Idioma: Inglés
Publicado por The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1992
Librería: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, Estados Unidos de America
Revista / Publicación Original o primera edición
EUR 13,27
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoNewspaper. Condición: Near Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the March-April 1992 (Vol. LIX No. 2) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Jo Roberts as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan, Meg Hyre, Kate Quigley, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: Guatemala: They Will Not Kill Our Roots by Jo Roberts and Annie Boagni; The Peace House On The Road by Karl Meyer; Maryhouse by Brian Hynes; Modern War And The Christian Conscience (featuring an article by Katharine Temple and the text of the 'Civilta Cattolica' Editorial); poem "News Report, September 1991 - U.S. BURIED IRAQI SOLDIERS ALIVE IN GULF WAR" by Denise Levertov; A US Political Prisoner by Paul Magno (on Mumia Abu-Jamal); East Timor - Another Occupied Country by Michael Rothberg. Light remnant of mailing label to front cover; narrow clear tape along right edge of rear cover; a few pieces of narrow clear tape found on page six.
Idioma: Inglés
Publicado por The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1990
Librería: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, Estados Unidos de America
Revista / Publicación Original o primera edición
EUR 13,27
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoNewspaper. Condición: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the September 1990 (Vol. LVII No. 6) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Jo Roberts as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan, Meg Hyre, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: Discerning This Fateful Hour by Jeff Dietrich; "Am I My Brother's Keeper?" by Carmen Trotta (which begins, "As of June 1, 1990, new station regulations, strictly enforced, have made it a crime to sleep or lie down in Penn R.R. Station"); St. Joseph House by Beatrice Reubelt; Jacques Ellul - the Word of God in a World of Technique (a discussion with Jeff Dietrich and Katharine - Kassie - Temple); letters to the Catholic Worker; Cut Loose From the Rhythms of the Cosmos by Lee Hoinacki ("What I want to say is this: That because of scientific photographs, it is 'impossible' to come to know creation - the universe as created by God"). Light remnant of mailing label to front cover.
Idioma: Inglés
Publicado por The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1992
Librería: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, Estados Unidos de America
Revista / Publicación Original o primera edición
EUR 13,27
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoNewspaper. Condición: Near Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the January-February 1992 (Vol. LIX No. 1) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Jo Roberts as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan, Meg Hyre, Kate Quigley, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: Eviction And Arrest For Tax Resisters (on Randy Kehler and Betsy Corner); Remember The Evil We Wish To Deny: One Year After The Persian Gulf War by Eileen Egan; Wolves And Villagers by Jennifer Belisle (on St. Francis of Assisi); Usury, Freedom From Debt And Jubilee by Barry Peters; short letter The Tears Of Haiti from Community workers in Haiti; The US Army School Of The Americas; memorial tribute Lucky Clarke by Michael Boover; poem "Ambassadors Of God" by Peter Maurin; Older People In The Big Apple's Bite by Jane Sammon; short A Cure For The Recession by Peter Maurin (a Radio talk, reprinted from the March 1943 issue of Catholic Worker). Light remnant of mailing label to front cover; short closed edge tear to front cover.
Idioma: Inglés
Publicado por The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1990
Librería: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, Estados Unidos de America
Revista / Publicación Original o primera edición
EUR 13,27
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoNewspaper. Condición: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the May 1990 (Vol. LVII No. 3) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Jo Roberts as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan, Meg Hyre, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: "Warehoused Apartments" by Carmen Trotta ("On February 19, twenty members of the New York Catholic Worker took to the streets, along with 400-500 other residents of the Lower East Side, to protest the withholding of empty, habitable apartments by private landlords - a phenomenon known as 'warehousing'"); Revolution, The Old Man and the Land by Michael Kane ("These are excerpts of a longer memoir concerning the life and changing times of Michael Kane's father, who still lives on the family farm in upstate New York"); Love Shows Itself in Tenderness by Dorothy Day (excerpts from Dorothy Day's "On Pilgrimage" columns in the Catholic Worker); Peaceful Tax Resistance in Beit Sahour [West Bank] by Terry Rogers; Peter Maurin - Social Realism and Utopian Idealism by Katharine Temple; The Aims and Means of the Catholic Worker Movement; Why Do You Think It's Called Capitalism? by Lee Hoinacki; short The Life of Marian Anderson by Alberta Piccolino. Light remnant of mailing label to front cover.
Idioma: Inglés
Publicado por The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1991
Librería: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, Estados Unidos de America
Revista / Publicación Original o primera edición
EUR 13,27
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoNewspaper. Condición: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the May 1991 (Vol. LVIII No. 3) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Jo Roberts as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan, Meg Hyre, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: Water By The Hill by Felton Davis (on Picatinny Arsenal); David Dellinger: Optimism Of The Will ("taken from an interview with Dave by Harry James Cargas, Professor of Literature and Language at Webster University, St. Louis, Missouri"); A Lesson In Prayer by Anthony Aratari (which begins, "Remembering Dorothy Day when she was in the thick of the work she had cut out for herself in those years following the end of World War II, I experienced her at close range, unaware that I was absorbing the religious formation of her strong personality"); From The Book Of Notes by Ric Rhetor (reflections, including, "When will it dawn on us that WAR is the war crime?"); Holding All These Things In Your Heart by Sally Hanlon ("Where do I see the passion of Christ in the world today?"); Peter Maurin On Economics: Money, Work & Distribution by Katharine Temple; The Aims And Means Of The Catholic Worker Movement; Love In The First Place by Stephen Cleghorn ("This is a remembrance of one spiritual child of Dorothy Day, one woman who heard Dorothy's call to action and responded. Her name was Claire Marie Carmody. It was God's blessing upon me to know her as my wife for 17 years. On July 26, 1990, at the age of 43, she died of cancer"); "Rerum Novarum" and The Wealth of Nations by John Cort. Mailing label to upper right corner of front cover.
Idioma: Inglés
Publicado por The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1991
Librería: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, Estados Unidos de America
Revista / Publicación Original o primera edición
EUR 13,27
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoNewspaper. Condición: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the September 1991 (Vol. LVIII No. 6) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Jo Roberts as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan, Meg Hyre, Kate Quigley, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: Hospitality Is Mutual Trust & Respect by Michael Kirwan; I Recognize God In You by Martin Rodgers (which begins, "I am a twenty four year old African-American Catholic man. In the Catholic tradition, we are all brothers and sisters in Christ. In the African-American tradition, we are all brothers and sisters in shared experiences and shared history"); "Pacifist" And Proud: An Open Letter to Ron Musto by Gordon Zahn; The Quality Of The Day by Felton Davis (which begins, "This is an article about the closing of Tompkins Square Park; but, first it is necessary to make some general observations"); two poems by Denise Levertov ("Suspended" and "Witnessing From Afar The New Escalation Of Savage Power"); The Children Of Iraq by Bill Griffin; Letter From Suquamish [Washington] from Linda Greenwald of the Suquamish Catholic Worker on behalf of the Double Rainbow Project; Intellectuals And Real Life In The City by Jane Sammon; poem "Easy Essay" by Peter Maurin. Mailing label to upper right corner of front cover.
Idioma: Inglés
Publicado por The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1990
Librería: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, Estados Unidos de America
Revista / Publicación Original o primera edición
EUR 13,27
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoNewspaper. Condición: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the January-February 1990 (Vol. LVII No. 1) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Meg Hyre and Jo Roberts as Managing Editors, and Editors Frank Donovan, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: Ammon [Hennacy], Catholic Anarchist by Michael True; Martyrdom in El Salvador: The Seed of the Church ("As we go to press toward the middle of December, fighting in El Salvador between FMLN rebel forces and the Salvadoran army, which began with the FMLN offensive on November 11, continues in both the city and the countryside"); Nonviolence from the Ground Up by Brayton Shanley ("We [Brayton and Suzanne Shanley] saw the culture dying around us - We came to see that if we didn't make a break with popular culture, we would be consumed by it. At the outset of the 1980's, a vision was becoming clear - we must live an authentic life of Christ grounded in resistance to the evils of our day - love of money and addiction to violence. We decided to move to the woods"); Why We Became War Tax Resisters (separate testimonials by Karl Meyer, and Betsy Corner and Randy Kehler); Helgi Lagoducz (in memoriam tributes by Katharine Temple and Candy Clarke); short A Dime From a Poor Man's Pocket by Ammon Hennacy (from his July 1959 column in the Catholic Worker); And Justice For All? by Michael [Bruce] Ross (on the executions of Robert Streetman; Wayne Felde; Willie Darden; Leslie Lowenfield; Earl Clanton; and James Messer - with Editor's note: "Michael Ross is currently the only person on Connecticut's death row"); Another Eviction in Tompkins Square [Park] by Michael Rothberg. Light remnant of mailing label to front cover.
Idioma: Inglés
Publicado por The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1989
Librería: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, Estados Unidos de America
Revista / Publicación Original o primera edición
EUR 13,27
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoNewspaper. Condición: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the January-February 1989 (Vol. LVI No. 1) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Meg Hyre as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, and book reviews, articles and other highlights of this issue include: South African Church Backs War Resisters; poem "The Extra Coat in Your Closet Belongs to the Poor" by Peter Maurin; Hope Beyond Violence in Central America by Terry Rogers (on Guatemala and Nicaragua); short Support These Boycotts; Maryhouse by Mary Lathrop; New IRS Ploys May Affect War Tax Resisters by Karl Meyer; short Mercy, Not Sacrifice (on Billy Neal Moore); short Saints and Revolutionaries by Jacques Maritain (an excerpt from his book "The Range of Reason"); The Resistance Continues: End Conscription Campaign Banned by Rob Goldman (on South Africa); short War Toys Aimed at the Poor; To Turn, To Understand With Our Hearts by Jo Roberts; short Holiness Is Close At Hand by Mary Anczarski. Light remnant of mailing label to front cover.
Idioma: Inglés
Publicado por The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1988
Librería: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, Estados Unidos de America
Revista / Publicación Original o primera edición
EUR 13,27
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoNewspaper. Condición: Near Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the August 1988 (Vol. LV No. 5) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Meg Hyre as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan, Tim Lambert, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, and book reviews, articles and other highlights of this issue include: "Each One of You a Prophet" by Joseph E. Mulligan, S.J. (on Archbishop Oscar Romero); Inside Botshabelo Township [South Africa]: A New Dumping Ground by Jim Consedine; Vinoba Bhave and the Land Gift Movement by Mark Shepard; Maryhouse by Tim Lambert; NY State Moves to Dismantle Shoreham Nuclear Reactor by Tim Lambert; Questions, Offerings, and Stories by Felton Davis ("Five years ago, on just such a pleasant June day as the one we are having while I write this, I sat on the floor of a holding cell in the county jail at Riverhead, Long Island. Over a hundred of us had been arrested at the construction site of the Shoreham Nuclear Power Plant, and fifteen of us had refused to give our names"); All For the Kingdom of God: The Witness of Franz Jagerstatter ("The following are excerpts of a statement which Franz Jagerstatter wrote from prison shortly before his execution on August 9, 1943"); A Public Witness to Truth by Thomas Gumbleton (on Franz Jagerstatter); Working for Peace: A View from the Netherlands - An Interview with Fritz ter Kuile. With two poems by Charles Culhane from Sing Sing Correctional Facility - "Of Cold Places" and "After Almost Twenty Years." Light remnant of mailing label to front cover; pen marks to upper edge of front cover.
Idioma: Inglés
Publicado por The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1989
Librería: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, Estados Unidos de America
Revista / Publicación Original o primera edición
EUR 13,27
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoNewspaper. Condición: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the October-November 1989 (Vol. LVI No. 7) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Meg Hyre and Jo Roberts as Managing Editors, and Editors Frank Donovan, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: Pittston [Company] Miners' Strike Defends Community by Denise Giardina; The Movement to Return Home: Salvadoran Refugees in Colomoncagua by Meg Hyre; editorial End This Day of Violence; In Memoriam: Two Good Men by Msgr. Charles Owen Rice (on I.F. Stone and Michael Harrington); a "pastoral statement written by the Salvadoran refugee community in Colomoncagua, Honduras, explaining their decision to return home to El Salvador, after nine years in the refugee camps"; Deane Mary Mowrer (in memoriam tributes by Anne Taillefer-Stokes, Ruth Collins, and Linda Bunce); Florence de Witt (an in memoriam tribute by Meg Hyre); Julian of Norwich by Joan Hyme. Light remnant of mailing label to front cover.
Idioma: Inglés
Publicado por The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1988
Librería: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, Estados Unidos de America
Revista / Publicación Original o primera edición
EUR 13,27
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoNewspaper. Condición: Near Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the June-July 1988 (Vol. LV No. 4) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Meg Hyre as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan, Tim Lambert, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, and book reviews, articles and other highlights of this issue include: Pretoria: The Tricks of a Violent Trade by Jim Consedine; What To Do With a Battleship? by Tim Lambert ("Finally, there is the new maritime strategy devised as part of preparations for the next, nuclear, war"); St. Joseph House by Meg Hyre; Whose City, Anyway? by Matthew Lee (on the South Bronx); The Destruction of the Ozone Layer by Carl Siciliano; Of Mice and Men by Katharine Temple (on genetic engineering); Tierra Nueva in Honduras by Bob and Gracie Ekblad; From Agri-Culture to Agri-Business by Darryl Birkenfeld; short tribute of Ramon Rodriguez by Jacqueline Jury; short Status of CO [conscientious objection to military service] in Warsaw Pact Nations by Eileen Egan. Light remnant of mailing label to front cover; short pen mark to front cover.
Idioma: Inglés
Publicado por The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1988
Librería: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, Estados Unidos de America
Revista / Publicación Original o primera edición
EUR 13,27
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoNewspaper. Condición: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the October-November 1988 (Vol. LV No. 7) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Meg Hyre as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan, Tim Lambert, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, and book reviews, articles and other highlights of this issue include: "What Do the Simple Folk Do?" by Dorothy Day (first published in the Catholic Worker in May 1978); Joan Andrews: A Faithful Witness to Life by Juli Loesch; short Kristallnacht by Jane Sammon; Maryhouse by Katharine Temple; Salvadoran Refugees Return Home Despite Great Risk by John Dear, S.J.; tribute Greg Murphy by Felton Davis; The Cross of Love Marks the Path to Life by David E. DeCosse; Letters from All Over; short Stop War Toys Campaign. Light remnant of mailing label to front cover.
Idioma: Inglés
Publicado por The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1989
Librería: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, Estados Unidos de America
Revista / Publicación Original o primera edición
EUR 13,27
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoNewspaper. Condición: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the August 1989 (Vol. LVI No. 5) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Meg Hyre as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan, Jo Roberts, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: Behind the Prison Wall by Leonard A. Taylor ("I can vividly remember my first impression of Folsom Prison"); "You are Homeless" Pounding in Your Ears by Ruth Young; AIDS: To Serve the Sick by Bill Griffin; Kenya Letters ("Marj Humphrey, our co-worker in Christ, and formerly with us at the New York Catholic Worker, has been working as a Physician Assistant in two areas of Kenya since 1988, with Maryknoll's Lay Mission Program"); bGH in Milk by Jack Miller (on Bovine Growth Hormone); D.C. Judge Moved by Testimony by Jim Kelly ("Catholic Workers and others in Washington, D.C. were found not guilty this past January of obstructing traffic within the Capitol grounds. The seven activists were arrested October 19th of last year after simulating an eviction as part of a housing demonstration"). Light remnant of mailing label to front cover.
Idioma: Inglés
Publicado por The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1989
Librería: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, Estados Unidos de America
Revista / Publicación Original o primera edición
EUR 13,27
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoNewspaper. Condición: Near Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the December 1989 (Vol. LVI No. 8) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Meg Hyre and Jo Roberts as Managing Editors, and Editors Frank Donovan, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: Shalom, Salaam, Peace On Earth by Jane Sammon; Novena for La Purisima by Ruth Ice; To File Or Not to File by Karl Meyer (an excerpt from his book on war tax refusers); The Civil War in Guatemala is Not Over by Jo Roberts; Labor Leader Rodolfo Robles Bears Witness (a leader of the Coca-Cola Workers Union in Guatemala); short Rally Greets ANC Leaders ("End apartheid now. Free Nelson Mandela now! God Bless Africa!"); in memoriam tribute of Michael Harrington by Eileen Egan; poem "Winter Song for the Women's Jail" by Deane Mary Mowrer (first appearing in the February 1958 issue of the Catholic Worker); Bolivian Children Defended by Dennis Nurkse (on Father Jorge Vila and his program Defense for Children International - Bolivia). Light remnant of mailing label to front cover; short closed edge tear to rear cover.
Idioma: Inglés
Publicado por The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1989
Librería: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, Estados Unidos de America
Revista / Publicación Original o primera edición
EUR 13,27
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoNewspaper. Condición: Near Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the March-April 1989 (Vol. LVI No. 2) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Meg Hyre as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: Rubber Tapper [Francisco] Chico Mendes Murdered by Jo Roberts; Behold the Tree of Life by Raymond Marcin; Thomas Berry: Dreaming of a New Earth - An Interview; St. Joseph House by Adam Owen; Maryhouse by Paul Wells; U.S. Presses Allies on Sea-Based Nuclear Weapons; Voluntary Poverty and the Way of Peace by John Dear; short Lutheran Church Under Attack in El Salvador; lengthy, near two-page review, of "Proud Donkey of Schaerbeek, Ade Bethune, Catholic Worker Artist" by Judith Stoughton (with six illustrations of her work); short Ten Steps to Liberation by Mary Anczarski; Letters from Our Friends. Light remnant of mailing label to front cover; narrow chips to lower edge of rear page (to blank margin only).
Publicado por Reference Guides
Librería: Wonder Book, Frederick, MD, Estados Unidos de America
EUR 11,30
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoCondición: Good. Good condition. Boards a bit mottled. (price guide, occult, metaphysics).
Idioma: Inglés
Publicado por Independently published, 2019
ISBN 10: 1078333130 ISBN 13: 9781078333139
Librería: Revaluation Books, Exeter, Reino Unido
EUR 9,50
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoPaperback. Condición: Brand New. 102 pages. 11.00x8.50x0.23 inches. In Stock.
Idioma: Inglés
Publicado por Independently published, 2018
ISBN 10: 1720259836 ISBN 13: 9781720259831
Librería: Revaluation Books, Exeter, Reino Unido
EUR 9,79
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoPaperback. Condición: Brand New. 157 pages. 9.00x6.00x0.40 inches. In Stock.
Librería: Museum Without Walls, Santa Maria, CA, Estados Unidos de America
EUR 4,38
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoNo Binding. Condición: Good. Postcard in Good condition, with writing on reverse. Unmailed. Cards are sent in stiff mailers. Postcard.
Idioma: Inglés
Publicado por Independently published, 2019
ISBN 10: 1079201165 ISBN 13: 9781079201161
Librería: Revaluation Books, Exeter, Reino Unido
EUR 12,96
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoPaperback. Condición: Brand New. 130 pages. 9.00x6.00x0.30 inches. In Stock.
Idioma: Inglés
Publicado por Independently published, 2018
ISBN 10: 1983313246 ISBN 13: 9781983313240
Librería: Revaluation Books, Exeter, Reino Unido
EUR 10,23
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoPaperback. Condición: Brand New. 197 pages. 9.00x6.00x0.50 inches. In Stock.
Publicado por Los Angeles: Reference Guides, 1967
Librería: MW Books, New York, NY, Estados Unidos de America
Original o primera edición
EUR 15,90
Cantidad disponible: Más de 20 disponibles
Añadir al carritoFirst Edition. An exceptional, fine copy in the original gilt-blocked cloth. Particularly and surprisingly well-preserved; tight, bright, clean and strong. Literally as new. ; 380 pages; Description: 380 p. 23 cm. Subjects: Occultism --Bibliography. Books --Prices. 3 Kg.
Librería: PBShop.store US, Wood Dale, IL, Estados Unidos de America
EUR 28,29
Cantidad disponible: 15 disponibles
Añadir al carritoHRD. Condición: New. New Book. Shipped from UK. Established seller since 2000.
Librería: PBShop.store US, Wood Dale, IL, Estados Unidos de America
EUR 28,29
Cantidad disponible: 15 disponibles
Añadir al carritoHRD. Condición: New. New Book. Shipped from UK. Established seller since 2000.
EUR 25,97
Cantidad disponible: Más de 20 disponibles
Añadir al carritoCondición: New.
EUR 24,78
Cantidad disponible: Más de 20 disponibles
Añadir al carritoCondición: New.
EUR 26,80
Cantidad disponible: Más de 20 disponibles
Añadir al carritoCondición: As New. Unread book in perfect condition.
EUR 29,20
Cantidad disponible: Más de 20 disponibles
Añadir al carritoCondición: New.
EUR 31,36
Cantidad disponible: Más de 20 disponibles
Añadir al carritoPaperback. Condición: New.
Librería: PBShop.store UK, Fairford, GLOS, Reino Unido
EUR 26,29
Cantidad disponible: 15 disponibles
Añadir al carritoHRD. Condición: New. New Book. Shipped from UK. Established seller since 2000.