Verlag: William Heinemann Ltd, 1933
Anbieter: World of Rare Books, Goring-by-Sea, SXW, Vereinigtes Königreich
Erstausgabe
EUR 13,32
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In den WarenkorbZustand: Fair. 1933. First Edition. 283 pages. No dust jacket. Red cloth with gilt lettering. Clean pages with mild tanning and heavy foxing throughout. Tightly bound with faint thumb-marking throughout. Previous owner's inscription to front endpaper. Heavy foxing to text block edges. Droplet to rear endpaper. Boards have mild edgewear with corner crushing and notable marking to boards. Moderate tanning to spine, which has mild crushing and tearing to ends. Book has forward lean. Boards are mildly warped. Large water stains to boards.
Verlag: Heinemann, London, 1933
Anbieter: ANTIQUARIAT.WIEN Fine Books & Prints, Wien, Österreich
EUR 36,30
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In den Warenkorboriginal red cloth, 8°, xvi, 283 pages, with illustations on plates, text a bit foxed, a good copy an 510 Buch.
Erscheinungsdatum: 1933
Anbieter: Henry Sotheran Ltd, London, Vereinigtes Königreich
Erstausgabe Signiert
EUR 154,84
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In den WarenkorbLondon, Heinemann, [1933]. 8vo. Original cloth, spine lettered in gilt; pp. xv, 283, map and plates; binding a little sunned, offsetting from endpapers to the initial and finalfew leaves; otherwise very good.First edition, presentation copy inscribed and signed by the author on initial blank. The author was a Scottish radical Soialist and founder of the National Party of Scotland. 'Known to friends and South Americans as Don Roberto, described in The Times as the cowboy dandy, to socialists he was Comrade, while to Galsworthy and Epstein he was the modern Don Quixote ⦠[He had] set out for South America at the age of seventeen. This was the first of several lengthy visits to America, during which he attempted cattle ranching and horse dealing; he rode with gauchos in Argentina, explored the forests of Paraguay, and trekked with a wagon train to Mexico City. During the First World War he worked in Uruguay, selecting horses for the British army; and it was in Buenos Aires, where he was widely respected, that he died on 20 March 1936. The South American journeys provided him with material for many of his tales and essays, and his historical studies include an account of the Jesuit missions in Paraguay, A Vanished Arcadia (1901), biographies of various conquistadores, and a life of Francisco Solano Là pez (president of Paraguay, 1865â"70)' (ODNB). The dictator's Irish mistress was Alice Eliza Lynch, the most vilified woman in Latin-American history. Cunninghame Graham of course deals with her case in this book.