Anbieter: The Reading Well Bookstore, Delaware, OH, USA
Erstausgabe
Paperback. Zustand: Very Good. Zustand des Schutzumschlags: No Dust Jacket. Illustrated by Freire Wright and Michael Foreman (illustrator). 1st Edition. 12mo 7" - 7½" tall; Color Illustrations; Signed by Not signed; Illustrated soft covers. Very light rubbing along spine and top and bottom edges. Creasing of the back cover. Pages are clean and secure. ; Color Illustrations; 12mo-7" to 71/2" tall; Unpaginated pages.
Verlag: University of Oklahoma Press, 1941
Anbieter: Riverby Books, Fredericksburg, VA, USA
Hardcover. Zustand: Very Good. Zustand des Schutzumschlags: Very Good. Hardcover with DJ. Brick colored cloth over boards with silver lettering on spine. No date on title page. Copyright page dated 1941. 298 pages. DJ has shelf wear along top and bottom edges. Light rubbing on rear cover. Second Printing stated on top left corner of front flap of DJ. $5.95 price printed at top right corner of front flap. List of titles in the American Exploration and Travel series as well as the Western Frontier Library on inside of DJ. Boards have been well protected by DJ. Silver illustration on front board and silver lettering on spine are shiny and legible. Photograph of a medal with the face of A. W. Whipple on it as frontispiece. Pages are in excellent shape. Text is neat and legible. Binding strong and tight. Very Good Condition. Please contact us with questions or if you would like to see photographs.
Sprache: Englisch
Verlag: Ambit, 17 Priory Gardens, Highgare, London N6 5QY, 1991
Anbieter: Orlando Booksellers, Lincoln, Vereinigtes Königreich
Erstausgabe
EUR 11,91
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbOriginal Wraps. Zustand: Very Good. Zustand des Schutzumschlags: Very Good. Michael Foreman, Laura Knight et al (illustrator). First Edition. Ambit Number 126, published in 1991. Illustrated throughout in monochrome. ***Very good in textured card monochrome-illustrated outer wrapper over thin white card covers. The edges of the outer wrapper are slightly rubbed. The top corner of the page block is slightly creased. No tears. Internally also very good with no inscriptions. Pages clean. Spine tight. ***244mm x 176mm. 96 pages. ***Contents: Jim Burns: Poems; Justine Rivers: Skin; Robert MacAulay; Judy Gahagan: Poem; John Emanuel: Drawings; Elaine Randell: Poem; Jonathan Treitel: Quest; Ken Cox: Drawings; Elaine Randell: Storm Damage; Laurie Preece: Pitures; Donal Atkinson Poems; Charles Shearer: Drawings; John Gower: Lillian; Mike Foreman; Edward Lowbury; Mary Knight: The Girl with the Unicorn; David Remfry; Herbert Lomas: Reviews; Florence Elon: From Frieda & William; Pop Art Retrospective from Ambit: Hockney / Paolozzi / Caulfield / Donaldson / Jones / Blake / Anuand / Donaldson; Joel Lane: The Death of the Witness; Laura Knight; Jeff Nuttall: Eyes IV; Jacqueline Lucas: Poems; William Hampton: To a Man Who Became a Storyteller; Ann Born / Vernon Scannell: Reviews; Duncan Chambers: Poems; Eric Mathieson: Reviews; Robert Magowan: Looking for Binoculars; Kevin Crossley-Holland: Poem. ***'In the sixties AMBIT became well known for testing the boundaries and social conventions and published many anti-establishment pieces, including an issue with works written under the influence of drugs. Edwin Brock was poetry editor, and J. G. Ballard became fiction editor alongside, later, Geoff Nicholson. Henry Graham and Carol Ann Duffy joined Edwin Brock as poetry editors. Michael Foreman was art editor for 50 years. Across the magazine's history, Derek Birdsall (Omnific), Alan Kitching, John Morgan Studio and Stephen Barrett were notable designers.' (Wiki) ***'AMBIT started in '59; there were various impulses behind it. I'd been interested in the writer John Middleton Murray, who was married to Katharine Mansfield. He had run a magazine from about 1910 onwards for two or three years called Rhythm that attracted writers like D.H. Lawrence, and Katharine Mansfield of course. What was striking about it - you could look at it in the V&A library - was that Murray, who really knew nothing about art, had met a Scottish artist called Ferguson who was sending over from Paris artwork by "young" artists like Picasso, Miro, etc. They looked quite startling in this 1910 magazine. And the idea, that Murray never developed, of trying to produce a magazine that had literary and visual material really working together, came to me out of that. But the other initiatives were more simple. There weren't many magazines about then because the possibility of what everybody can do now -- produce a magazine from a 'desktop' in quite small numbers and for not very much money -- didn't exist. But electronic things were just starting to happen, and the first number of Ambit we partly set ourselves on a machine called a variotyper. It enabled us to paste down visual work of which we had some good drawings from an Australian artist, Oliffe Richmond, in this first number and enabled us to begin the notion of producing an arts magazine rather than the traditional poetry or Eng. Lit. magazine. I'd say there's still no magazine in the country that combines high class artwork, produced and found by Mike Foreman over the years, alongside writers who I think are exciting. (Martin Bax interview with 3:AM magazine) ***An early 90s edition of the magazine in very nice, collectable condition. Of interest to collectors of AMBIT and poetry magazines in general. ***For all our books, postage is charged at cost, allowing for packaging: any shipping rates indicated on ABE are an average only: we will reduce the P & P charge where appropriate - please contact us for postal rates for heavier books and sets etc.
Anbieter: Fireside Bookshop, Stroud, GLOS, Vereinigtes Königreich
Verbandsmitglied: PBFA
EUR 5,96
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbPaperback. Zustand: Very Good. Foreman, Michael (illustrator). Signed Copy. Type: Book N.B. very light shelf wear to edges of covers.
Sprache: Englisch
Verlag: Ambit, 17 Priory Gardens, Highgare, London N6 5QY, 1992
Anbieter: Orlando Booksellers, Lincoln, Vereinigtes Königreich
Erstausgabe
EUR 11,91
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbOriginal Wraps. Zustand: Very Good. Zustand des Schutzumschlags: Very Good. Michael Foreman, Laura Knight et al (illustrator). First Edition. Ambit Number 127, published in 1992. Illustrated throughout in monochrome. ***Very good in textured card monochrome-illustrated outer wrapper over thin white card covers. The edges of the outer wrapper are slightly rubbed. The top of the spine is slightly creased. No tears. Internally also very good with no inscriptions. Pages clean. Spine tight. ***244mm x 176mm. 96 pages. ***Contents: James Laughlin: Poems, Robert MacAulay; Vanessa Jackson: Drawings; Ann Gray: Poems; Martin Bax: Le Magasin des Gants, David Remfy; Rosemary Norman: Poems; Adrian Mitchell: Poems; Michael Foreman; Judith Kazantzis: The Glass Avenue, Laura Knight; Andzej Klimowski: The Story So Far; Josephine Wilson: Poems; Lomas / Eisa Sterberg: Money Doesn't Stink; E.A. Markham: Madeline; Elizabeth Smith: The Tzar, Lenin & Picasso; Lois Beeson: Poems; Jim Burns: Reviews; David Grubb: Poems; Sue Flynn: Disabled Vows; Ian Pollock: Drawings; Liz Dearden: Cut Woman Poems; Linda Sutton: Etchings; Anthony Edkins: Poems; Lomas / Belbin: Reviews; Ambit Nights Out; Felicity Napier: Poems; Richard Dyer: Poems / Pictures. ***'In the sixties AMBIT became well known for testing the boundaries and social conventions and published many anti-establishment pieces, including an issue with works written under the influence of drugs. Edwin Brock was poetry editor, and J. G. Ballard became fiction editor alongside, later, Geoff Nicholson. Henry Graham and Carol Ann Duffy joined Edwin Brock as poetry editors. Michael Foreman was art editor for 50 years. Across the magazine's history, Derek Birdsall (Omnific), Alan Kitching, John Morgan Studio and Stephen Barrett were notable designers.' (Wiki) ***'AMBIT started in '59; there were various impulses behind it. I'd been interested in the writer John Middleton Murray, who was married to Katharine Mansfield. He had run a magazine from about 1910 onwards for two or three years called Rhythm that attracted writers like D.H. Lawrence, and Katharine Mansfield of course. What was striking about it - you could look at it in the V&A library - was that Murray, who really knew nothing about art, had met a Scottish artist called Ferguson who was sending over from Paris artwork by "young" artists like Picasso, Miro, etc. They looked quite startling in this 1910 magazine. And the idea, that Murray never developed, of trying to produce a magazine that had literary and visual material really working together, came to me out of that. But the other initiatives were more simple. There weren't many magazines about then because the possibility of what everybody can do now -- produce a magazine from a 'desktop' in quite small numbers and for not very much money -- didn't exist. But electronic things were just starting to happen, and the first number of Ambit we partly set ourselves on a machine called a variotyper. It enabled us to paste down visual work of which we had some good drawings from an Australian artist, Oliffe Richmond, in this first number and enabled us to begin the notion of producing an arts magazine rather than the traditional poetry or Eng. Lit. magazine. I'd say there's still no magazine in the country that combines high class artwork, produced and found by Mike Foreman over the years, alongside writers who I think are exciting.' (Martin Bax interview with 3:AM magazine) ***An early 90s edition of the magazine in very nice, collectable condition. Of interest to collectors of AMBIT and poetry magazines in general. ***For all our books, postage is charged at cost, allowing for packaging: any shipping rates indicated on ABE are an average only: we will reduce the P & P charge where appropriate - please contact us for postal rates for heavier books and sets etc.
Verlag: Thorp Springs Press, Berkeley, California, 1972
Anbieter: Between the Covers-Rare Books, Inc. ABAA, Gloucester City, NJ, USA
Erstausgabe
Softcover. Zustand: Near Fine. First edition. 60pp. Pictorial wrappers. A faint stain on the interior front wrap (that shows through a bit), five tiny ink arrows on the contents page, near fine. The issue is devoted to Ezra Pound, and contains "A Laud for Ezra Pound" by Paul Foreman. Additional contributions by Kenneth Rexroth, Malcolm Glass, and more.
Verlag: (Thorp Springs Press), Berkeley CA, 1972
Anbieter: Between the Covers-Rare Books, Inc. ABAA, Gloucester City, NJ, USA
Erstausgabe
Softcover. Zustand: Fine. First edition. Contemporary gift inscription, else fine in perfect bound wraps.
Verlag: Collins, Great Britain, 1966
Anbieter: The London Bookworm, East Sussex, Vereinigtes Königreich
Erstausgabe
EUR 8,58
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbCloth. Zustand: Very Good. Zustand des Schutzumschlags: Very Good. First Edition. Hardback. There are line drawings throughout the text, illustrating entries which benefit from visual treatment, and the last thirty pages of the encyclopedia carry a list of Useful Abbreviations, tables of Weights and Measures with special emphasis on the Metric System, brief chonologies of all the Commonwealth Countries, the structure of the United Nations Organisation and a miscellany of interesting statistics including The Highest Mountain, The Deepest Mine, The Farthest Star and many others. Illustrated. 469 pp.(We carry a wide selection of titles in The Arts, Theology, History, Politics, Social and Physical Sciences. academic and scholarly books and Modern First Editions ,and all types of Academic Literature.).
Sprache: Englisch
Verlag: Ambit, 17 Priory Gardens, Highgate, London N.6., 1985
Anbieter: Orlando Booksellers, Lincoln, Vereinigtes Königreich
Erstausgabe
EUR 41,69
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbOriginal Wraps. Zustand: Near Fine. Zustand des Schutzumschlags: Near Fine. Peter Blake, Michael Foreman, Vanessa Jackson et al (illustrator). First Edition. Ambit Number 100, published in 1985. Illustrated throughout in monochrome and occasional colour. Cover artwork by Peter Blake. ***Near fine in textured card monochrome-illustrated outer wrapper over thin white card covers. The edges of the outer wrapper are just slightly rubbed. No bumps or creases. No tears. Internally also near fine with no inscriptions. Pages clean. Spine tight. ***248mm x 176mm. 192 pages. ***Contents: please see scan of back cover. ***'In the sixties AMBIT became well known for testing the boundaries and social conventions and published many anti-establishment pieces, including an issue with works written under the influence of drugs. Edwin Brock was poetry editor, and J. G. Ballard became fiction editor alongside, later, Geoff Nicholson. Henry Graham and Carol Ann Duffy joined Edwin Brock as poetry editors. Michael Foreman was art editor for 50 years. Across the magazine's history, Derek Birdsall (Omnific), Alan Kitching, John Morgan Studio and Stephen Barrett were notable designers.' (Wiki) ***'AMBIT started in '59; there were various impulses behind it. I'd been interested in the writer John Middleton Murray, who was married to Katharine Mansfield. He had run a magazine from about 1910 onwards for two or three years called Rhythm that attracted writers like D.H. Lawrence, and Katharine Mansfield of course. What was striking about it - you could look at it in the V&A library - was that Murray, who really knew nothing about art, had met a Scottish artist called Ferguson who was sending over from Paris artwork by "young" artists like Picasso, Miro, etc. They looked quite startling in this 1910 magazine. And the idea, that Murray never developed, of trying to produce a magazine that had literary and visual material really working together, came to me out of that. But the other initiatives were more simple. There weren't many magazines about then because the possibility of what everybody can do now -- produce a magazine from a 'desktop' in quite small numbers and for not very much money -- didn't exist. But electronic things were just starting to happen, and the first number of Ambit we partly set ourselves on a machine called a variotyper. It enabled us to paste down visual work of which we had some good drawings from an Australian artist, Oliffe Richmond, in this first number and enabled us to begin the notion of producing an arts magazine rather than the traditional poetry or Eng. Lit. magazine. I'd say there's still no magazine in the country that combines high class artwork, produced and found by Mike Foreman over the years, alongside writers who I think are exciting.' (Martin Bax interview with 3:AM magazine) ***A mid 80s edition of the magazine in very nice, collectable condition - this being a bumper-sized double issue. Of interest to collectors of AMBIT and poetry magazines in general. ***For all our books, postage is charged at cost, allowing for packaging: any shipping rates indicated on ABE are an average only: we will reduce the P & P charge where appropriate - please contact us for postal rates for heavier books and sets etc.
Sprache: Englisch
Verlag: Ambit, 17 Priory Gardens, Highgate, London N.6., 1985
Anbieter: Orlando Booksellers, Lincoln, Vereinigtes Königreich
Erstausgabe
EUR 41,69
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbOriginal Wraps. Zustand: Near Fine. Zustand des Schutzumschlags: Near Fine. Peter Blake, Michael Foreman, Vanessa Jackson et al (illustrator). First Edition. Ambit Number 100, published in 1985. Illustrated throughout in monochrome and occasional colour. Cover artwork by Peter Blake. ***Near fine in textured card monochrome-illustrated outer wrapper over thin white card covers. The edges of the outer wrapper are just slightly rubbed. No bumps or creases. No tears. Internally also near fine with no inscriptions. Pages clean. Spine tight. ***248mm x 176mm. 192 pages. ***Contents: please see scan of back cover. ***'In the sixties AMBIT became well known for testing the boundaries and social conventions and published many anti-establishment pieces, including an issue with works written under the influence of drugs. Edwin Brock was poetry editor, and J. G. Ballard became fiction editor alongside, later, Geoff Nicholson. Henry Graham and Carol Ann Duffy joined Edwin Brock as poetry editors. Michael Foreman was art editor for 50 years. Across the magazine's history, Derek Birdsall (Omnific), Alan Kitching, John Morgan Studio and Stephen Barrett were notable designers.' (Wiki) ***'AMBIT started in '59; there were various impulses behind it. I'd been interested in the writer John Middleton Murray, who was married to Katharine Mansfield. He had run a magazine from about 1910 onwards for two or three years called Rhythm that attracted writers like D.H. Lawrence, and Katharine Mansfield of course. What was striking about it - you could look at it in the V&A library - was that Murray, who really knew nothing about art, had met a Scottish artist called Ferguson who was sending over from Paris artwork by "young" artists like Picasso, Miro, etc. They looked quite startling in this 1910 magazine. And the idea, that Murray never developed, of trying to produce a magazine that had literary and visual material really working together, came to me out of that. But the other initiatives were more simple. There weren't many magazines about then because the possibility of what everybody can do now -- produce a magazine from a 'desktop' in quite small numbers and for not very much money -- didn't exist. But electronic things were just starting to happen, and the first number of Ambit we partly set ourselves on a machine called a variotyper. It enabled us to paste down visual work of which we had some good drawings from an Australian artist, Oliffe Richmond, in this first number and enabled us to begin the notion of producing an arts magazine rather than the traditional poetry or Eng. Lit. magazine. I'd say there's still no magazine in the country that combines high class artwork, produced and found by Mike Foreman over the years, alongside writers who I think are exciting.' (Martin Bax interview with 3:AM magazine) ***A mid 80s edition of the magazine in very nice, collectable condition - this being a bumper-sized double issue. Of interest to collectors of AMBIT and poetry magazines in general. ***For all our books, postage is charged at cost, allowing for packaging: any shipping rates indicated on ABE are an average only: we will reduce the P & P charge where appropriate - please contact us for postal rates for heavier books and sets etc.
Verlag: Collins, London, 1965
Anbieter: CURIO, Cleethorpes, North East Lincolnshire, Vereinigtes Königreich
Erstausgabe
EUR 9,53
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbHardcover. Zustand: Very Good. No Jacket. 1st Edition. First Edition / First Print. Hardback copy in grey cloth boards with green lettering to spine and green illustration to front board. No dustjacket. 127pp. Not library copy, no inscriptions. (51/2).
Sprache: Englisch
Verlag: Ambit, 17 Priory Gardens, Highgate, London N6 5QY, 1982
Anbieter: Orlando Booksellers, Lincoln, Vereinigtes Königreich
Erstausgabe
EUR 53,60
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbOriginal Wraps. Zustand: Near Fine. Zustand des Schutzumschlags: Very Good. Michael Foreman, Errol Lloyd, Ray Povey et al (illustrator). First Edition. Ambit Number 91, published in 1982. Caribbean Special issue. Illustrated throughout in monochrome. Cover design by Alan Kitching. ***Very good in textured card monochrome-illustrated textured wrappers over thin white card covers. The edges of the outer wrapper are slightly rubbed and there are a few light foxing marks. No bumps or creases. No tears. Internally near fine with no inscriptions. Pages clean. Paper stock just slightly tanned. Spine tight. ***245mm x 180mm. 96 pages. ***Contents - work by: Linton Kwesi Johnson; Sam Selvon; Edward Kamau Brathwaite; Ray Povey; Grace Nichols; Lynda Nkem Chinaka; Amryl Johnson; E. A. Markham; Elyse Dodgson and Company; S. E. Ashman; A. L. Hendriks; Michael Foreman; John Agard; Edgar White; Les Johnson; Andrew Salkey; Peter Fraser; James Berry; Errol Lloyd; Howard Fergus; Lynford French; Caryl Phillips; John La Rose; Charles Shearer; John Figueroa; David Nathaniel Haynes. ***'In the sixties AMBIT became well known for testing the boundaries and social conventions and published many anti-establishment pieces, including an issue with works written under the influence of drugs. Edwin Brock was poetry editor, and J. G. Ballard became fiction editor alongside, later, Geoff Nicholson. Henry Graham and Carol Ann Duffy joined Edwin Brock as poetry editors. Michael Foreman was art editor for 50 years. Across the magazine's history, Derek Birdsall (Omnific), Alan Kitching, John Morgan Studio and Stephen Barrett were notable designers.' (Wiki) ***'AMBIT started in '59; there were various impulses behind it. I'd been interested in the writer John Middleton Murray, who was married to Katharine Mansfield. He had run a magazine from about 1910 onwards for two or three years called Rhythm that attracted writers like D.H. Lawrence, and Katharine Mansfield of course. What was striking about it - you could look at it in the V&A library - was that Murray, who really knew nothing about art, had met a Scottish artist called Ferguson who was sending over from Paris artwork by "young" artists like Picasso, Miro, etc. They looked quite startling in this 1910 magazine. And the idea, that Murray never developed, of trying to produce a magazine that had literary and visual material really working together, came to me out of that. But the other initiatives were more simple. There weren't many magazines about then because the possibility of what everybody can do now -- produce a magazine from a 'desktop' in quite small numbers and for not very much money -- didn't exist. But electronic things were just starting to happen, and the first number of Ambit we partly set ourselves on a machine called a variotyper. It enabled us to paste down visual work of which we had some good drawings from an Australian artist, Oliffe Richmond, in this first number and enabled us to begin the notion of producing an arts magazine rather than the traditional poetry or Eng. Lit. magazine. I'd say there's still no magazine in the country that combines high class artwork, produced and found by Mike Foreman over the years, alongside writers who I think are exciting.' (Martin Bax interview with 3:AM magazine) ***An early 80s edition of the magazine in very good condition - this being a special Caribbean issue. Of interest to collectors of AMBIT and poetry magazines in general. An uncommon issue of the magazine. ***For all our books, postage is charged at cost, allowing for packaging: any shipping rates indicated on ABE are an average only: we will reduce the P & P charge where appropriate - please contact us for postal rates for heavier books and sets etc.
Sprache: Englisch
Verlag: Ambit, 17 Priory Gardens, Highgate, London, N.6., 1969
Anbieter: Orlando Booksellers, Lincoln, Vereinigtes Königreich
Erstausgabe
EUR 53,60
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbOriginal Wraps. Zustand: Near Fine. Zustand des Schutzumschlags: No Jacket, as Issued. Eduardo Paolozzi, Robin Ray, Stevie Smith, Michael Foreman et al (illustrator). First Edition. Ambit Number 40, published in 1969. Illustrated throughout in monochrome. Cover illustration by Eduardo Paolozzi, with the cover Robin Ray. With a seven-page poem "The House of Over-Dew" written and illustrated by Stevie Smith, and an eight-page spread entitled "Why We Are In Vietnam" by Eduardo Paolozzi. ***Near fine in glossy card stapled covers. The covers are just very slightly rubbed. No bumps or creases. No tears. Internally also near fine with no inscriptions. Pages clean. No marks. Spine tight. ***250mm x 185mm. 60 pages. ***Contents - work by: Stevie Smith; John Horder; Oswell Blakeston; Gavin Ewart; Juan-Agustin Palazuelos; Jim Burns; Eduardo Paolozzi; James Raimes; Boleslaw Tabotski; Martin Bax; David Trotter; Peter Angeles; Henry Graham; Mike Foreman; Henry Woolf; Stella Coleman; Taner Baybars; Oliver Stallybrass. ***'In the sixties AMBIT became well known for testing the boundaries and social conventions and published many anti-establishment pieces, including an issue with works written under the influence of drugs. Edwin Brock was poetry editor, and J. G. Ballard became fiction editor alongside, later, Geoff Nicholson. Henry Graham and Carol Ann Duffy joined Edwin Brock as poetry editors. Michael Foreman was art editor for 50 years. Across the magazine's history, Derek Birdsall (Omnific), Alan Kitching, John Morgan Studio and Stephen Barrett were notable designers.' (Wiki) ***'AMBIT started in '59; there were various impulses behind it. I'd been interested in the writer John Middleton Murray, who was married to Katharine Mansfield. He had run a magazine from about 1910 onwards for two or three years called Rhythm that attracted writers like D.H. Lawrence, and Katharine Mansfield of course. What was striking about it - you could look at it in the V&A library - was that Murray, who really knew nothing about art, had met a Scottish artist called Ferguson who was sending over from Paris artwork by "young" artists like Picasso, Miro, etc. They looked quite startling in this 1910 magazine. And the idea, that Murray never developed, of trying to produce a magazine that had literary and visual material really working together, came to me out of that. But the other initiatives were more simple. There weren't many magazines about then because the possibility of what everybody can do now -- produce a magazine from a 'desktop' in quite small numbers and for not very much money -- didn't exist. But electronic things were just starting to happen, and the first number of Ambit we partly set ourselves on a machine called a variotyper. It enabled us to paste down visual work of which we had some good drawings from an Australian artist, Oliffe Richmond, in this first number and enabled us to begin the notion of producing an arts magazine rather than the traditional poetry or Eng. Lit. magazine. I'd say there's still no magazine in the country that combines high class artwork, produced and found by Mike Foreman over the years, alongside writers who I think are exciting.' (Martin Bax interview with 3:AM magazine) ***A collectable 1960s edition of the magazine in near fine condition - this issue of particular interest for collectors of the poetry and illustrations of Stevie Smith, who features, and for collectors of AMBIT and poetry magazines in general. An uncommon issue of the magazine. ***For all our books, postage is charged at cost, allowing for packaging: any shipping rates indicated on ABE are an average only: we will reduce the P & P charge where appropriate - please contact us for postal rates for heavier books and sets etc.
Verlag: University of Oklahoma
Anbieter: ThriftBooks-Dallas, Dallas, TX, USA
Hardcover. Zustand: Good. No Jacket. Former library book; Pages can have notes/highlighting. Spine may show signs of wear. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less.
Anbieter: Revaluation Books, Exeter, Vereinigtes Königreich
EUR 152,80
Anzahl: 2 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbPaperback. Zustand: Brand New. reprint edition. 336 pages. 8.27x5.83x0.81 inches. In Stock.
Sprache: Englisch
Verlag: Cambridge University Press, 2021
ISBN 10: 1108490689 ISBN 13: 9781108490689
Anbieter: Revaluation Books, Exeter, Vereinigtes Königreich
EUR 194,68
Anzahl: 2 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbHardcover. Zustand: Brand New. 494 pages. 9.75x7.25x1.00 inches. In Stock.
Anbieter: Revaluation Books, Exeter, Vereinigtes Königreich
EUR 362,22
Anzahl: 2 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbHardcover. Zustand: Brand New. 288 pages. 9.50x6.25x0.75 inches. In Stock.
Anbieter: Hay-on-Wye Booksellers, Hay-on-Wye, HEREF, Vereinigtes Königreich
EUR 29,78
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbZustand: Good. Hardcover. 3rd printing. No dustjacket. Marks/scuffs/some fading to cover & knocks to edges. Heavy foxing to textblock edges/endpapers. Name inscription on front endpaper. Light tanning at page edges & minor creases to corners. Content very good.
Verlag: The Berkeley Branch of the National Alliance for Postal and Federal Employees, (Berkeley), 1971
Anbieter: Between the Covers-Rare Books, Inc. ABAA, Gloucester City, NJ, USA
Erstausgabe
Softcover. Zustand: Fine. Periodical. Front cover with an illustration by Rosetta Proctor. Small quarto. 20pp. Illustrated from a few drawings. Stapled self-wrappers. A couple very tiny, faint marks on the front cover, else fine. A magazine produced (circa 1971) by the Berkeley branch of the National Alliance for Postal & Federal Employees. Includes a Q&A about the reorganization and reduction in force at the U.S. Postal Service; an article by Paul Foreman about the upcoming elections pertaining to the Berkeley police force; a three-line poem by National Book Award winning poet Hayden Carruth; a one-page article written by Alliance president George Banks in which he states his opinion that the United Federation of Postal Clerks is run by racists; an interview with Ron Dellums, dated February 8, 1971 (Dellums was a recently elected congressman at the time); and several articles discussing workers rights. *OCLC* locates just one copy.
Verlag: James Mecham, Wichita, Kansas, 1971
Anbieter: Between the Covers-Rare Books, Inc. ABAA, Gloucester City, NJ, USA
Unbound. Zustand: Near Fine. Unstapled booklet. [8]pp. Near fine with a but of wear along the spine. A literary magazine published by James Mecham with excerpts from forthcoming Thorp Springs Press books. This issue contains contributions from Fowler, A.D. Winnans, Paul Foreman, Morton Grinker, and Hester Storm. *OCLC* locates no copies.