governmental positions including Vice Governor of the Federal Reserve, colonel of the Transportation Corps during World War I, receiver in the Red River Boundary Case, Oklahoma v. Texas, by the US Supreme Court, member of the League of Nation's International Commission concerning opium production in Persia, a member of the Smithsonian Institution Board of Regents, trustee and chairman of the Brookings Institute, member and chairman of the National Park and Planning Commission of Washington, chairman of the Nat. Bestandsnummer des Verkäufers 116404
Titel: Typed letter initialed
Erscheinungsdatum: 1942
Signiert: Signed
Auflage: First Edition.
Anbieter: THE FINE BOOKS COMPANY / A.B.A.A / 1979, ROCHESTER, MI, USA
First Edition. TYPED LETTER INITIALED to good friend Harry Harrison dated October 22nd, 1986, on personal stationery folded twice but still vg+/near fine. One page being about 270 words concerning his wife's most recent and totally unexpected heart attack and subsequent new plans for Windy Con; might having to renege on an offer to drive Harrison to Midway airport; a Japanese monetary payment, etc. A nice little bit of chatty correspondence between these 2 most important writers. Bestandsnummer des Verkäufers 07589
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
Anbieter: THE FINE BOOKS COMPANY / A.B.A.A / 1979, ROCHESTER, MI, USA
First Edition. TYPED LETTER INITIALED to good friend Harry Harrison dated May 22nd, 1969, on personal stationery folded twice but still fine. One page being about 200 words concerning politics and honesty in voting for the NEBULA awards; Ted Gordon and the Institute of the Future and its Delphi Machine; the possible inclusion of some material from his (Pohl's) book DIGITS AND DASTARDS in a new book the recipient is doing; a hopeful visit to San Deigo, etc. Along with 3 carbon TYPED LETTERS from Harry Harrison (one to Anne McCaffrey and two to Fred Pohl) dated May 22nd, June 25th & July 14th, 1969 respectively, near fine; the one to Anne being two pages, the two to Pohl, being one page each, all in all about 1200 words total concerning the politics of the NEBULA awards and suggestions of change; the death of Willy Ley; his wife's operation; NEBULA politics; thanks for a copy of DIGITS AND DASTARDS and noting that he will show it to his co-editor for their new anthology; noting a potential typo in the book on page 165; of same; going to Ireland to check on the particulars of the alleged tax free haven; calling a meeting of the Hydra club, etc. A nice little bit of revealing correspondence from these 2 most important writers. Bestandsnummer des Verkäufers 07571
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Anbieter: Expatriate Bookshop of Denmark, Svendborg, Dänemark
one page. This is the carbon copy of a one-page single-side 52-line typed letter from American author Henry Miller to Guy Buchet, the co-proprietor of the French publishing house Editions Buchet / Chastel, largely concerning a French edition of "To Paint Is to Love Again". About 500 words total. Signed, in inked initials,"HM". The letter reads in part: ".,.The original American edition [.] has long been out of print[.,.] However my friend William G. Webb [.] arranged with his friend Richard Grossman of N.Y. City to republish this book but in an enlarged version; to the original text he added an equally lengthy text called 'Semblance of a Devoted Past' composed of letters to my old friend Emil Schnellock and dealing exclusivelty with painting and painters [.,.] These letters date from the 1930s and are of course, very, very different in every way from the text of 'To Paint [.,.] Unfortunately Grossman Publishers did a bad job with the colors in reproducing my water colors; they also neglected to advertise the book, for no apparent reason. At this moment a Japanese publisher[.,.] is bringing out the Grossman edition in Japanese, with additional water colors and we, trust, corrected color values [.,.] I could not send you additional water colors -- too much bother, too much risk of loss or damage, and besides, I own now very very few; my friends own the bulk of my work.[.,.] I didn't know you had republished the Big Sur book and Aller Retour too. Does the later sell well?.,.". Bestandsnummer des Verkäufers 018786
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
Anbieter: Between the Covers-Rare Books, Inc. ABAA, Gloucester City, NJ, USA
Unbound. Zustand: Near Fine. One page Typed Letter Initialed ("W.M.") by William Maxwell to Atheneum Press poetry editor and book designer Harry Ford. On *New Yorker* stationary, undated but docketed on the verso as 1958. Toning at the edges of the letter, one horizontal fold from mailing, very good. Longtime *New Yorker* fiction editor Maxwell apologizes for misplacing some paper and sends them along (not present here). Maxwell also explains in detail his reasoning about a phrase in a story that they seem to disagree on. Bestandsnummer des Verkäufers 553788
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Anbieter: Churchill Book Collector ABAA/ILAB/IOBA, San Diego, CA, USA
Letter. This artifact of Winston S. Churchill's preparation to publish the first volume of his Second World War memoirs is comprised of four pages, the first a 6 March 1948 typed letter signed by Churchill to his close friend, the publishing magnate Viscount Camrose. The remaining three pages, referenced and conveyed by the letter, are a three-page draft by Churchill's indispensable literary agent, Emery Reves, initialed by Churchill, to publishers of the forthcoming first volume of Churchill's war memoirs.The letter from Churchill to Camrose is typed on a single sheet of Churchill's watermarked, laid paper, Chartwell stationery. It begins "My dear Bill, Reves has sent me the enclosed which, like all his work, bears evidence of precise and careful thought." The letter proceeds to strongly endorse Reves's draft while also asking for Camrose's comments. The final sentence references a "talk that you and I and Brendan [Bracken] had" Churchill's autograph valediction follows in two lines "Yours ever, | W." The three-page document from Reves is headed "Letter to the Publishers | DRAFT". On the final page of the document, there is note that "the second volume will probably not be published before the beginning of 1949." With an "x" beside it in the left margin and a corresponding "x" denoted note at the bottom of the document reading "I am sorry about this; but accept it." Beside this note, Churchill initialed in pencil "WC". The draft letter presents "the final title pages and preliminaries of the first volume as prepared and approved by Mr. Churchill, subject to full freedom of proof correction." The letter also announces that "The first volume's title has been finally fixed as 'The Gathering Storm'." Amid the four, numbered points made by Reves is the observation that use of the individual volume's subtitles, rather than the overall title of the work ("The Second World War") may serve to keep sales robust as successive volumes appear. Also interesting is the exhortation about content; even though "the volume is considerably larger than expected" it is explicitly stated that "we find that there is not one paragraph in the book which could be omitted." Not unrelated to the last point is acknowledgement of post-war scarcity in Britain: "the binding cloth shortage in England will make it impossible to publish it in two volumes."Condition of the letter is clean and complete with a single circular hole punched at the upper left for filing, a paper clip indentation and mild soiling adjacent to the hole, a pencil check mark at the upper right, and a pencil notation at the lower left that appears to say "replied 10 Mar 48". Condition of the three-page draft from Reves is near fine, the pages clean and complete with a single staple hole at the upper right.Although huge numbers of each volume of The Second World War were published in the U.S. and Great Britain, foreign language editions were by no means either incidental or few. We know of foreign editions in Arabic, Belgian, Bulgarian, Danish, Dutch, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hungarian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Russian, Serbo-Croat, Spanish, Swedish, and Turkish, among others. Perhaps no other figure played such an important - even vital - role in bringing the writings of Winston Churchill to a worldwide audience as did Emery Reves (1904-1981). Particularly in the critical years immediately preceding the Second World War, Reves succeeded in putting Churchill's relentless advocacy of democratic ideals before an incredibly diverse international audience. Per Churchill bibliographer Ronald Cohen, Reves was Churchill's "principal literary agent for foreign-language periodical contributions and, ultimately, for the foreign-language and North American editions of The Second World War and A History of the English-Speaking Peoples in both volume and periodical form." It was "a profitable business relationship that grew over time into an enduring personal friendship. Bestandsnummer des Verkäufers 008035
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
Anbieter: Churchill Book Collector ABAA/ILAB/IOBA, San Diego, CA, USA
Letter. This 23 March 1949 letter and accompanying "aide memoire" present to Winston S. Churchill's close friend, the publishing magnate Viscount Camrose, Churchill's proposal to add a sixth and final volume to Churchill's Second World War memoirs. The letter is a single typed sheet on watermarked stationery headed with the typed address of financier and U.S. presidential advisor Bernard Baruch. The letter features, all in blue ink, Churchill's autograph and underlined stipulation "Private" at the upper left, the "My dear Bill," salutation, the valediction "yours sincerely," and his signature "Winston S. Churchill". Presented in the letter and accompanying it is a two-page typed "aide memoire" on the same stationery terminating with the typed date "23.3.49" directly below Churchill's autograph initials "WSC". These documents must have been sent by courier on 23 March the two miles from Baruch's home, at 4, East 66th Street, New York City to the Ritz-Carlton at 46th Street and Madison Avenue, where Camrose was staying.Condition of the letter is near fine, clean and complete (apart from pencil filing notation at the upper center) with a single circular hole punched at the upper left for filing, an adjacent staple scar, and a single horizontal fold. Condition of the accompanying "aide memoire" is likewise near-fine, clean and complete with no notation other than Churchill's autograph initials.The Second World War, published between 1948 and 1953, was arguably one of the most significant non-fiction publishing events of the twentieth century. In a 15 October 1946 letter marked "Private & Confidential" in his hand, Churchill had first proposed to Camrose his initial conceptions, concerns, and conditions about writing his war memoirs. At that time, Churchill had estimated that, if he undertook it, "The work would seem to divide itself into four or five books" In the intervening years, writing the war memoirs had gone from a speculative possibility to a definitive, consuming, and financially significant reality. The project had also grown significantly in scope and length from the original conception. Churchill was readying to submit the final draft of his third volume when, with this letter and the attached "aide memoire", he formally proposed to add a sixth volume.On 3 March, Camrose's son, Michael, informed Churchill that his father would be in New York from 20-26 March. Churchill wrote to Michael on 9 March 1949 "I look forward to seeing your father in New York. It will be very convenient our all being there, as I have several questions to raise about the future." Churchill arrived in New York aboard the Queen Mary the same day that he presented Camrose with this letter and accompanying "aide memoire". In his letter, Churchill tells Camrose "I hope we are going to meet at dinner tonight at Bernie's. There is a serious point which I should like to discuss with you, and on which I send you the enclosed note. Please think it over and give me your opinion. The "note" is two typed pages formally making the case for the necessity of a sixth and final volume of The Second World War. After more than a full page of substantive and detailed explanation of the issues and events yet to be addressed in his history, particularly in the notionally final fifth volume, Churchill states "To compress all this into a single volume seems a pity. I therefore suggest that you and your friends [These being the U.S. and British publishers of Churchill's war memoirs] should consider a sixth volume It is necessary for me to know whether this would be agreeable to the purchasers, and what terms they will offer, so that I can plan my work accordingly I will talk to you about this when we meet, but thought it would be convenient for you to have this aide memoire to show the others."Of course, there was ultimately a sixth and final volume, titled Triumph and Tragedy and published in November 1953. These documents, written and signed by Churchill upon his arrival in New York on 23 March 1949, encapsulate Churchill's initial presentation and advocacy for the final volume.This letter was part of an archive of correspondence from Churchill to William Ewert Berry, 1st Viscount Camrose (1879-1954) and Camrose's sons, centered on the conception, writing, and publication of Churchill's Second World War memoirs, and spanning sixteen years, from October 1946 to October 1962. The file in which the correspondence was kept bore a typed label "LETTERS SIGNED | (or initialed) | by SIR WINSTON CHURCHILL". Viscount Camrose co-owned the Daily Telegraph and Morning Post both papers for which a very young Churchill had served as a war correspondent in the final years of the 19th century during the reign of Queen Victoria. Churchill's Second World War and postwar publisher in Britain Cassell was also linked to Camrose. In the postwar years, Camrose played crucial roles in securing Churchill's prosperity. Of Camrose, Churchill later said "He was one of my most true and most valued friends for more than thirty years."Camrose was, of course, not Churchill's only influential friend. Churchill composed, signed, and sent these documents from the home of Bernard Mannes Baruch (1870-1965), financier and advisor to U.S. presidents from Woodrow Wilson to Harry Truman. Baruch and Churchill first became acquainted in 1918 when the latter as Minister of Munitions corresponded with the former as Chairman of the U.S. War Industries Board about supplies of raw materials for the war effort. Churchill and Baruch were introduced in person by Lloyd George at the 1919 Paris Peace Conference and struck up a friendship that resulted in more than 750 letters and numerous meetings over the following decades. Bestandsnummer des Verkäufers 008039
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