Verlag: Cleveland: Zubal Books, 2003
Anbieter: Zubal-Books, Since 1961, Cleveland, OH, USA
Zustand: Fine. *Price HAS BEEN REDUCED by 10% until Monday, Feb. 9 (weekend SALE item)* facsimile reprint of the 1913 edition, 120 pp., softcover, NEW!! - If you are reading this, this item is actually (physically) in our stock and ready for shipment once ordered. We are not bookjackers. Buyer is responsible for any additional duties, taxes, or fees required by recipient's country.
Verlag: Paramount Pictures, Los Angeles, 1957
Anbieter: Royal Books, Inc., ABAA, Baltimore, MD, USA
Vintage studio still photograph from the set of the 1957 film. An imaginative and inaccurate biography of the famed comedian. 10 x 8 inches. Near Fine.
Verlag: Flying Eagle Publications, USA, 1959
Erstausgabe
Single Issue Magazine. Zustand: Fair. Aguilera; McAnnally, James; Corrigan, Paul; Parent, Robert; Smith, Paul Morton; Geller; Myers, Lou; Buelow (illustrator). First Edition. An early men's publication in the model of Playboy. 70 pages with color and black and white photos. Features: Photo of Darby Donnelly inside front cover; A Clash of Symbols - story by Ed Sauk; 3 Dates in New York for $5, $25, and $75 - Bob Ritterbush and Mary Lynn Mason live it up - article with photos; Behind the Velvet Rope - article about headwaiters by Jack Keating; The Top Prime Rib - The Old Homestead on Ninth Ave. in Manhattan; Sex vs. Censorship - Between the Post Office's trials of Lady Chatterly's Lover and Freud's discovery that the primal appetite to couple far exceeds our procreative needs there lies a gulf of confusion and dispute dating back to the prejudices and superstitions of the Dark Ages; Photos of Darby Donnelly - A Dilly of a Dallier; The Secret History of a Hero - story by Gerald Kersh; The Sensible Martini; Photos of lovely Shirley, part Irish and part Pawnee, from Dallas; Comic writer Jack Douglas; and more. Unmarked with average wear. Chip from back cover at top of spine. PLEASE NOTE: Pages 41-42 missing - They contained a photo(s) of Darby and the first page of the George Shearing article, otherwise a sound vintage copy.