Sprache: Englisch
Verlag: Albert Whitman & Company, Chicago, IL, 1942
Anbieter: Second Edition Books, Butte, MT, USA
Hardcover. Zustand: Fair. No Jacket. Howe, Oscar (illustrator). Library rebound. Tight binding. Bright orange boards are worn on edges, light soiling. All the usual library markings inside, main text unmarked. Closed tears to page edges, tape repairs and mild soiling throughout; frontis has a portion (3" x 2") missing. Wonderful full color illustrations and black line drawings. "When five young Sioux boys get lost during the tribe's move, they band together as they strive to find their people." Dedicated to "My Indian friends on the Crow Creek Reservation." 32 pages.
Sprache: Englisch
Verlag: Albert Whitman & Company, Chicago, IL, 1944
Anbieter: Second Edition Books, Butte, MT, USA
Hardcover. Zustand: Good -. No Jacket. Howe, Oscar (illustrator). Stated fourth printing. Tight binding, clean interior. Red boards with full paste down have moderate wear to corners, white stains on back board, Illustrated endpapers, interior unmarked. When five young Sioux boys get lost during the tribe's move, they band together as they strive to find their people. Beautiful full page color illustrations by Oscar Howe. 32 pp.
Sprache: Englisch
Verlag: The Lund Press, Minneapolis, MN, 1966
Anbieter: Books from the Past, Memphis, TN, USA
Signiert
Pictorial Hard Cover. Zustand: Very Good. Oscar Howe (illustrator). The cover is yellow, maroon, and tan. Each board has a design by Oscar Howe. The endpapers have a pictorial map of South Dakota that is also by Howe. A brief biography of Howe is in the frontal matter. The title page has the signature of the editor, followed by "Poet Laureate of S. D. 1958." The frontispiece is a b/w portrait of her. The first 32 pages have her poems. The other pages have poems entered in order of the poets' last names. The boards' bottom edges have a little color loss from shelf wear rubbing. The back board has a few specks of light stain. The front board has a pinpoint size stain. The top margin of the front endpaper has three names that are covered with black marker and has another name in marker. Scans e-mailed upon request. Signed by the Editor.
Sprache: Englisch
Verlag: National Museum of the American Indian / Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC, 2022
ISBN 10: 1933565330 ISBN 13: 9781933565330
Anbieter: Capitol Hill Books, ABAA, Washington, DC, USA
Erstausgabe
Zustand: Fine. Zustand des Schutzumschlags: Fine. Washington, DC: National Museum of the American Indian / Smithsonian Institution, 2022. First Edition with full number line. Quarto; publisher's cloth in pictorial dust jacket; vii,[1],200pp.; full color illus. throughout. Fine condition.
Verlag: The University of South Dakota, 2004. Revised Edition, 2004
Anbieter: Jackson Street Booksellers, Omaha, NE, USA
Hardcover. Zustand: Fine. No Jacket. 2nd Edition. Fine in tall thin red leather.
Verlag: Dakota Territory Centennial Commission, 1961
Anbieter: Thomas J. Joyce And Company, Chicago, IL, USA
Erstausgabe Signiert
stapled wrappers. Zustand: fine. First Edition. Duodecimo, 61 pages, light blue paperback. Signed by the Author and by Oscar Howe on the title-page. Oscar Howe (1915-1983) is one of the most-honored native American artists. This appears to be the first book-length study of his life and art, and it appeared in the year after which he was named the Artist Laureate of South Dakota. Frontispiece in color, other reproductions of his art.
Verlag: United States Indian Service Publication Division, Washington DC, 1943
Anbieter: Lorne Bair Rare Books, ABAA, Winchester, VA, USA
Erstausgabe
First Edition. First printing of 5,000 copies. Oblong octavo (17cm x 25cm). Stapled, pictorial card wrappers; 84pp; illus. Mild dusting to covers, else Near Fine - a pretty copy. Bilingual reader for Navajo children, based on a traditional Dakota folktale; illustrated by the noted Dakota modernist Oscar Howe. The book is one in a series of elementary readers issued by the United States Indian Service in the 1940s and 1950s. Like the present title, many of these were written by Ann Nolan Clark (1896-1995), who would win a Newberry Medal for her 1953 book Secret of the Andes.