Verlag: Haskell House, New York, 1973
Anbieter: K Books Ltd ABA ILAB, York, YORKS, Vereinigtes Königreich
Erstausgabe
Hardcover , Zustand: Very Good. Zustand des Schutzumschlags: No Dust Jacket. First Edition. With 116pp , a valuable bibliography, in mint condition. HARDCOVER, NO DUST JACKET, NO MARKINGS, VERY GOOD CONDITION, EXCELLENT VALUE .
Verlag: New York, Haskell House Publ., 1973
Anbieter: Biblion Antiquariat, Zürich, ZH, Schweiz
8°. 116 S. OLn. Sprache: englisch.
Verlag: Haskell New York 1973, 1973
Anbieter: Antiquariat Thomas & Reinhard, Recklinghausen, NRW, Deutschland
LEINEN, 8°, 116 Seiten, dies ist ein regulär ausgesondertes Bibliotheksexemplar aus einer wissenschaftlichen Bibliothek, keine Markierungen / Anstreichungen im Text, das Buch befindet sich in einem tadellosen Zustand --- LINEN BINDING, 116 pages, Lib.Ex., no marks/underlines, the book is in a flawless condition. Shipping to abroad insured with tracking number.
Verlag: Random House, New York, 1931
Anbieter: James Cummins Bookseller, ABAA, New York, NY, USA
Erstausgabe
First edition, Number 355 of 500 numbered copies (marked out of series) at the Harbor Press. Folding frontispiece. 116 pp. 1 vols. 8vo. The First Bibliography of Ernest Hemingway by the famous bookseller and proprietor of House of Books. Black ribbed cloth. Fine. In blue morocco and cloth and chemise Folding frontispiece. 116 pp. 1 vols. 8vo First edition, Number 355 of 500 numbered copies (marked out of series) at the Harbor Press.
Verlag: Random House, New York, 1931
Anbieter: Between the Covers-Rare Books, Inc. ABAA, Gloucester City, NJ, USA
Erstausgabe
Hardcover. Zustand: Near Fine. First edition. One of 500 numbered copies. Hemingway's introduction reproduced as a foldout reproduction of the manuscript. Bookplate of noted Hemingway scholar and collector Fraser Bragg Drew, slight crease at the edge of the foldout, and some rubbing at the crown, else a crisp, near fine copy, lacking the unprinted tissue dustwrapper. Inscribed by Cohn to Drew. Laid into the book is Cohn's own bookplate, which was designed for Cohn and lettered (in print) by Hemingway. As a young teacher, Drew wrote a letter to which Hemingway responded kindly. Eventually, Hemingway invited Drew to visit him in Havana. On April 8, 1955, one year after Hemingway won the Nobel Prize for Literature, Drew and Hemingway spent a long afternoon discussing literature and teaching, later recounted by Drew in his article "Unedited Notes on a Visit to Finca Vigia" (in Bruccoli, *Conversations With Ernest Hemingway*, 89-98), an account remarkable for its portrayal of Hemingway's modesty and generosity. The first bibliography of Hemingway.
Verlag: New York, 1946
Anbieter: Between the Covers-Rare Books, Inc. ABAA, Gloucester City, NJ, USA
Erstausgabe Signiert
Unbound. Zustand: Near Fine. Typed Letters Signed. Seven letters and one note: five letters and one note Signed by Marguerite A. Cohn; one Signed by Louis Henry Cohn, and one one unsigned and incomplete typed letter. Each letter is one page on House of Books, Ltd. stationery measuring 7¼" x 10½". Old folds, light wear (one letter with a tiny corner chip) and the occasional very light stain, near fine. A nice collection of letters from the venerable House of Books, Ltd. of New York City to Miss Dorothy P. Nassau of Philadelphia. According to the letters, Miss Nassau was an avid collector of Robert Frost and Stephen Vincent Benét, and most of the letters involve quoting and discussing material related to these two authors. (The incomplete letter is a list of material sent to Miss Nassau on approval). The single letter from Louis Henry Cohn is of particular interest; he writes to Miss Nassau that Random House had recently discovered 29 sets of sheets from the limited edition of Robert Frost's *Collected Poems* of 1930, from an edition of 1,000 copies Signed by Frost. Random House bound the sheets in polished gray cloth with a leather spine label, different from the first state binding. Cohn writes that "we have control of these copies" and offers them to her at $7.50 (!) a copy. He slyly notes (the letter is dated December 18) that, in addition to improving her collection, the books would make "a vary [sic] suitable Christmas gift." In the letter from 1946, Marguerite writes of a section on Benét in their upcoming catalog; she discusses one piece and then notes cryptically "[t]he other item, the WOLFS HEAD, we do not even dare list as it is such a hush, hush affair." A charming collection of letters from a pair of highly respected booksellers, friends of Hemingway and Faulkner and pioneers in the sale of modern first editions, to a valued collector. After her husband's death, Margie Cohn was involved in building some of the great 20th Century modern first edition collections, including that of Carter Burden.