Sprache: Englisch
Verlag: The Chelsea Babies Club, London, UK
Anbieter: All Lost Books, Wollaston, Vereinigtes Königreich
EUR 47,60
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbHardcover. Zustand: Good. 63pp plus 14*pages of advertisements. Rebound in green cloth boards. The original card boards have been retained and bound-in with their bound copy. Early pages are toned with some staining and marks.
Verlag: Continental Distributing, New York, 1968
Anbieter: Royal Books, Inc., ABAA, Baltimore, MD, USA
Manuskript / Papierantiquität
Vintage press kit for the 1968 British film. White pocketed folder, containing 20 black and white photographs, and 13 gatherings of promotional reading material. Based on the 1966 experimental play "US" by Dennis Cannan. A group of British metropolitan inhabitants react to the Vietnam War, interwoven with newsreel footage and satirical skits. Folder, photographs, and promotional material Near Fine.
Verlag: The Chelsea Babies' Club n.d. circa, 1933
Anbieter: Blackwell's Rare Books ABA ILAB BA, Oxford, Vereinigtes Königreich
EUR 437,29
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbFIRST EDITION, illustrations to the ads at rear, a little corner-creasing to some leaves, pp. 63, [16, ads], small 4to, original yellow wrappers, with an illustration printed in green and pink to the front (signed 'E.J.'), the illustrator's ownership inscription is above: 'Personal copy. Enid Jones. Nov. 1933', slightly nicked at joint ends, fore-margin of rear cover a little creased, small spot at foot of front, very minor handling otherwise, the inside front-cover with the bookplate of Martin & Pamela Finch, very good. The copy of Enid Bagnold, Lady Jones, who provides the illustration to the front cover. Bagnold had studied art under Walter Sickert before becoming an author, but the charm of her work here lies in part in its modesty: a note within the image confesses that 'the hoods [on the prams] are up because they are easier to draw'. It was Bagnold - listed here, along with Vera Brittain, on the Executive Committee and the Literature Sub-Committee - who encapsulated the organisation as 'a West End Club to teach rich mothers East End Wisdom'. It was, more officially, an 'Infant Welfare Centre for Subscribers', giving advice to mothers on diet, nutrition and other aspects of care with a progressive outlook. Leading the advertisements at the rear is a photograph of a caged infant - being a 'Hammersmith member' using the open-air cage, attached to the window of a high-storey, recommended as a source of exposure to 'fresh air', particularly for those families without ready access to a garden.