Publicado por Faber And Faber, London, 1995
Librería: Fountain Books (Steve Moody), Eastleigh, Reino Unido
Original o primera edición Ejemplar firmado
Hardcover. Condición: Fine. Estado de la sobrecubierta: Fine. Chris Riddel. Lisa Flather. Ilustrador. 1st Edition. A Fine Four Volume Set in Fine Dust Jackets throughout. With a Fine Slip case to match. Signed by Ted Hughes to the Half Title of Volume 1. A complete publication of Ted Hughes Collected Animal Poems, presented together as a single issue. Signed by Author(s).
Publicado por [Philadelphia?], 1828
Librería: William Reese Company - Americana, New Haven, CT, Estados Unidos de America
8pp. Stitched, as issued. Moderate tanning and foxing. About very good. A scarce printing of several anti-Jackson pieces from Pennsylvania newspapers during the 1828 presidential campaign. The first short tract is an indictment of Jackson's conduct in Florida during the Seminole War by a former General and Senator, Andrew Lacock. The second is a denouncement of Jackson by a former supporter, and the third prints prior critical statements of Jackson by some of his current supporters. Not in AMERICAN IMPRINTS; only three copies are located by OCLC, at the New York State Library, University of Rochester, and the College of William & Mary. Quite rare in the market; this is the first copy we have handled. OCLC 9354408.
Publicado por Vance, Parsloe & Co, 47 Maiden Lan., New York, 1875
Librería: Between the Covers-Rare Books, Inc. ABAA, Gloucester City, NJ, Estados Unidos de America
Original o primera edición
Unbound. Condición: Fine. Vintage pictorial lithograph broadside with printed caption. 11" x 9". Printed on recto only in black on tan paper. There are a few small spots of foxing, with one short tear in the margin, else a fine, clean copy. The supposedly humorous lithograph reproduces a cityscape drawing, depicting two poorly dressed African-Americans, a man and woman, standing facing each other and nearly kissing, leaning over a trash barrel on a city sidewalk, each with a gunny-sack slung over their shoulder, with buildings and a street sign, "Maiden Lane," in the background. The lithograph is signed in the plate "F. T. Vance". Frederick T. Vance was a New York state Civil War veteran and POW who turned to art after the War, gaining some praise for his landscapes and scenes, but suffered a stroke and spent the last decade of his life in a home for soldiers. As near as we can tell, he wasn't noted for his racist caricatures.*OCLC* seems to locate no copies.