Publicado por The Servire Press, The Hague, 1932
Librería: sonalsorises, Los angeles, CA, Estados Unidos de America
Original o primera edición
EUR 84,29
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoSoft cover. Condición: Near Very Good. Hans Arp Ilustrador. First Edition. First Edition. Original illustrated wrappers, stain to top of front cover. Cover illustration by Hans Arp. Contains "Homage to James Joyce" with a contribution and facsimile by Joyce. Early work by Samuel Beckett, also Gertrude Stein, Franz Kafka and others. This issue published in March of 1932.
Publicado por The Servire Press, The Hague (Holland), 1935
Librería: Between the Covers-Rare Books, Inc. ABAA, Gloucester City, NJ, Estados Unidos de America
Original o primera edición
EUR 133,09
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoSoftcover. Condición: Very Good. First edition. 205, [7 ads] pp. Illustrated from black and white photographs. Pictorial wrappers. Short tears on the cover along the spine, creases and small chips on the spine with rubbing on the rear wrap, very good. Contains a special section: "James Joyce and His New Work," including James Joyce's, "Continuation of a Work in Progress: Opening and Closing Pages, Part II, Section II" ; also prints two articles about Joyce (by Leon-Paul Fargue and Armand M. Petitjean). Additional contributions by Malcolm Cowley, Eugene Jolas, Franz Kafka, and more.
Publicado por Shakespeare and Company, Sylvia Beach, Paris, 1929
Librería: G. F. Wilkinson Books, member IOBA, GRASS VALLEY, CA, Estados Unidos de America
Miembro de asociación: IOBA
Original o primera edición
EUR 155,27
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoSoftcover. Condición: Poor. First Edition. Front cover evenly detached; chips with loss to leading edges of front & back cover; loss of up to 1" bottom of spine; covers soiled; moderate tanning to text pages. Holding tight in spite it all. ; Printed wrappers. ; 8vo 8" - 9" tall; 194 pages.
Publicado por Faber and Faber Limited London [1929], 1929
Librería: Anthony Smith Books, London, LND, Reino Unido
Miembro de asociación: PBFA
Original o primera edición
EUR 208,68
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carrito8vo. First UK edition using sheets printed in France in May 1929. Original turquoise cloth lettered in gilt on the spine. Cloth a little darkened to the spine and top edges. Neat ink ownership, dated 1940, on the fly. Unclipped jacket, showing the price as '6s. net', a bit tanned on the spine with tiny nicks to the spine ends. Near fine in near fine d/w. A collection of essays about 'Work In Progress', which would be published as Finnegans Wake ten years later. The two 'Letters of Protest' are by Joyce. Beckett's contribution, 'Dante. Bruno. Vico. Joyce' is the author's first appearance in print. His first novel, only published in 1992 after his death but probably written c. 1932, was called 'Dream of Fair to Middling Women'. That title is adapted from Tennyson's poem but was used unaltered by Henry Williamson for one of his novels, published by Faber and included as No. 14 in the list of 'The Faber Library' on the back panel of the jacket of this book. The former owner was David Daiches CBE (1912-2005), the Scottish literary historian and critic.
Publicado por Transition, Paris, 1928
Librería: Raptis Rare Books, Palm Beach, FL, Estados Unidos de America
Original o primera edición
EUR 332,73
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoThe summer 1928 issue of Transition, number 13, containing James Joyce's ongoing piece âContinuation of a Work in Progress." Octavo, original pictorial wrappers with the cover portrait by Picasso, illustrated with black and white photographs throughout including Berenice Abbott's famed portrait of James Joyce. âContinuation of a Work in Progress" is an excerpt of Joyce's experimental novel that would later be published as Finnegans Wake (1939). Joyce began working on Finnegans Wake shortly after the 1922 publication of Ulysses. By 1924 installments of Joyce's new avant-garde work began to appear, in serialized form, in Parisian literary journals transatlantic review and transition, under the title "fragments from Work in Progress". The actual title of the work remained a secret until the book was published in its entirety, on 4 May 1939. The work has assumed a preeminent place in English literature. In very good condition with loss to the spine. Cover by Pablo Picasso. Transition was a Paris-based modernist literary journal founded in 1927 by Eugene Jolas that became one of the most influential platforms for experimental writing in the interwar period. Dedicated to challenging traditional literary forms, the magazine published work by leading figures such as James Joyce, Gertrude Stein, Samuel Beckett, and Hart Crane, often showcasing texts that pushed the boundaries of language and narrative. Its pages were especially important for serializing excerpts of Joyceâs Work in Progress (later Finnegans Wake), thereby introducing avant-garde readers to his evolving style.
Publicado por Transition, New York, 1937
Librería: TBCL The Book Collector's Library, Montreal, QC, Canada
Miembro de asociación: IOBA
Original o primera edición
EUR 399,28
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carrito1st Edition. 1st Edition. Soft cover. First Edition. Size: 6 x 8 3/8" - 208 pp + ads and black and white reproductions. TRANSITION featured a range of literary and artistic works, reflecting the journal's commitment to innovation and boundary-pushing content. "TRANSITION" was known for publishing works by writers such as James Joyce, as well as showcasing avant-garde art such as Duchamp and music by Copeland. In very good condition. Includes the subscription card in the back as well as the erratum pasted on for Stuart Gilbert. Cover art by Marcel Duchamp Issue Number Twenty-Six, published in 1937, included contributions from Eugene Jolas and James Johnson Sweeney. Eugene Jolas, an American writer and translator, was the editor of "TRANSITION" and a strong advocate for linguistic experimentation and the breaking of traditional narrative forms. James Johnson Sweeney was an influential art critic and curator known for his work at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York. An important and difficult issue to find.
Publicado por Faber and Faber Limited, London, 1929
Librería: Raptis Rare Books, Palm Beach, FL, Estados Unidos de America
Original o primera edición Ejemplar firmado
EUR 6.388,44
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoFirst limited British edition of this collection of critical essays and two letters on James Joyce's book Finnegans Wake. Small octavo, original publisher's cloth. Boldly signed by Samuel Beckett and Marcel Brion on the half-title page, and additionally signed by Beckett above the title of his essay. Samuel Beckett and Marcel Brion both personally knew James Joyce and were early defenders of his experimental work 'Finnegans Wake.' Beckett, a close associate of Joyce in Paris, assisted him with research and contributed an essay to 'Our Exagmination.' Marcel Brion, though more distant, also knew Joyce and played a key role in promoting Finnegans Wake to a French audience, offering interpretive insights that helped frame its reception within European modernism. He also contributed an essay to 'Our Exagmination.' One of 96 numbered copies, this example is unnumbered. Near fine in a near fine dust jacket. Letters of Protest by G.V.L. Slingsby and Vladimir Dixon. From the collection of Robert Duncan. Rare. Our Exagmination Round His Factification for Incamination of Work in Progress (1929) is a landmark critical volume that offers some of the earliest responses to James Joyceâs Finnegans Wake, then still unpublished and known only as Work in Progress. Comprising essays by a range of writersâ"including Samuel Beckett, William Carlos Williams, and Stuart Gilbertâ"the collection attempts to grapple with the experimental form, linguistic density, and philosophical ambition of Joyceâs evolving text. While some essays offer praise and others express bafflement, the volume as a whole reflects the modernist fascination with Joyceâs radical departure from conventional narrative.
Publicado por Shakespeare and Company, Sylvia Beach, Paris, 1929
Librería: Thomas A. Goldwasser Rare Books (ABAA), CHESTER, CT, Estados Unidos de America
Original o primera edición Ejemplar firmado
EUR 11.091,05
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoFirst edition. [3]-194, [2] p. 191 x 140 mm. (7 1/2 x 5 1/2 in.). Original printed paper wrappers. Copy no. 60 of 96 numbered copies printed on Arches paper. Mogens Boisen's copy (the Danish translator of Ulysses) inscribed to him by Sylvia Beach, and with two letters from him to a former owner, explaining the circumstances. Small chip from rear wrapper edge, light creasing on front wrapper, otherwise a fine copy. In a folding box, with the announcement. "Dante.Bruno. Vico.Joyce" published here constitutes Samuel Beckett's first appearance in print.
Publicado por Shakespeare and Co., May & June, Paris, 1927
Librería: Contact Editions, ABAC, ILAB, Toronto, ON, Canada
EUR 665,46
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoFull Leather. Condición: Fine. Two issued bound together by Bayntun in full tan calf with gilt frames, ornate gilt spine panels with gilt-stamped title on a black morocco label, gilt dentelles, all edges gilt, marbled endpapers. Pp. 185, [5] adverts; [183], [6] adverts, 2 double-sided black & white plates in No. 2 and also in No. 3. Bound without the original wrappers and without the half-title to No. 3, pages tanned as usual. Joints rubbed, outer corner of No. 3 title-page missing with loss to the year, professionally repaired. A beautifully bound, handsome copy of two early issues of this important literary review produced in Paris in the twenties. Sylvia Beach in her book "Shakespeare and Company, talks of 'transition': "All the best Anglo-Saxon and European work of the period appeared in it, much of it for the first time. Of all the reviews I came in contact with, 'transition' was the most vital, the longest-lived, and the review that I felt was most intelligently devoted to the interests of new writing." Contributors include: James Joyce, Gottfried Benn, Elliot Paul, Rainer Maria Rilke, Kay Boyle, William Carlos Williams, Gertrude Stein, Morley Callaghan, Man Ray, Max Ernst, Pavel Tchelitcheff, Laura Riding, Size: 12mo. Book.
Año de publicación: 1937
Librería: Ursus Rare Books, New York, NY, Estados Unidos de America
Original o primera edición
EUR 865,10
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoDUCHAMP, Marcel. Transition - A Quarterly Review. Number 26. With texts by James Joyce, Franz Kafka, and others. 208 pp., plus ads. 8vo., original wrappers, with front cover designed by Duchamp, preserved in a grey cloth box. New York: Transition, 1937. First Edition. Duchamp designed this cover using a reproduction of his readymade 'Comb' and an image of the journal's masthead. The same reproduction (but without the 'Transition' masthead) is included in all copies of 'The Box in a Valise,' 1941. According to Sylvia Beach, James Joyce told her jokingly that "the comb with thick teeth shown on this cover was the one used to comb out "Work in Progress," (Schwarz). Some wear to wrapper extremities, else fine. Schwarz, The Complete Work of Marcel Duchamp 457. Slocum & Cahoon 70.