Gift Catalogue 2014
Transcription
Gift Catalogue 2014
gift catalogue 2014 baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-97-bauman (1-800-972-2862) or 212-751-0011 [email protected] NY LV PA 535 Madison Avenue (Between 54th & 55th Streets) New York, NY 10022 800-972-2862 or 212-751-0011 Monday to Saturday, 10am to 6pm Grand Canal Shoppes, The Venetian | The Palazzo 3327 Las Vegas Blvd., South Suite 2856 Las Vegas, NV 89109 888-982-2862 or 702-948-1617 Sunday - Thursday, 10am to 11pm Friday - Saturday, 10am to Midnight by appointment only 1608 Walnut Street Philadelphia, PA 19103 215-546-6466 | (fax) 215-546-9064 Monday to Friday, 9am to 5pm All books are shipped on approval and are fully guaranteed. Any items may be returned within ten days for any reason (please notify us before returning). All reimbursements are limited to original purchase price. We accept all major credit cards. Shipping and insurance charges are additional. Packages will be shipped by UPS or Federal Express unless another carrier is requested. Next-day or second-day air service is available upon request. baumanrarebooks . com / blog twitter . com / baumanrarebooks GIFT C ATALO GUE N OV E M 2 33 45 55 73 79 215 86 95 100 104 107 Ar t & Il ur e ’s Liter lu s t r a t a t ur e ed an a H o li d a y Travel & E x p lor a Hi s t or y , P h il o s e & E co S por t s Food & W facebook . com / baumanrarebooks Childre n A m er ic F i n an c Index L i t er a t BER 201 4 ine t ion op h y & nomic s Religio n 2 LITERATURE charles dickens “The One Great Christmas Myth Of Modern Literature” 1. DICKENS, Charles. The Christmas Books. London, 1843-48. Together, five volumes. Small octavo, early 20th-century full red morocco gilt. $18,000. First editions of all five of Charles Dickens’ Christmas Books—chief among them a first issue of his immortal Christmas Carol, the veritable “Bible of Christmas”—illustrated with 65 engravings, four in color, by Leech, Maclise, Stanfield, Doyle, and Landseer, all books with original cloth covers and spines bound in. A handsome set, bound by Zaehensdorf. “It was a work written at the height of Dickens’ great powers, which would add to his considerable fame, bring a new work to the English language, increase the festivities at Christmastime, and contain his most eloquent protest at the condition of the poor” (John Mortimer). “Suddenly conceived and written within a few weeks, [A Christmas Carol] was the first of Dickens’ Christmas books (a new literary genre thus created incidentally)” (Britainnica). Christmas Carol is first issue, with uncorrected,redand-blue title page dated 1843, half title printed in blue, and light green endpapers. (First-issue copies appear with either yellow or green endpapers, no priority established; this copy has the original green free endpapers bound in.) Fine. 3 The Works Of Jane Austen gift catalogue 2014 2. AUSTEN, Jane. Works. New York, circa 1920. Six volumes. Octavo, contemporary three-quarter brown morocco gilt. $4200. Literature Lovely later edition of Austen’s novels, illustrated by C.E. Brock, finely bound by Stikeman. Contains Pride and Prejudice, Sense and Sensibility, Northanger Abbey, Persuasion, Mansfield Park, and Emma, as well as the unfinished novels “Lady Susan” and “The Watsons.” Near-fine. 1687 Edition Of Chaucer’s Works, The Last Gothic Type Edition 3. CHAUCER, Geoffrey. The Works. London, 1687. Folio, period-style full brown calf gilt. $6500. Third Speght edition of Chaucer’s works, the last edition to be set in Gothic type, with engraved frontispiece “Progeny of Chaucer,” incorporating a full-length portrait of the author and an image of his tomb. A beautiful volume in period-style calf-gilt. This edition is essentially a reprint of Speght’s 1602 edition, being the eighth collected edition, and includes for the first time the printing of the conclusions to the Cook’s and the Squire’s Tale, then recently discovered, on the verso of the last leaf. Owner’s small inscription to title page. Occasional light dampstaining to corners of text block. Binding beautiful and fine. “It Was The Best Of Times, It Was The Worst Of Times” Literature 4. DICKENS, Charles. A Tale of Two Cities. London, 1859. Octavo, contemporary three-quarter green calf gilt. $9200. gift catalogue 2014 4 First edition, first issue, bound from parts, of Dickens’ second historical novel, one of his most enduring works, handsomely bound. “The force of the novel springs from its exploration of darkness and death but its beauty derives from Dickens’ real sense of transcendence, from his ability to see the sweep of destiny” (Ackroyd, 858). Plates with occasional tiny closed tears to edges, light expert cleaning to a few leaves, interior unusually clean. Handsome. Call us at 212-751-0011 for more gift recommendations, or visit our website at BaumanRareBooks.com. Extra-Illustrated First Edition Of The Pickwick Papers 5. DICKENS, Charles. The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club. London, 183637. Thick octavo, early 20th-century full green morocco gilt. $4200. First book edition, mixed first and early issue, of one of Dickens’ greatest works, with 43 illustrations by Seymour and Phiz, extraillustrated with a complete suite of 32 engraved plates, most by Thomas Onwyn, in full morocco-gilt by Zaehnsdorf. “Never was a book received with more rapturous enthusiasm than that which greeted the Pickwick Papers!” (Allibone I:500). With six of seven first-issue points. Plates in mixed states, as usual. Near-fine. 6. SHELLEY, Mary Wollstonecraft. Frankenstein: Or, The Modern Prometheus. WITH: SCHILLER, Frederick. The Ghost-Seer. London, 1839. Two volumes bound in one. Small octavo, original marbled boards rebacked with original spine laid down. $3200. “Years Later [London] Would Say That Of All His Books He Liked The People Of The Abyss Best, That He Put More Heart Into It Than Any Other…” 7. LONDON, Jack. The People Of The Abyss. New York, 1903. Octavo, original cloth. $1100. First edition of London’s early nonfiction account of living in the East End of London, with dozens of photographic illustrations. “He bought some old clothes, worn brogans and a greasy cloth cap from a dealer in Petticoat Lane and prepared to plunge into ‘this human hell-hole called the East End,’ where almost half a million people lived in the utmost squalor and hopelessness (O’Connor, 169). Front inner paper hinge tender, some rubbing to cloth along spine and at corners. An extremely good copy. Scarce. Literature Third edition, fourth printing, of the first revised edition of Shelley’s masterpiece, the first to contain illustrations (the engraved frontispiece depicts the creature coming to life) and the first with her introduction, prepared especially for this edition, revealing the story behind the writing of the novel. This volume was issued with part I of Schiller’s The Ghost-Seer, the second part of which was published in number 10. Near-fine. 5 gift catalogue 2014 1839 First Illustrated Edition Of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, With Splendid Engraved Frontispiece gift catalogue 2014 Literature 6 Salesman’s Dummy For Mark Twain’s Tramp Abroad 8. TWAIN, Mark. A Tramp Abroad [Salesman’s Dummy]. Hartford, Connecticut, 1879. Octavo, original brown cloth. $4200. Original salesman’s dummy for A Tramp Abroad, with engraved frontispiece portrait, select illustrations and excerpts, and samples of the giltdecorated cloth spine and morocco swatch affixed to front pastedown, and a sample of publisher’s calf affixed to rear pastedown. Near-fine. “His Best Travel Narrative” 9. TWAIN, Mark. Following the Equator: A Journey Around the World. Hartford; New York, 1897. Royal octavo, original gilt-stamped navy cloth, mounted cover illustration. $1250. First edition of Twain’s fifth and final travel book—a lovely copy. Often sober in tone due to Twain’s grief over the death of his daughter Susie, this is his “only travel book that makes no pretense that its narrator may be anyone other than Twain himself” (Rasmussen, Critical Companion, 916). Near-fine. “One Of Mark Twain’s Most Important Books” 10. TWAIN, Mark. Life on the Mississippi. Boston, 1883. Octavo, original gilt-stamped pictorial brown cloth. $2200. First American edition, first state “intermediate A,” with hundreds of illustrations, many by Edmund Henry Garrett. During an 1872 visit to the Midwest, the author “was struck by the great diminution of steamboat traffic on the Ohio River and became anxious to document the steamboat era before it vanished altogether… [The resulting volume is] widely regarded as both one of Mark Twain’s major works and a classic on the Mississippi itself” (Rasmussen, 283, 291-2). Near-fine. 7 11. TURGENEV, Ivan. Fathers and Sons. A Novel. New York, 1867. Small octavo, original gilt-stamped green cloth. $7500. First edition in English of Turgenev’s controversial masterpiece, in scarce original cloth. “Fathers and Sons concerns the inevitable conflict between generations and between the values of traditionalists and intellectuals” (Encyclopedia of Literature, 405). Near-fine. gift catalogue 2014 “And This Is What Is Called Nihilism?” Literature “She Was A Woman Of A Steadfast Mind, Tender, And Deep In Her Excess Of Love”: Wordsworth Autographed Poetical Manuscript Signed, Framed With Portrait 12. WORDSWORTH, William. Autograph poetical manuscript signed. Rydal Mount, Oct. 29th, 1839. Single leaf, 7-1/4 inches by 9 inches; mounted and framed with portrait, entire piece measures 22 inches by 18 inches. $6000. Fragment of Wordsworth’s poem ‘The Excursion’ written entirely in Wordsworth’s hand, with a difference between the manuscript version and the published text. Signed and dated by Wordsworth at Rydal Mount, his home in the Lake District. In this autograph, Wordsworth has written “a woman of a steadfast mind” rather than the published “steady mind” in the first line. Fine. Manuscript verse entirely in Wordsworth’s hand is scarce, as more often his sister copied poems for him. gift catalogue 2014 Literature 8 “No More Than A Memory,” One Of Only 100 Copies Signed By Beckett 13. BECKETT, Samuel. Imagination Dead Imagine. Translated from the French by the Author. London, 1965. Octavo, original gray cloth, slipcase. $3600. Signed limited first edition in English, one of only 100 copies signed by Beckett—his brilliant metaphor for “the postmodern imagination.” Published the same year in French as Imagination Morte Imaginez. Fine. Inscribed With Shark Sketch By Benchley 14. BENCHLEY, Peter. Jaws. Garden City, 1974. Octavo, original black cloth, dust jacket. $1600. First edition of Benchley’s bestselling thriller, in scarce first-issue dust jacket, inscribed by the author with his sketch of a shark: “To: Frank —-, keep writing! Best wishes – Peter Benchley.” A “confrontation between man and nature [that] consciously echoes Moby Dick” (Fantasy and Horror 6-27). Near-fine. “I Must Pass On The Secret”: Signed By Dan Brown 15. BROWN, Dan. The Da Vinci Code. New York, 2003. Octavo, original half black cloth, dust jacket. $950. First edition of Dan Brown’s suspenseful (and controversial) thriller, an intricate race through centuries of ecclesial conspiracy and the lore of secret societies, signed by him. “Not since the advent of Harry Potter has an author so flagrantly delighted in leading readers on a breathless chase and coaxing them through hoops” (New York Times). Fine. Inscribed By Edgar Rice Burroughs 16. BURROUGHS, Edgar Rice. Swords of Mars. Tarzana, California, 1936. Octavo, original blue cloth, dust jacket. $3200. First edition of Burroughs’ highly acclaimed eighth book—”one of his very best novels”—in his Barsoom series, inscribed by him: “To — — with good wishes, Edgar Rice Burroughs, Tarzana, California.” Burroughs’ skill “in storytelling and invention is high in the Barsoom books… Serious scifi writers who owe a debt to Edgar Rice Burroughs include Leigh Brackett, Ray Bradbury, Michael Moorcock and, above all, Philip José Farmer” (Clute & Nicholls, 177-8). Book fine, dust jacket about-fine. “He Bent His Steps Toward The Distant Jungle, And Beside Him Paced The Great Lion” 17. BURROUGHS, Edgar Rice. The Lad and the Lion. Tarzana, California, 1938. Octavo, original blue cloth, dust jacket. $1500. First edition of Burroughs’ adventure about a shipwrecked boy and his friendship with a ferocious lion, basis for the 1917 silent feature film. First serialized in All-Story Weekly (June-July 1917), this first edition in book form contains Burroughs’ extensive revisions and additions. Fine. gift catalogue 2014 Literature 10 “What’s It Going To Be Then, Eh?” 18. BURGESS, Anthony. A Clockwork Orange. London, 1962. Octavo, original black cloth, dust jacket. $9500. First edition of Burgess’ controversial classic, with the original last chapter (in contrast to the first American edition), in rarely found first-issue dust jacket. Director Stanley Kubrick’s 1971 film adaptation “was based on the incomplete U.S. edition, which omitted the crucial last chapter in which, as Burgess later said, ‘my young thuggish protagonist grows up… and recognizes that human energy is better expended on creation than destruction” (Anatomy of Wonder II190). Fine. Limited Edition, Signed By Capote 19. CAPOTE, Truman. The Thanksgiving Visitor. New York, 1968. Octavo, original blue cloth, slipcase. $1200. Signed limited edition, one of only 300 copies signed by Capote. The first separate printing in book form of this childhood memoir, which first appeared in McCall’s magazine. Fine. “A Girl Doesn’t Read This Sort Of Thing Without Her Lipstick” 20. CAPOTE, Truman. Breakfast at Tiffany’s. A Short Novel and Three Stories. New York, 1958. Octavo, original yellow cloth, dust jacket. $3500. First edition of the adventures of free-spirited Holly Golightly, in scarce dust jacket. With three other stories: “House of Flowers,” “A Diamond Guitar,” and “A Christmas Memory.” About-fine. Inscribed By Orson Scott Card First edition of the provocative first book in Card’s science-fiction “Ender Saga,” winner of both the Nebula and Hugo awards, inscribed: “to Michael—Good to see you at Noreascon!—Orson Scott Card, 2 Sep ’89.” Winner of the 1985 Nebula Award and the 1986 Hugo Award for best novel. Fine. 22. CARVER, Raymond. Cathedral. Stories. New York, 1983. Octavo, original half gray cloth, dust jacket. $1100. First edition of Carver’s award-winning collection of stories, signed by him. Awarded a national Book Critics Circle Award nomination, Cathedral includes “A Small, Good Thing,” first-place winner in 1983 of the prestigious O. Henry Award, as well as “Where I’m Calling From” and the title story. Fine. First Edition Of The Manchurian Candidate, Inscribed By Condon 23. CONDON, Richard. The Manchurian Candidate. New York, 1959. Octavo, original half blue cloth, dust jacket. $3800. First edition of Condon’s brilliant, controversial, “definitive psychological thriller,” scarce in original dust jacket, boldly inscribed by the author in the year of publication: “For Pat —, patron of first novelists – the hope of youth – Dick Condon, NY 3/27/59,” accompanied by a typed letter signed by him. Near-fine. Literature Signed First Edition gift catalogue 2014 21. CARD, Orson Scott. Ender’s Game. New York, 1985. Octavo, original half navy cloth, dust jacket. $5000. 11 12 gift catalogue 2014 Literature Signed By Pat Conroy In The Year Of Publication 24. CONROY, Pat. The Great Santini. Boston, 1976. Octavo, original orange cloth, dust jacket. $1200. First edition of Conroy’s acclaimed first novel, boldly signed: “Pat Conroy, Oct 21, 1976.” Critically praised as “robust and vivid… full of feeling,” Pat Conroy’s highly autobiographical first novel chronicles the struggles of a teenage boy against his brutal and demanding father (Newsday). A limited advance edition of the uncorrected proof and proof jacket (35 copies) was issued the same year. Fine. DeLillo’s “Private Declaration Of Independence” 25. DELILLO, Don. Americana. Boston, 1971. Octavo, original half blue cloth, dust jacket. $1200. First edition of DeLillo’s first novel, a “swift, ironic, witty cross-country American nightmare.” As Martin Amis has observed, “Here is a writer of high intellect and harsh originality, equipped with extraordinary gifts… Right from the start—Americana (1971)— DeLillo appeared tricked out and tooled up, his prose hard-edged, pre-stressed, sheet-metaled” (New York Times). Book fine, dust jacket about-fine. “I Had A Farm In Africa, At The Foot Of The Ngong Hills…” 26. DINESEN, Isak. Out of Africa. New York, 1938. Octavo, original black and orange cloth, dust jacket. $1700. First American edition, a beautiful copy. Dinesen “married her cousin, Baron Bror von BlixenFinecke, in 1914. They ran a coffee plantation in Kenya, which she continued to manage after her divorce; the story of this failed enterprise is told in Out of Africa” (Drabble, 109). Preceded by the first English edition in 1937. Fine. 27. FAULKNER, William. The Reivers: A Reminiscence. New York, 1962. Octavo, original burgundy cloth, acetate. $2800. Signed limited first edition of The Reivers, Faulkner’s Pulitzer Prize-winning last novel, one of only 500 copies signed by him, published one month before his death, praised on publication as a brilliant “excursion into the pleasure of fantasy” (New York Times). Fine. 13 gift catalogue 2014 One Of Only 500 Copies Signed By William Faulkner Literature One Of Only 400 Copies Signed By Faulkner 28. FAULKNER, William. Idyll in the Desert. New York, 1931. Octavo, original marbled red boards, glassine. $4500. Signed limited first edition of Faulkner’s haunting tale of love and loss, one of only 400 copies signed by him, in scarce original glassine. Foreshadowing The Wild Palms and mirroring Faulkner’s life at the time, Idyll tells the story of a woman who abandons her husband and two children for a younger man. Only slight wear to glassine, book fine. “In This Book He Is Unsurpassable” 29. FAULKNER, William. The Hamlet. New York, 1940. Octavo, original three-quarter dark green cloth, custom clamshell box. $6000. Signed limited first edition, one of only 250 copies signed by Faulkner. The first novel in the acclaimed and popular Snopes trilogy, The Hamlet was the only novel Faulkner published between Absalom, Absalom! in 1936 and Knight’s Gambit in 1949. Without scarce acetate. Near-fine. gift catalogue 2014 Literature 14 “Among His Most Beautiful Lyrics”: One Of Only 600 Copies Signed By T.S. Eliot 30. ELIOT, T.S. Ash-Wednesday. New York and London, 1930. Slim octavo, original blue cloth, slipcase. $3200. Signed limited first edition, one of 600 copies printed by the Curwen Press and signed by T.S. Eliot. These poems “represent the first fruits of Eliot’s conversion after the despair of ‘The Hollow Men’, and are among his most beautiful lyrics” (Connolly, 65). Light expert repairs to slipcase. Book fine. “So We Beat On, Boats Against The Current, Borne Back Ceaselessly Into The Past” 31. FITZGERALD, F. Scott. The Great Gatsby. New York, 1925. Octavo, original green cloth. $6000. First edition of this landmark of 20thcentury fiction. Without extremely rare original dust jacket. Very nearly fine. In Scarce First-State Dust Jacket 32. FITZGERALD, F. Scott. Taps at Reveille. New York, 1935. Octavo, original dark green cloth, dust jacket. $4200. First edition, second state (as often), of the last collection of Fitzgerald’s short stories published during his life, in rare first-state dust jacket. Fitzgerald chose for inclusion in this volume what he considered his best short stories from the previous decade—many of which dealt with a pre-war boy in his middle teens. Book nearly fine, rare dust jacket bright with only light wear to extremities and a bit of tape reinforcement to verso edges. Lovely. 15 gift catalogue 2014 33. FLEMING, Ian. Thunderball. London, 1961. Octavo, original dark brown paper boards, dust jacket. $2000. First edition of Fleming’s ninth Bond novel, featuring the first appearance of the super-spy’s memorable nemesis, the villainous mastermind behind SPECTRE, Ernst Blofeld, whose theft of two nuclear warheads threatens the world. Fine. First Edition, With Brown-Stamped Dancing Girl On Front Cover 34. FLEMING, Ian. Dr. No. London, 1958. Octavo, original brown-stamped paper boards, dust jacket. $4500. First edition of the sixth Bond thriller, introducing Dr. No, perhaps the most famous of the Bond villains and the first to appear on film, this copy with the desirable silhouette of a dancing girl brown-stamped on the front cover. With brown-stamped dancing girl silhouette on front board (“probably intended to be Honeychile Rider” [Biondi & Pickard, 44]); binding is listed by Gilbert as second state and is considered more desirable than the plain binding of the first state. Nearly fine. Literature “To Begin With He Was Ashamed Of Himself—A Rare State Of Mind” gift catalogue 2014 Literature 16 “A Naked Arm Smelling Of Chanel No. 5 Snaked Round His Neck…” 35. FLEMING, Ian. The Man with the Golden Gun. London, 1965. Octavo, original black paper boards, dust jacket. $1500. First edition of Fleming’s final Bond novel, published the year after Fleming’s death, in which 007 is sent to Fleming’s beloved Jamaica to neutralize the assassin known as “the man with the golden gun.” Near-fine. “The Most Highly Esteemed American Poet Of The 20th Century” 36. FROST, Robert. The Complete Poems. New York, 1950. Two volumes. Tall octavo, original dark blue cloth, custom slipcase. $3600. Signed limited edition, one of 1500 copies signed by Frost, praised by T.S. Eliot, additionally signed by famed typographer Bruce Rogers and New England illustrator Thomas W. Nason. “Both Nason and Frost connected with and appealed to a broad spectrum of the American public through their imagery of rural life in New England” (Florence Griswold Museum). Without scarce original glassine wrappers and original slipcase. About-fine. “Thanks For The Glimpse Of This Old Book” 37. FROST, Robert. North of Boston. New York, 1919. Octavo, original half black cloth. $2200. First illustrated edition, one of only 500 copies printed, signed by Frost below the frontispiece portrait: “Robert Frost at Amherst,” and additionally inscribed: “To Dr. Dwight B. McNair Scott from Robert Frost. Thanks for the glimpse of this old book.” First published in 1914. This book is inscribed to Dr. Dwight B. McNair Scott, actually Dr. Mary Dwight Baker McNair Scott, the first woman on the faculty of Harvard Medical School. Very nearly fine. 38. FOWLES, John. The Magus. Boston, 1965. Tall octavo, original green cloth, dust jacket. $700. First edition, preceding the London first, of Fowles’ second, highly acclaimed novel. “The story is a modernized, worldly-wise version of The Tempest… bathed in an atmosphere of mystery, eroticism and paranoia” (Parker, 426-27). Book very nearly fine, dust jacket near-fine.. 39. GARCIA MARQUEZ, Gabriel. One Hundred Years of Solitude. New York, 1970. Octavo, original green cloth, dust jacket. $5000. First edition in English of “one of the preeminent literary achievements of the century,” in scarce first-issue dust jacket. “One of the best-known and highly esteemed works of Latin American magic realism, One Hundred Years of Solitude… allegorizes cosmic questions and literary concerns while remaining an absorbing story” (Barron, Fantasy and Horror 7-130). Originally published in 1967 in Spanish. Fine. Inscribed By John Gardner 40. GARDNER, John. Grendel. New York, 1971. Octavo, original purple cloth, dust jacket. $3500. First edition of Gardner’s third novel, his “violent, inspiring, awesome, terrifying” reimagining of “Beowulf” from the monster’s point of view, inscribed by the author: “To George & Kate, Best wishes, John Gardner.” “A complex and brilliantly styled parable of consciousness, the consciousness of death and the compensatory urge to create lasting monuments of the mind” (Vinson, 493). Bookseller’s review copy, with publisher’s letter and advertisement laid in. Fine. Literature “The Greatest Achievement In Spanish Literature Since Don Quixote” (Neruda) 17 gift catalogue 2014 “One Of The Most Engrossing Reading Experiences In Modern Fiction” gift catalogue 2014 Literature 18 “Fearful And Wonderful—Horribly Brilliant!”: Signed By Günter Grass 41. GRASS, Gunther. The Tin Drum. New York, 1962. Octavo, original red cloth, dust jacket. $3200. First American edition of the Nobel Laureate’s first novel and acclaimed masterpiece, signed by Grass. The “publication of The Tin Drum meant a second birth for the German novel of the 20th century… It seems to stage the very march of history” (Nobel Prize Presentation Speech). Preceded by the London edition of 1961; initially published in German in 1959. Book fine; light edge-wear, small chip to spine head of bright, extremely good dust jacket, affecting one letter of author’s name. “Man Is Not Made For Defeat” 42. HEMINGWAY, Ernest. The Old Man and The Sea. New York, 1952. Octavo, original blue cloth, dust jacket. $3500. First edition of Hemingway’s classic story of Santiago and his epic battle with the marlin and the sharks, winning him the Pulitzer Prize in 1952 and contributing to his award of the 1954 Nobel Prize for Literature, original dust jacket. Near-fine. “Paris Is A Moveable Feast” 43. HEMINGWAY, Ernest. A Moveable Feast. New York, 1964. Octavo, original half russet cloth, dust jacket. $500. First edition of Hemingway’s celebration of Paris, with eight pages of black-and-white photographic illustrations. With eight pages of black-and-white photographs. Near-fine. Signed By James Joyce The first separate publication of the centerpiece and most beautiful segment of Finnegans Wake, one of only 800 copies signed by Joyce, a splendid copy in original gilt-stamped cloth. Responding to critics who accused him of writing off the cuff, Joyce claimed to have spent 1200 hours composing this integral part of his Work in Progress, later published as Finnegans Wake. Near-fine. 45. JOYCE, James. Finnegans Wake. London, 1939. Large octavo, original red cloth, dust jacket. $5800. First trade edition of Joyce’s “inscription on the walls of eternity.” “Joyce’s last and most innovative prose work, written in a revolutionary narrative style that approximates the protean nocturnal dream world” (Fargnoli & Gillespie, 74). Published simultaneously with the signed limited first edition. Book fine, dust jacket near-fine. “One Of His Two Most Influential Works” 46. KEROUAC, Jack. The Dharma Bums. New York, 1958. Octavo, original black cloth, dust jacket. $1500. First edition of Kerouac’s celebrated follow-up to the classic of his generation, On the Road. Book fine, dust jacket near-fine. Literature “Passages Of Unearthly Beauty” gift catalogue 2014 44. JOYCE, James. Anna Livia Plurabelle. New York, 1928. 12mo, original brown cloth. $5200. 19 gift catalogue 2014 Literature 20 “A Great Literary Catharsis” 47. KESEY, Ken. Sometimes a Great Notion. New York, 1964. Octavo, original gray cloth, dust jacket. $1500. First edition, scarce first issue, of Kesey’s critically acclaimed second novel. Following the success of his first novel, One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (1962), Kesey, in this work about an Oregon logging family, “aimed higher than many of his contemporaries, and… [came] impressively close to his target” (Vinson, 754). Fine. “…They Only Come Out At Night!” 48. KING, Stephen. ’Salem’s Lot. Garden City, 1975. Octavo, original half black cloth, dust jacket, custom clamshell box. $5200. Rare first edition, in third-issue dust jacket, of King’s second novel, a haunting story of one New England village’s sinister secrets, inscribed by the author: “For Chaz—Best— and remember: they only come out at night! Stephen King, 2/26/86.” Very nearly fine. Inscribed By Stephen King 49. KING, Stephen. Christine. New York, 1983. Octavo, original half cloth, dust jacket. $1500. First trade edition, inscribed by King in the year of publication: “For Girt—With all best wishes, Stephen King. 4/22/83.” Preceded by a signed/limited edition. Book with just a bit of wear to boards, dust jacket fine. 21 Signed By Jerzy Kosinksi “And His Soul Could Not Leave Her, Wherever She Was” 51. LAWRENCE, D.H. Sons and Lovers. London, 1913. Octavo, original blue cloth, custom clamshell box. $3200. First edition, first state, of Lawrence’s first important novel. Written during the “great blossoming of his genius,” Sons and Lovers is regarded as Lawrence’s first clear success. About-fine. Inscribed By Harper Lee 52. LEE, Harper. To Kill a Mockingbird. New York, 1995. Octavo, original half black cloth, dust jacket. $1750. Thirty-fifth Anniversary edition, later printing, inscribed in blue ink: “Best wishes, Harper Lee.” To Kill a Mockingbird won the 1961 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction. Fine. Literature First edition, first issue, of the first book published under Kosinski’s name, boldly signed by him. “Generally regarded as Kosinski’s masterpiece. The novel’s episodic form, coupled with its lack of plot and the seemingly futile existence that it reflected, epitomized widespread sentiments in the mid-1960s… The novel marks Kosinski as an important American author of the late 20th century” (ANB). About-fine. gift catalogue 2014 50. KOSINSKI, Jerzy. The Painted Bird. Boston, Cambridge, 1965. Octavo, original brown cloth, dust jacket. $1800. gift catalogue 2014 Literature 22 “I Drew These Tides Of Men Into My Hands And Wrote My Will Across The Sky In Stars” 53. LAWRENCE, T.E. Seven Pillars of Wisdom, A Triumph. London, 1935. Large quarto, original gilt-stamped brown cloth, dust jacket. $1650. First trade edition of Lawrence’s account of his legendary part in the Arab rebellion against the Ottoman Empire during the First World War, scarce in fragile original dust jacket. Preceded only by the very rare private printing of 1926 and the 1935 limited edition. Without very scarce cardboard box. Scarce original dust jacket slightly chipped at spine ends, with closed tears to front and rear top edges and front fore-edge, front joint expertly reinforced, cloth clean. Extremely good. “In Our Family, There Was No Clear Line Between Religion And Fly Fishing” 54. MACLEAN, Norman. A River Runs Through It, and Other Stories. Chicago and London, 1976. Octavo, original blue cloth, dust jacket. $3200. First edition of the author’s first book, one of only 1577 copies printed. In addition to the title story, this collection includes “Logging and Pimping and ‘Your Pal, Jim” and “USFS 1919: The Ranger, the Cook, and A Hole in the Sky.” About-fine. “A Brilliant And Mythic Baseball Fantasy” 55. MALAMUD, Bernard. The Natural. New York, 1952. Octavo, original gray paper boards, dust jacket. $6000. Scarce first edition of Malamud’s first novel, in original dust jacket. The Natural simultaneously “parodies both the pretensions of those who see baseball as a metaphor for heroism and the idea of the existence of the ‘great American novel’” (Stringer, 427). Near-fine. “A Colossally Gifted Writer” First trade edition of McCarthy’s “harrowing, propulsive drama” (New York Times), the basis for the Coen brothers’ Oscar-winning film, signed on a tipped-in leaf by McCarthy. Preceded by two signed limited editions: a leather-bound edition of 75 copies and a half-leather edition of 325 copies. Fine. 57. MCCARTHY, Cormac. The Road. New York, 2006. Octavo, original half black paper, dust jacket. $500. First edition of McCarthy’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel of a post-apocalyptic world, a work of “stunning, savage beauty,” adapted to the screen in 2009 with stars Viggo Mortensen and Charlize Theron. Fine. Signed By Frank McCourt 58. MCCOURT, Frank. Angela’s Ashes. New York, 1996. Octavo, original half burgundy cloth, dust jacket. $950. First edition of McCourt’s Pulitzer Prize-winning first book, boldly signed. “In the annals of memoir, this name will be writ large” (Mary Karr). Fine. Literature “Pure Poetic Brimstone” gift catalogue 2014 56. MCCARTHY, Cormac. No Country for Old Men. New York, 2005. Octavo, original black paper boards, dust jacket. $1600. 23 gift catalogue 2014 Literature 24 Original Galley Proofs For Terms Of Endearment— Editor Sophie Sorkin’s Annotated Set 59. MCMURTRY, Larry. Terms of Endearment. New York, 1975. Full set of galley proofs.$4200. Galley proofs of McMurtry’s novel, designated “For Sophie Sorkin” in pencil on the verso of the last leaf, with 67 of her minor changes. These are the original galley proofs edited by Sophie Sorkin, who began her publishing career at Simon and Schuster in 1958 and retired as Vice President in charge of manuscript editing, at the age of 83. Fine. Signed By Larry McMurtry 60. MCMURTRY, Larry. The Last Picture Show. New York, 1966. Octavo, original tan cloth, dust jacket. $2500. First edition of McMurtry’s popular third novel, boldly signed by him. In The Last Picture Show, “one of Larry McMurtry’s most powerful, memorable novels,” he introduced characters who would return in his later novels Texasville and Duane’s Depressed (Boston Globe). Fine. “Here’s A Vast Bunch Of Cowboy” 61. MCMURTRY, Larry. Lonesome Dove. New York, 1985. Octavo, original half black cloth, dust jacket. $750. First edition, first printing, of this sweeping, Pulitzer-Prize winning novel of the West. Winner of the 1986 Pulitzer Prize. Fine. 62. MILLER, Arthur. Death of a Salesman. New York, 1949. Octavo, original orange cloth, dust jacket. $8500. First edition of Miller’s Pulitzer Prize-winning classic, boldly signed by Miller, in scarce original dust jacket. “Miller came into his own with Death of a Salesman, thought by some critics to be the most significant of modern tragedies; the drama won a Pulitzer Prize and a Critics’ Circle Award” (American Literature, 286). Fine. 63. NATHAN, Robert. The Bishop’s Wife. Indianapolis, 1928. Octavo, original yellow cloth, dust jacket. $2500. First edition of Nathan’s whimsical tale, basis for the 1947 Oscar-winning film of the same name starring Cary Grant and Loretta Young, scarce in original dust jacket. Robert Nathan’s The Bishop’s Wife was immediately praised on publication in 1928 as “idyllic”—the work of a writer much loved for “tender, subtle” works always infused with a gentle whimsy and light irony. Book fine, dust jacket near-fine. Signed By Tim O’Brien 64. O’BRIEN, Tim. If I Die In a Combat Zone Box Me Up and Ship Me Home. New York, 1973. Octavo, half olive green cloth, dust jacket, custom clamshell box. $4500. First edition of O’Brien’s first book, a profoundly moving record of his combat experiences in Vietnam, signed by him. “Brilliantly and quietly evokes the footsoldier’s daily life in the paddies and foxholes…a beautiful, painful book” (New York Times). Fine. Literature “He Did Not Want His Wife To Adore A Stranger” 25 gift catalogue 2014 “A Salesman Is Got To Dream, Boy. It Comes With The Territory.” “This Novel Is Like No Other” Literature 65. O’CONNOR, Flannery. Wise Blood. New York, 1952. Octavo, original yellow cloth, dust jacket. $5500. gift catalogue 2014 26 Scarce first edition (one of only 3000 copies) of Flannery O’Connor’s powerful first novel, in scarce original dust jacket. “A comic masterpiece, Wise Blood focused on Hazel Motes, the would-be founder of a ‘church without Christ, where the blind stay blind, the lame stay lame and them that’s dead stays that way’” (Davis, 1955). Near-fine. “One Of The Great Plays Of The 20th Century” 66. O’NEILL, Eugene. A Moon for the Misbegotten. New York, 1952. Octavo, original half brown cloth, dust jacket. $3000. First edition of the last of O’Neill’s plays to be published during his lifetime, critically hailed as “possibly O’Neill’s best” (Walter Kerr). “Clive Barnes hailed Moon as ‘one of the great plays of the 20th century.’” (Voglino, Perverse Mind, 112). Near-fine. Signed By Robert Pirsig 67. PIRSIG, Robert M. Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance. New York, 1974. Octavo, original half black cloth, dust jacket. $1500. First edition of Pirsig’s bestselling travelogue/ philosophical treatise, boldly signed by Pirsig. An “enormously influential… journey of self-discovery permeated by philosophical discussion, and startlingly original and disturbing imagery” (Stringer, 532). Fine. “A Very Interesting Show—Ayn Rand” “Who Is John Galt?” 69. RAND, Ayn. Atlas Shrugged. New York, 1957. Thick octavo, original cloth, dust jacket. $4500. First edition of one of the most popular and influential novels of the last 50 years. In a 1991 Library of Congress survey, Americans named it second only to the Bible as the book that had most influenced their lives. Book fine, dust jacket near-fine. “Deliciously Funny” 70. ROTH, Philip. Portnoy’s Complaint. New York, 1969. Octavo, original beige cloth, dust jacket, slipcase. $1500. Signed limited first edition, one of only 600 copies, of Roth’s “wild and uproarious” novel, signed by him. Fine. Literature First edition, first printing, inscribed by Rand only two months after publication to WNEW television producer Walter Reed: “To Wally Reed—with sincere appreciation of a very interesting show—Ayn Rand 5/6/61.” “Rand’s 1961 book For The New Intellectual outlines her philosophical system of Objectivism by means of excerpts from We The Living, Anthem, The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged… She then opens the book with an essay on the cultural bankruptcy that has undermined the capitalistic system of the United States” (Bostaph, Journal of Ayn Rand Studies 11:1,20). Interior fresh with front inner paper hinge expertly reinforced, dust jacket fine. gift catalogue 2014 68. RAND, Ayn. For the New Intellectual. New York, 1961. Octavo, original black cloth, dust jacket. $4500. 27 gift catalogue 2014 Literature 28 Inscribed By Philip Roth In The Year Of Publication 71. ROTH, Philip. The Human Stain. Boston and New York, 2000. Octavo, original half black cloth, dust jacket. $2800. First edition of Roth’s award-winning novel, boldly inscribed by him: “For D—- M—- — Philip Roth, July 2000.” In this novel, which won the 2001 Pen/Faulkner Award for Fiction, Roth has created “an astonishing… often very beautiful book” (New York Times). Fine. “The Seminal Modern Vampire Novel” 72. RICE, Anne. Interview with the Vampire. New York, 1976. Octavo, original half black cloth, dust jacket. $3000. First edition of the first novel in Anne Rice’s popular Vampire Chronicles, signed in the year of publication. Rice’s “Vampire Chronicles are landmarks of modern horror fiction almost singlehandedly responsible for the phenomenal popularity of the vampire story at the end of the 20th century” (Barron, Fantasy and Horror 6-303). Near-fine. “There Wasn’t Much Fish, Just A Few Stray Bits Of Bare Backbone” 73. SOLZHENITSYN, Alexander. One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich. London, 1963. Octavo, original red cloth, dust jacket. $500. First English edition of the Nobel Prize-winner’s first published work. The novel was based on Solzhenitsyn’s eight-year incarceration in a Kazakhstan labor camp. This, the first English translation, was faithful to the Russian original and necessarily included the “deliberately muted themes” resulting from Solzhenitsyn’s selfcensorship. Preceded by the American edition, published in the same year. About-fine. “Pure Delight” First edition of Steinbeck’s beloved cross-country narrative, handsomely bound in full crushed morocco by Asprey. “What other writer of his time had been able to touch America’s soul in both the 30s and the 60s?” (Benson, 913). Near-fine. 75. STEINBECK, John. East of Eden. New York, 1952. Octavo, original green cloth, custom half morocco clamshell box. $5800. Signed limited first edition of Steinbeck’s epic and moving story of a modern Cain and Abel, one of 1500 copies signed by the author. Without original cardboard slipcase or original acetate dust jacket. Fine. “I Have Poured Every Ounce Of Energy Into It, And What Aging Passion I Have Left” 76. STEINBECK, John. The Winter of Our Discontent. New York, 1961. Octavo, original navy cloth, dust jacket, printed acetate dust jacket. $1500. Limited first edition of Steinbeck’s last novel, one of 500 copies specially printed and bound for friends of the author and publisher. “Of all the books of that moment, [Winter] seemed to put its finger on the malaise of the American soul better than any other” (Benson, 899). The result, Steinbeck’s last novel “prompted the Nobel Prize Committee to award Steinbeck that prestigious honor” (Salinas Public Library, 48). With both original blue pictorial dust jacket and scarce original clear acetate dust jacket bearing the printed words “Limited Edition.” Fine. Literature “Timshel!”: East Of Eden, Signed Limited First Edition gift catalogue 2014 74. STEINBECK, John. Travels with Charley. New York, 1962. Octavo, modern full green morocco gilt; original endpapers, dust jacket bound in. $1200. 29 gift catalogue 2014 Literature 30 One Of Only 300 Copies Signed By Eikoh Hosoe 77. TANIZAKI, Junichiro. A Portrait of Shunkin. New York, 2000. Large quarto, original mauve cloth, paper label, cloth clamshell box. $3000. Splendid illustrated edition of one of Tanizaki’s best stories, one of only 300 copies signed by photographer Eikoh Hosoe and calligrapher Shunkei Yahagi. Originally published as Shunkinsho in 1933. Fine. “Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night” 78. THOMAS, Dylan. In Country Sleep. New York, 1952. Slim octavo, original blue-green boards, dust jacket. $6200. First trade edition, published only one year before Thomas’ death, signed and dated 1953 by Thomas, in scarce dust jacket. Dylan Thomas’ last collection of new poetry includes “Poem on His Birthday,” the famed villanelle “Do Not Go Gentle into that Good Night,” “Lament” and “In Country Sleep.” Published the same year as the signed limited first edition of only 100 copies. Fine. Inscribed By Dylan Thomas 79. THOMAS, Dylan. The Map of Love. Verse and Prose. London, 1939. Octavo, original purple cloth, dust jacket. $4500. First edition in book form, warmly inscribed by Thomas: “Bunny, forever, from Dylan. May 1943.” This copy is inscribed to V.R. “Bunny” Lang, the founder of the enormously influential Poets’ Theatre at Harvard and the unofficial hostess for Harvard’s literary and cultural events throughout the 1940s and ‘50s. Book fine, dust jacket near-fine. 31 80. TOLKIEN, J.R.R. Farmer Giles of Ham. London, 1949. Small octavo, original boards, dust jacket. $2250. First edition of Tolkien’s delightful tale of an unlikely dragon slayer, wonderfully illustrated by Pauline Baynes. Book about-fine, dust jacket with a bit of edge-wear, faint spotting to rear panel only, brighter than often found. 81. UPDIKE, John. Rabbit, Run. New York, 1960. Octavo, original half green cloth, dust jacket. $1500. First edition of Updike’s second novel, the first book in his Rabbit tetralogy. “Updike’s choice of Rabbit Angstrom, in Rabbit, Run, was inspired, one of those happy, instinctive accidents that so often shape a literary career” (Books of the Century, 450). Near-fine. Signed By Virginia Woolf 82. WOOLF, Virginia. Orlando: A Biography. New York, 1928. Octavo, original gilt-stamped black cloth. $3500. Signed limited first edition of Woolf’s fantastical and often whimsical novel, one of 861 copies signed by Woolf in her trademark purple ink. With eight plates showing Orlando in various incarnations. Only 800 copies of this edition were originally offered for sale. Without extremely scarce glassine dust jacket, rarely found. Near-fine. Literature “…Lighter And Quicker And Quieter, He Runs” gift catalogue 2014 “A Kind Of Anti-Beowulf” 32 gift catalogue 2014 Literature “I Have Always Depended On The Kindness Of Strangers” 83. (HIRSCHFELD) WILLIAMS, Tennessee. A Streetcar Named Desire. New York, 1982. Folio (8 by 12-1/2 inches), original half burgundy analine leather, hand-screened cloth boards. $1100. Limited Editions Club edition of Williams’ first Pulitzer Prize-winning drama, one of 2000 copies signed by artist and illustrator Al Hirschfeld, with original lithograph frontispiece after Hirschfeld printed on Rives paper. Streetcar brought Williams his second New York Drama Critics’ Circle Award and a Pulitzer Prize. Without original acetate and slipcase. Fine. “Miss Pettigrew Is A Winner” 84. WATSON, Winifred. Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day. New York, 1939. Octavo, original gray cloth, dust jacket. $3000. First American edition of Watson’s critically praised third novel, rediscovered and adapted to the screen in the 2008 film starring Francis McDormand and Amy Adams, in scarce dust jacket. Preceded by the virtually unobtainable 1938 English edition. Near-fine. Yeats’ Later Poems, One Of Only 250 Signed Copies 85. YEATS, William Butler. Later Poems. New York, 1924. Octavo, original half blue cloth, custom clamshell box. $4000. First American edition, one of only 250 copies signed by Yeats. Contains all of Yeats’ non-dramatic poems written between 1899 and 1921. First published in London in 1922. Near-fine. gift catalogue 2014 CHILDREN’S LITERATURE 33 Children’s Literature charles dickens / arthur rackham A Christmas Carol, Illustrated And Signed By Arthur Rackham 86. DICKENS, Charles. A Christmas Carol. London and Philadelphia, 1915. Large quarto, original full vellum gilt. $8000. Signed limited edition, one of only 525 copies, of the “Bible of Christmas,” with 12 beautiful mounted color plates and 20 in-text line cuts by Rackham and signed by him. “The Christmas gift-book proved an excellent market for Rackham. His sensitive and agile line earned him the appreciation of connoisseurs, while his care for the spirit of each text commended him alike to children and adults” (DNB). A Christmas Carol marks the first time Rackham illustrated Dickens’ work. A beautiful copy. 34 gift catalogue 2014 Children’s Literature Inscribed By Armstrong 87. ARMSTRONG, William H. Sounder. New York, 1969. Octavo, original pictorial boards, dust jacket. $900. Library edition, inscribed, “My very best to you, William H. Armstrong.” “Sounder may be a bleak book, but it speaks honestly about cruelty, suffering and enduring love” (Silvey, 31); it won the Newbery Medal in 1970. Book fine, dust jacket near-fine. Original Signed Color Drawing By Ludwig Bemelmans Of Pepito 88. BEMELMANS, Ludwig. Original drawing signed. No place, circa 1956. Pen, ink and color wash drawing measuring 9 by 11 inches, matted and framed. $8500. Wonderful original pen, ink and color wash portrait of Pepito, from Bemelmans’ classic children’s book Madeline and the Bad Hat. Pepito, the Spanish Ambassador’s cherubic son, didn’t fool the irrepressible Madeline one bit when he moved next door to Miss Clavel’s old, vinecovered house in Paris: “Madeline said, ‘It is evident that / This little boy is a Bad Hat!’” Following a muchneeded reformation, Pepito became Madeline’s friend, and would return in later Madeline titles. Edges lightly embrowned; lines bold, colors bright. A delightful original piece. 35 gift catalogue 2014 89. BOND, Michael. A Bear Called Paddington. London, 1958. Octavo, original rose cloth, dust jacket. $8200. Scarce first edition, inscribed: “To David, with all good wishes, Michael Bond, 7th December 2010.” “Paddington’s appeal came not only from the hilarious situations and mishaps in which he found himself… but also from Peggy Fortnum’s penand-ink sketches, which capture Paddington’s bewitching charm and combination ‘little boy/small bear’ character” (Silvey, 70-71). Near-fine. “The Crayon Is As Much A Character As Harold” 90. JOHNSON, Crockett. Harold’s Fairy Tale. New York, 1956. 12mo, original half black cloth, dust jacket. $2500. First edition of the second book in Johnson’s popular Harold series. “Few picture-book author-illustrators have captured [the world of very young children] as superbly as Johnson” (Silvey, 355). About-fine. Children’s Literature “A Very Rare Sort Of Bear” gift catalogue 2014 Children’s Literature 36 Fine Illustrated Edition Of Smoky, In Scarce Original Gift Box 91. JAMES, Will. Smoky the Cow Horse. New York, 1929. Small quarto, original giltstamped black cloth, gift box. $1200. Later illustrated edition of James’ most famous book, with color illustrated title page and 14 full-page plates of horses and riders by James (six in color). “A love of horses and the West is evident in every volume written and illustrated by this genuine [sic] American cowboy” (Silvey, 349). First published in 1926. A fine copy in scarce original box. Rare First Edition Of MacDonald’s Charming Fantasy 92. MACDONALD, George. At the Back of the North Wind. London, 1871. 12mo, original pebbled gilt-stamped pictorial magenta cloth recased, custom clamshell box. $9500. Rare first edition of MacDonald’s classic story, his first full-length work for children, with 76 in-text wood engravings by the Dalziel brothers after illustrations by Arthur Hughes. Originally published as a serial in the juvenile magazine Good Words for the Young, MacDonald’s tale is “a remarkable piece of work and a milestone in children’s fiction in that it combines the qualities of the fairy story at its best with the expression of social and moral concerns” (Carpenter & Prichard, 34). A lovely copy. Rare. “The Nest Is So Snug, We Shall Be Sound Asleep All Winter” First edition of Potter’s gift to her devoted American readers, with color frontispiece and 26 color plates. “It is believed that The Tale of Timmy Tiptoes was written primarily for American children because they would be familiar with both chipmunks and bears. They would also be familiar with grey squirrels like Timmy Tiptoes and his wife Goody” (Linder, 208). Very nearly fine. 94. POTTER, Beatrix. The Tale of Pigling Bland. London and New York, 1913. 16mo, original maroon boards, mounted cover illustration. $1700. First edition of Potter’s story of two piglets’ escape into a new life, illustrated with frontispiece, 14 color plates and 37 in-text vignettes. Potter’s 19th book, Pigling Bland concerns two real pigs Potter called Alexander and Pigling Bland; Potter herself appears in her drawing on page 22, along with Alexander. Near-fine. “It Is Said That The Effect Of Eating Too Much Lettuce Is ‘Soporific’” 95. POTTER, Beatrix. The Tale of the Flopsy Bunnies. London and New York, 1909. 16mo, original brown paper boards, mounted cover illustration. $2300. First edition of the further adventures of Peter Rabbit and Benjamin Bunny, with color frontispiece and 26 color plates. This book represents the final stage “in the defeat of Mr. McGregor, who by the end… has been made into a proper fool, just as giants should be” (Carpenter). Very nearly fine. Children’s Literature “Then Over The Hills And Far Away She Danced With Pigling Bland” gift catalogue 2014 93. POTTER, Beatrix. The Tale of Timmy Tiptoes. London and New York, 1911. 16mo, original brown boards, mounted cover illustration. $2000. 37 gift catalogue 2014 Children’s Literature 38 Signed By Author And Illustrator Robert Lawson 96. LAWSON, Robert. Rabbit Hill. New York, 1944. Octavo, original buff patterned cloth, dust jacket. $1250. First edition of Lawson’s enchanting tale of the animals who live on Rabbit Hill and their new human neighbors, signed by Lawson. Winner of the 1945 Newbery Medal. Near-fine. Wonderfully Illustrated By Maurice Sendak 97. (SENDAK, Maurice) MINARIK, Else Holmelund. Little Bear. WITH: Father Bear Comes Home. WITH: Little Bear’s Friend. WITH: Little Bear’s Visit. WITH: A Kiss for Little Bear. New York, 1957-68. Five volumes. Octavo, original boards, dust jackets. $3600. Scarce first editions of Minarik’s beloved “Little Bear” series of readers, each book with charming illustrations by Maurice Sendak, in original dust jackets. Books clean and fine. First two dust jackets with light toning to spines and rubbing to folds (Little Bear with small chip to spine foot); tape repairs to versos. A beautiful set. 98. SENDAK, Maurice. Original drawing signed. No place, no date. Large felt pen drawing measuring 18 by 24 inches, matted and framed. $9000. Inscribed By Sendak With An Original Illustration 99. SENDAK, Maurice. Where the Wild Things Are. New York, circa 1968. Oblong quarto, original half gray cloth, pictorial boards, dust jacket. $3500. Early edition of Sendak’s cherished classic, inscribed: “Happy Birthday For M— P— Maurice Sendak Jan. 76,” with an original drawing of Moishe the Wild Thing with a lit birthday candle on his head. First published in 1963. Book about-fine, dust jacket near-fine. Children’s Literature Wonderful, large original drawing of Sendak’s character Max from Where the Wild Things Are, dressed in his iconic wolf suit, holding a placard that reads “For Jessica!” and with a speech balloon reading, “BOO!,” signed by Sendak. “In Max, the tantrum-tossing wolf-child, Sendak portrayed what he regards as an ordinary but also ‘a very crucial point in a child’s life,’ a dark moment when only a leap of faith into fantasy can help him find release from his rage” (Silvey, 586). An excellent and desirable piece. 39 gift catalogue 2014 Very Large Original Drawing Signed By Maurice Sendak gift catalogue 2014 Children’s Literature 40 Signed By Charles M. Schulz 100. SCHULZ, Charles M. Original sketch of Charlie Brown signed. No place, no date. Illustration on white sheet of paper, measuring 10 by 8 inches; matted and framed. $4800. Original drawing of a smiling Charlie Brown, signed by Charles Schulz. Fine. Inscribed With A Large Sketch Of Snoopy By Charles M. Schulz 101. SCHULZ, Charles M. The Snoopy Festival. New York, 1974. Quarto, original yellow cloth, dust jacket. $4500. First edition of this collection of comic strips celebrating the funny papers’ favorite beagle, inscribed: “For Herb, Charles M. Schulz,” and with a large, wonderful drawing of Snoopy in Schulz’ hand. This collection of strips from 1968-74 feature the ebullient beagle at suppertime, playing baseball, writing his Great American Novel, waiting with Linus for the Great Pumpkin and sharing many other silly and special moments with the rest of the gang. Includes 90 pages of comics in color. Near-fine. 102. SEUSS, Dr. The Cat in the Hat. New York, 1957. Octavo, original pictorial paper boards, dust jacket. $9200. “I Am Eloise. I Am Six” 103. THOMPSON, Kay. Eloise. Drawings by Hilary Knight. New York, 1955. Slim quarto, original white pictorial cloth, dust jacket. $ 4700. First edition of the first and rarest Eloise book, with a postcard from the Plaza Hotel signed by Kay Thompson laid in. A fine, beautiful copy. Children’s Literature First edition of this rare and important children’s classic. “The Cat in the Hat was so successful that Random House, publisher of all the Dr. Seuss books since 1937, created a special division, Beginner Books, with the Cat in the Hat as the logo and Dr. Seuss as president of the division” (Dr. Seuss from Then to Now, 45). About-fine. 41 gift catalogue 2014 “…We Can Have Lots Of Good Fun That Is Funny!” gift catalogue 2014 Children’s Literature 42 Inscribed By Shel Silverstein With An Original Sketch 104. SILVERSTEIN, Shel. A Light in the Attic. New York, 1981. Quarto, original gray cloth, dust jacket. $2500. Early edition, inscribed: “For M—— with Love, Shel Silverstein,” with an original sketch of an arm reaching up inside a frame and holding a balloon. Silverstein’s second collection of children’s poetry. Very nearly fine. “Just About Perfect, And Just Magical In The Way It Is Done” (Eudora Welty) 105. WHITE, E.B. Charlotte’s Web. New York, 1952. Octavo, original beige cloth, dust jacket. $4000. First edition of one of the most delightful and beloved children’s books, a cornerstone of any collection of modern children’s literature. With numerous endearing illustrations by Garth Williams. Very nearly fine. “The Truth Of The Matter Was, The Baby Looked Very Much Like A Mouse” 106. WHITE, E.B. Stuart Little. New York and London, 1945. Octavo, original pictorial olive cloth, dust jacket. $1800. First edition of White’s “outstandingly funny and sometimes touching” (Carpenter & Prichard, 568) first book for children. For White, the story “‘symbolizes the continuing journey that everybody takes—in search of what is perfect and unattainable” (Silvey, 677). Book fine, dust jacket near-fine. 43 gift catalogue 2014 Children’s Literature e . b . white First Edition Of E.B. White’s Last Children’s Book, Inscribed By Him 107. WHITE, E.B. The Trumpet of the Swan. New York, 1970. Octavo, original blue cloth, dust jacket. $11,500. First edition of E.B. White’s third and final children’s book, with lovely illustrations by Edward Frascino, inscribed in the year of publication using his nickname: “Ann with love (and in sorrow) Andy White. N. Brooklin. Aug 1970.” This copy is inscribed by White as “Andy,” indicating a close friendship with the recipient. Andy was E.B. White’s nickname, which he acquired at Cornell. White graduated from Cornell in 1921. Cornell tradition holds that any male student with the surname White is given the nickname Andy after Cornell co-founder Andrew Dickson White. Book near-fine, dust jacket bright and fine. gift catalogue 2014 Children’s Literature 44 Inscribed By Laura Ingalls Wilder 108. WILDER, Laura Ingalls. These Happy Golden Years. New York and London, 1943. Octavo, original pictorial tan cloth. $3400. First edition, second printing of the last Little House book published in the author’s lifetime, inscribed, “Yours sincerely, Laura Ingalls Wilder.” The penultimate work in the series, which would conclude with The First Four Years (1971). Containing color frontispiece and 14 black-and-white illustrations, ten full-page, by Helen Sewell and Mildred Boyle. Without original dust jacket. Interior with occasional light foxing. Front inner paper hinge with expert reinforcement. Original cloth lightly rubbed and soiled. Extremely good. “Children’s Literature Is Indebted To Her” 109. WILDER, Laura Ingalls. Little Town on the Prairie. New York, 1941. Octavo, original pictorial tan cloth, pictorial endpapers, dust jacket. $2800. First edition of one of the last Little House books, in scarce original dust jacket. The fourth of the eventual five Wilder titles recognized as a Newbery Honor Book. With color frontispiece, six full-page and eight in-text illustrations, along with illustrated half title, title page, front board and dust jacket, by Helen Sewell and Mildred Boyle. Very nearly fine. ARTS & ILLUSTRATED ma xfield parrish / louise saunders “One Of The Greatest Of American Illustrated Books” 110. (PARRISH, Maxfield). SAUNDERS, Louise. The Knave of Hearts. New York, 1925. Folio, original black cloth, mounted cover illustration, glassine. $5500. First edition of “one of the greatest of American illustrated books” (Porter, 84), the last and most lavish book illustrated by Maxfield Parrish, with mounted cover design, pictorial endpapers, 14 full-page color plates and nine in-text color illustrations. Parrish agreed to illustrate his friend Saunders’ play “on account of the bully opportunity it gives for a very good time making the pictures. Imagination could run riot, bound down by no period, just good fun and all sorts of things” (Yount, 86-88). Without very scarce box. Book nearly fine, some chipping to scarce glassine. A beautiful copy. gift catalogue 2014 arts & illustrated 46 “An Undisputed Master” 111. ADAMS, Ansel. Images 1923-1974. Boston, 1981. Oblong folio (14 by 17-1/2 inches), original half black cloth, jacket. WITH: Laid-in photographic print (13 by 16 inches) initialed on plate affixed below image, loose as issued. $1750. First trade edition, second printing, accompanied by splendid exhibition-size photographic print approved and initialed by Adams on affixed label below image, beautifully displaying his “Winter Sunrise, Sierra Nevada, from Lone Pine, California, 1944”—one of “the greatest landscapes of all time”—a fine folio production with 115 extended-range photolithographs. “Ansel Adams made monumental contributions as a photographer… an undisputed master” (Warren, Encyclopedia of 20th Century Photography, 9). Without scarce slipcase. Fine. Inscribed And Signed By Ansel Adams In The Year Of Publication 112. ADAMS, Ansel. Yosemite and the Range of Light. Boston, 1979. Oblong folio, original red and blue cloth, dust jacket, shipping carton. $2500. First trade edition, first printing of Adams’ stellar photobook, containing 116 striking blackand-white photogravures, most full-page, inscribed: “For Roger Larson, M.D. Ansel Adams, Carmel, 11-23-79.” A pristine inscribed copy in the original shipping box. 113. ADAMS, Ansel and NEWHALL, Nancy. The Eloquent Light. San Francisco, 1963. Folio, original light green cloth, dust jacket. $1200. Inscribed By Charles Addams With An Original Drawing Signed And Dated By Him 114. ADDAMS, Charles. Favorite Haunts. New York, 1976. Tall quarto, original brown paper boards, dust jacket. $3800. First edition of this wonderful collection of Addams’ cartoons, inscribed by him, “For Pat and Charles with all best” above his large original drawing, signed by him and dated 1978, showing Wednesday Addams lying on her side with a thought bubble leading to the printed Simon and Schuster logo—as if the logo’s figure is the man of her dreams. With 94 full-page cartoons (including color endpapers). Book fine, dust jacket near-fine. arts & illustrated First edition, inscribed: “For Roger Larson, At M— P— Yosemite, 4-4-73, Ansel Adams,” featuring 86 impressive photogravures (many double-page), in scarce original dust jacket. This copy accompanied by the 1963 exhibition booklet for the inaugural exhibition of “Ansel Adams Photographs 19231963” at San Francisco’s M.H. de Young Memorial Museum, containing eight photogravure plates (seven fullpage, one double-page). About-fine. 47 gift catalogue 2014 Inscribed By Ansel Adams At Yosemite gift catalogue 2014 arts & illustrated 48 “The Cult Of Perversity And Irony” 115. (BEARDSLEY, Aubrey. The Yellow Book: An Illustrated Quarterly. London and Boston, 1894-97. Thirteen volumes. Octavo, original black-stamped pictorial yellow cloth. $4200. Early printings of all 13 volumes of Beardsley’s celebrated art-nouveau quarterly, profusely illustrated with 220 plates after designs by Beardsley, Sickert, Crane, Sargent, Beerbohm, Leighton and many others, with literary contributions by such distinguished men of letters as Yeats, Wells, James, France, and Grahame. “The Yellow Book is arguably the best-known cultural artifact of the 1890s in Britain. Every book about the period reproduces at least one Beardsley title-page, drawing, or cover; every exhibition on Art Nouveau or turn-of-the-century book illustration includes a representative volume” (Lasner, 5). Near-fine. “His Strongest Illustrations” 116. (BEARDSLEY, Aubrey) MALORY, Thomas. The Birth, Life and Acts of King Arthur, Of His Noble Knights of the Round Table. London, 1927. Large quarto, original black cloth gilt. $3000. Limited third and best edition, English issue, of Beardsley’s magnificently illustrated Morte D’Arthur, one of 1600 copies, with 20 superb fullpage illustrations and hundreds of ornamental chapter headings and decorative frames by Beardsley. These illustrations earned Beardsley “instant recognition and the artistic leadership of a decade often known as the ‘Beardsley period’… The Malory drawings are his strongest illustrations” (The Artist and the Book 16). Without scarce original dust jacket. Fine. 49 gift catalogue 2014 117. (TATTOO ART). Burmese manuscript tattoo design book. Shan region, Burma, late 19th century. Very tall 12mo (3-1/2 by 8-1/2 inches), original stiff paper wrappers painted in black and red, accordion-folded, ll. 33, custom clamshell box. $4500. Rare and unusual manuscript tattoo design book from the Shan region of Burma, scribed in red and black ink on native paper, featuring 200 finely executed designs of fantastical beasts, beauties, warriors, geometric patterns, and other images, with manuscript Burmese text, bound in leporello folds with stiff paper wrappers neatly hand-painted in black and red. Due to the Shan belief that tattoos imbued the wearer with spiritual strength and/or held magical significance, tattooing came to have great importance. Near-fine. Chagall’s The Ballet, With Original Lithograph 118. (CHAGALL, Marc) LASSAIGNE, Jacques. Marc Chagall: Drawings and Water Colors for The Ballet. New York, 1969. Folio, original tan cloth, dust jacket, slipcase. $800. First American edition of Chagall’s ballet decors and costume designs, containing 68 full-color reproductions, with an original color lithograph. Fine. arts & illustrated Manuscript Burmese Tattoo Design Book Featuring 200 Finely Executed Designs 50 gift catalogue 2014 arts & illustrated “Fraternal Greetings, Leonard” 119. COHEN, Leonard. Stranger Music: Selected Poems and Songs. Toronto, 1993. Octavo, original black paper boards, dust jacket. $1200. First trade edition, preferred Canadian issue, of Cohen’s long-awaited collection of his work, warmly inscribed by Cohen, “To Herschel, fraternal greetings, Leonard, Los Angeles 1994.” “A record of Cohen’s dispatches from the front, an invaluable record of a shining voice” (Ottawa Citizen), with 11 previously unpublished poem; several poems’ titles and texts were revised for this edition. Fine. Call us at 212-751-0011 for more gift recommendations, or visit our website at BaumanRareBooks.com. Inscribed By Leonard Cohen 120. COHEN, Leonard. The Energy of Slaves. London, 1972. Octavo, original black paper boards, dust jacket. $1200. First British edition of this collection of poems, inscribed: “To S—— B——, fraternal greetings, Leonard Cohen. Los Angeles 1994,” stamped by Cohen with his original inkstamp design displaying the “Order of the Unified Heart.” The first edition was published in Toronto the same year. About-fine. 121. TENNYSON, Alfred. Idylls of the King. London, 1868. Thick folio (12-1/2 by 16-1/2 inches), contemporary full navy morocco gilt. $5800. The Tale Of Igor’s Campaign, 1933, With Ten Magnificent Folio Palekh-Style Plates, Very Ornately Bound 122. GOLIKOV, Ivan (illustrator). Slove o polku Igoreve [The Tale of Igor’s Campaign]. Moscow, 1934. Folio (11-1/2 by 17 inches), original cloth overlaid with Palekh-style illustrations, cloth portfolio. $3800. First edition of this magnificently illustrated version of the medieval Tale of Igor’s Campaign, with 10 vibrant folio plates by Ivan Golikov done in the style of Palekh miniatures. A medieval Russian epic poem written in old East Slavonic, the manuscript for Igor’s Campaign was not discovered until 1795, and not published until 1800; Borodin used it as the basis of his opera Prince Igor. Palekh miniatures were a 20th-century Russian folk art form based on icon painting, usually seen on small lacquered boxes and cases. Fine. arts & illustrated First edition of Tennyson’s Arthurian classic with illustrations by Gustave Doré, with 37 large, lovely full-page steel engravings by him. The text contains the first four poems of the epic cycle: Enid, Elaine, Vivien and Guinevere— all the parts of the Idylls Tennyson had completed to date. Interior and plates clean and fine; beautiful binding with minor rubbing, gilt bright. 51 gift catalogue 2014 With 37 Folio Steel Engravings By Doré gift catalogue 2014 arts & illustrated 52 “A Dreamworld Transcribed By A Master Technician” 123. MIRÓ, Joan. Céramiques Monumentales de Miró et Artigas. Paris, 1963. Folio, original pictorial wrapper, chemise and slipcase. $7500. Signed limited edition of this special issue of Derrière le Miroir devoted to the ceramic designs of Miró and his teacher Llorens Artigas, one of only 150 copies signed by Miró in pencil, with six original color lithographs (a triple-plate, two double-page plates, and three single plates). This portfolio is a special issue of the art magazineDerrière le Miroir devoted to avant garde ceramics, published by French gallery owner Aimé Maeght and designed to be an art object in itself. Light soiling to original slipcase only. A splendid limited edition. Scarce. Signed By Hirschfeld 124. HIRSCHFELD, Al. Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. No place, 1992. Print measures 19 by 16 inches; matted and framed, entire piece measures 26 by 22-1/2 inches. $3500. Original Al Hirschfeld print featuring Paul Newman and Robert Redford as Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, one of only 95 prints numbered and signed by Hirschfeld in pencil. Fine. 125. (RACKHAM, Arthur) SHAKESPEARE, William. The Tempest. London and New York, 1926. Quarto, original half vellum, custom cloth slipcase. $4200. “Where We Used To Live And Have Such Happy Days” 126. PORTER, Cole. Typed letter signed. No place, August 30, 1958. Quarto, one page, letter measures 7-1/4 by 10-1/2 inches; matted and framed with a photographic portrait. $6500. Gracious 1958 signed Cole Porter letter, thanking his correspondent for photographs of the Palazzo Rezzonico, “where we used to live and have such happy days. The typed letter reads: “Dear Miss Stern: Thank you so much for sending, via Bob Montgomery, the photographs of the Palazzo Rezzonico, where we used to live and have such happy days. It was most thoughtful of you. Sincerely, [signed] Cole Porter.” Fine. arts & illustrated Deluxe signed limited edition, one of only 520 copies, with 21 full-page mounted color illustrations and 25 intext line cuts, signed by Rackham. This signed limited first edition contains an extra color plate (the frontispiece) not issued for the trade edition. Without scarce dust jacket. Very nearly fine. 53 gift catalogue 2014 Illustrated And Signed By Arthur Rackham gift catalogue 2014 arts & illustrated 54 “With Love And Kisses From I Stravinsky” 127. STRAVINSKY, Igor. CRAFT, Robert. Expositions and Developments. Garden City, New York, 1962. Octavo, original black cloth, dust jacket. $2500. First edition, warmly inscribed to neighbor and longtime friend Miranda Levy, “To my dear Miranda, with love and kisses from I Stravinsky, Nov /63.” In these conversations with conductor Robert Craft, Stravinsky discusses his childhood in St. Petersburg, recalls such musical luminaries as Tchaikovsky and Rimsky-Korsakov, reflects on the intersection of music and modern recording technology, and discusses his works. Miranda Levy was a founding member of the Santa Fe Opera and wife of pioneering television director Ralph Levy who lived in Los Angeles less than a block away from the Stravinskys. Very nearly fine. Inscribed And Twice Signed By Andy Warhol With His Drawing Of A Star 128. WARHOL, Andy. Andy Warhol’s Exposures. New York, 1979. Tall quarto, original black cloth, dust jacket. $3500. First trade edition, American issue, of Warhol’s candid and engaging photobook, featuring 360 full-page halftones, boldly inscribed, “To Becky — Love Andy Warhol, Merry Christmas” with Warhol’s sketch of a star, additionally signed by him on the front dust jacket panel. “I don’t think Studio 54 is like pagan Rome. I think it’s like junior high school.” Interior generally fresh with front inner paper hinge expertly reinforced; expert repairs to closed tears of price-clipped dust jacket. Very good. AMERICANA francis treveyl an miller / civil war “The Grandfather Of Civil War Histories” 129. (CIVIL WAR) MILLER, Francis Trevelyan, editor. The Photographic History of the Civil War. New York, 1911. Ten volumes. Quarto, publisher’s blue cloth, top edges gilt. $3000. First edition of Miller’s famous and important 10-volume photographic history of the Civil War, containing “thousands of scenes photographed 1861-65, with text by many special authorities.” “Zealous in their work, often regardless of danger, and at all times handicapped by the vexing difficulties of the photographic process of that day,” Brady and his assistants “carried their cameras to every scene that promised an interesting picture,” capturing “scenes of actual conflict, others of places devastated by gunfire, of troops on the march or in bivouac, and of individual officers and men” (ANB). Near-fine. americana 56 “No One Ever Questioned His Bravery On The Battlefield” 130. (CIVIL WAR) (BEAUREGARD, P.G.T.) ROMAN, Alfred. The Military Operations of General Beauregard. New York, 1884. Two volumes. Octavo, original three-quarter brown morocco gilt. $1650. gift catalogue 2014 First edition of this “valuable source on the first victor of the Confederacy” (Eicher 186), an especially fine copy in publisher’s three-quarter morocco gilt. “This work is highly laudable on its subject and highly critical of Beauregard’s enemies; the general himself penned a good part of the text” (Nevins II:86). Fine. “Admired By Historians And Students Alike” 131. (CIVIL WAR) CHURCHILL, Winston. The American Civil War. London, 1961. Octavo, modern three-quarter navy morocco gilt. $1200. First separate English edition of Churchill’s history of the American Civil War, with six maps and numerous photographs, handsomely bound. “Churchill had explored the battlefields of Virginia with none other than Douglas Southall Freeman, the great American Civil War historian; and he had toured Gettysburg with a local resident of some experience at war, Dwight Eisenhower. His fine if brief account of the War Between the States has been admired by historians and students alike” (Langworth, 327-28). Fine. 132. (CIVIL WAR) DAVIS, Jefferson. The Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government. New York, 1881. Two volumes. Thick octavo, original threequarter brown morocco. $2800. “A Genuinely Tragic Book, Brave And Bitter” 133. (CIVIL WAR) HOOD, John Bell. Advance and Retreat. New Orleans, 1880. Octavo, contemporary full brown morocco gilt. $2200. First edition of this dramatic Confederate memoir, with two portraits and four maps, one folding, in rare publisher’s deluxe full morocco binding. Focused on Hood’s Confederate service, from his early involvement at Second Manassas and Sharpsburg to his surrender at Natchez, Mississippi. “A genuinely tragic book, brave and bitter, wistful and manly, touched with humor in the early chapters, grim in its recountal of the circumstances which defeated his final plan of operations” (Freeman). Faint marginal dampstaining to preliminaries, joints and spine end expertly repaired, extremely good. americana First edition of Jefferson Davis’ seminal history of the Confederacy, one of the most important works on the Civil War written by one of the conflict’s primary figures, and one of the major arguments for the Constitutional basis of the war, with 18 maps (14 folding) and 19 plates, including stipple-engraved portraits of Davis, members of the presidential staff, General Lee and others, scarce in publisher’s original three-quarter morocco. “Probably the most scholarly recital of the ‘states rights’ arguments, since it was written by the leader of the movement after mature reflection” (Channing). About-fine. 57 gift catalogue 2014 “The Southern States Had Rightfully The Power To Withdraw” gift catalogue 2014 americana 58 “All Persons Held As Slaves… Shall Be, Then, Thenceforward, And Forever Free” 134. (CIVIL WAR) (LINCOLN, Abraham). Emancipation Proclamation. General Orders, No. 139. IN: [General Orders, 1862]. Washington, DC, 1862. Octavo, contemporary green pebbled morocco. $4500. September 24, 1862 official printing of Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation, General Orders, No. 139, printed nearly four months before the Proclamation was made public. Bound as issued with the General Orders for the entire year of 1862. “President Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation on January 1, 1863, as the nation approached its third year of bloody civil war… It added moral force to the Union cause and strengthened the Union both militarily and politically. As a milestone along the road to slavery’s final destruction, the Emancipation Proclamation has assumed a place among the great documents of human freedom” (National Archives). Foxing to flyleaves only; text clean and fine. Handsome contemporary binding gently rubbed. Extremely good. “A Different Story From The One You Learned In School” 135. (CIVIL WAR) SHAARA, Michael. The Killer Angels. New York, 1974. Octavo, original blue paper boards, dust jacket. $4000. First edition of Shaara’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, one of the most popular and acclaimed works of Civil War fiction. “A book that changed my life… I had never visited Gettysburg, knew almost nothing about that battle before I read the book, but here it all came alive” (Ken Burns). A scarce about-fine copy. “A Milestone Of Great Importance In Confederate Literature” 59 136. (CIVIL WAR) LONGSTREET, James. From Manassas to Appomattox. Philadelphia, 1896. Thick octavo, original pictorial red cloth.$1200. gift catalogue 2014 Call us at 212-751-0011 for more gift recommendations, or visit our website at BaumanRareBooks.com. “When The Battle Waged Hottest, Sheridan Was At His Best” 137. (CIVIL WAR) SHERIDAN, P.H. Personal Memoirs. New York, 1888. Two volumes. Octavo, original burgundy pebbled cloth rebacked at an early time in threequarter burgundy morocco. $1200. First edition of Sheridan’s military autobiography, with 27 maps (11 folding) and 17 plates, handsomely bound. “Often ranked with Grant and Sherman as the foremost Union commanders” (Mullins & Reed 82), Sheridan completed this work just days before his death in 1888. He recounts three decades of military service including his many decisive Civil War campaigns. Near-fine. americana First edition of Longstreet’s important Civil War history, with frontispiece portrait, 16 maps, and 30 illustrations of battle sites and portraits. “A milestone of great importance in Confederate literature. It tells the story of the war in the first person from one of the great generals of American history, allows him to make his case… Longstreet here provides ample documentation of his close relationships with Lee” (Eicher). Front inner paper hinge expertly repaired, rear inner paper hinge split, light soiling, extremely good. gift catalogue 2014 americana 60 “The Gun That Won The West” 138. (COLT, Samuel) BARNARD, Henry, ed. Armsmear: The Home, the Arm, and the Armory of Samuel Colt. New York, 1866. Tall quarto, original pebbled green cloth gilt. $2200. First edition of this handsome volume on the influence and inventive brilliance of Samuel Colt, whose Colt .45—the “Peacemaker”—is known as the gun that tamed the West, profusely illustrated with steel-engraved frontispiece portrait and over 80 steel-engraved maps and illustrations, in original gilt-embossed cloth. It was Colt who “introduced the concept of interchangeable parts to large-scale gun manufacturing.” “More than anyone, Colt created international markets for American machine tools and made the world aware of the remarkable accomplishments of the Yankee innovators who created the American system of manufactures” (ANB). Interior fine, slight edge-wear to bright cloth. 1819 Landmark Dartmouth College Case, Establishing Corporate Rights In America 139. FARRAR, Timothy. Report of the Case of the Trustees of Dartmouth College Against William H. Woodward. Portsmouth, N.H. 1819. Octavo, original paper-covered boards respined, original paper spine label, uncut. $4500. First edition of one of the most significant and influential of the early cases appearing before the Supreme Court. Before Chief Justice John Marshall’s Supreme Court, Dartmouth College was represented by one of its most famous alumni, the orator and politician Daniel Webster. Marshall’s decision in favor of Dartmouth established “an assurance for all investors in American corporate enterprises that the terms upon which they had committed their capital could not be unilaterally altered by a state. At a time when corporations were first being widely used, it thus encouraged the expansion of American business enterprise… The decision vested the Corporation with indestructible contract rights… even against its creator” (Schwartz). Scattered foxing to text. Scarce in original boards. 140. DU BOIS, W.E. Burghardt. The Souls of Black Folk: Essays and Sketches. Chicago, 1903. Octavo, original black cloth. $5500. “I Ought Not To Have Suspected You Of Treachery” 141. PAINE, Thomas. Letter to George Washington. Philadelphia, 1796 [i.e. 1797]. Slim octavo, late 19th-century half black morocco. $4800. First edition of Paine’s bitter public attack on George Washington, an extra-illustrated copy containing a steel-engraved frontispiece portrait of Franklin by Grainge and a view of Liberty Hall. Once a “staunch supporter of Washington” (Fruchtman, 350), Paine ultimately blamed the President for not quickly interceding on his behalf when he was imprisoned by the French as an enemy alien. When Paine did not receive any answer to his letters, he published this violent diatribe, first in America, and shortly afterward in England and elsewhere. Near-fine. americana First edition of W.E.B. Du Bois’ profoundly influential history of the African American struggle, “a seminal work on African-American history, culture and politics.” In the opening lines of Du Bois’s revolutionary work, he declares “with breathtaking prescience, ‘The problem of the 20th century is the problem of the color line’” (New York Times). Hailed as “his greatest work… a hauntingly complex portrait of the Afro-American people, Souls of Black Folk blended history, sociology, memoir, biography, and fiction so effectively that it became perhaps the most influential work on blacks in America since Uncle Tom’s Cabin” (ANB). Near-fine. 61 gift catalogue 2014 “The Most Influential Work On Blacks In America Since Uncle Tom’s Cabin” gift catalogue 2014 americana 62 Inscribed By Robert Kennedy 142. KENNEDY, Robert. To Seek a Newer World. Garden City, 1967. Octavo, original blue cloth, dust jacket. $3500. First edition, inscribed by Robert Kennedy, “With Best Wishes, Robert Kennedy.” This collection of essays grew out of Kennedy’s travels and experiences as Attorney General and as a Senator, and address such topics as the youth movements, race relations in America, nuclear arms and Vietnam. Book fine, dust jacket near-fine. “72 Hours Of Campaigning Left As I Write This Note. I Can Hardly Believe It’s Almost Over—Or Is It Just Beginning—Tuesday Will Tell” 143. (PRESIDENTS) BUSH, George. Four letters signed. Various places, 1976-96. Three autograph letters signed and one typed letter signed, together with three envelopes; letters range in size from 4 by 6-1/2 inches to 7 by 9 inches. $4000. Three autograph letters and one typed letter, each signed by George Bush, spanning 20 years of correspondence with Helen Copley, publisher of the San Diego Union and the Tribune, starting with Bush’s tenure as Director of the CIA, to his time campaigning for the presidency while serving as Vice-President, to his Presidency and after. All of these pieces were addressed to Helen Copley, the influential publisher of the San Diego newspapers the Union and the Tribune. The second autograph letter reads in full: “Michigan to N.J. Nov. 4, 1988. Dear Helen, I was so very pleased to receive the endorsement of the papers. Methinks I sense the hand of Helen Copley. If so I am very grateful. 72 hours of campaigning left as I write this note. I can hardly believe it’s almost over—or is it just beginning—Tuesday will tell. Most gratefully, George.” A fine collection. 144. (PRESIDENTS) (BUSH, George H.W.) STINNET, Robert. George Bush: His World War II Years. Washington, 1992. Large quarto, original navy cloth, dust jacket. $1100. Signed By President George H.W. Bush 145. (PRESIDENTS) BUSH, George H. W. The American Presidents. Garden City, 1989. Octavo, original full blue leatherette gilt, slipcase. $4000. Signed limited “American Bicentennial Presidential Edition,” one of 1000 copies signed by President Bush. The first and fortyfirst presidents’ speeches, highlighting the continuity of the republic from generation to generation, open this volume, which surveys the administrations of each Chief Executive in the American Constitution’s first two hundred years. This edition published and specially bound for the American Bicentennial Inaugural in 1989. Fine. americana Special limited edition published for the 1992 Republican National Convention, inscribed: “To Bill Fox, A fellow survivor of WWII with warm best wishes, George Bush.” Written by Robert Stinnett, a combat photographer who flew with Bush (a pilot) in his torpedo bomber, “The Barbara,” this work focuses on Bush’s World War II military service, during which he flew 58 combat missions, was shot down twice, and earned the Distinguished Flying Cross. Fine. 63 gift catalogue 2014 “To… A Fellow Survivor Of World War II With Warm Best Wishes, George Bush” gift catalogue 2014 americana 64 “Who’s Happier… The Givers Or The Takers?” 146. (PRESIDENTS) CLINTON, Bill. Giving: How Each of Us Can Change the World. New York, 2007. Octavo, original blue paper boards, dust jacket. $850. First edition of President Clinton’s celebration of and call for charity and activism, boldly signed by him. Bill Clinton’s passionate appeal for ordinary citizens to take action and change the world for the better. Fine. “I Was Born Under A Clear Sky After A Violent Summer Storm To A Widowed Mother” 147. (PRESIDENTS) CLINTON, Bill. My Life. New York, 2004. Octavo, original blue paper boards, dust jacket. $1500. First edition, first state, boldly signed by President Clinton. The autobiography of President Bill Clinton, illustrated with numerous black-and-white photographs. Fine. “The Hopes And Prayers Of LibertyLoving People Everywhere March With You” 148. (PRESIDENTS) EISENHOWER, Dwight D. Crusade in Europe. Garden City, 1948. Thick octavo, original tan linen. $7000. Signed limited first edition, one of 1426 copies signed by Eisenhower at the bottom of a facsimile of his D-Day message to Allied troops. Eisenhower’s memoir provides an important and unique perspective on the difficult command-level decisions that decided the outcome of World War II. Included are numerous battlefield and theater maps (a number in color), as well as photographic illustrations. Without scarce original slipcase. Light wear to acetate, book fine. 149. (PRESIDENTS) EISENHOWER, Dwight D. Mandate for Change 1953-1956. Garden City, 1963. Thick octavo, original blue cloth, dust jacket. $3000. “The First Substantial Life Of Jefferson” 150. (PRESIDENTS) (JEFFERSON, Thomas) TUCKER, George. The Life of Thomas Jefferson. Philadelphia, 1837. Two volumes. Octavo, modern threequarter brown morocco gilt. $2200. First edition of this extensively researched biography, with engraved frontispiece portrait of Jefferson. “This work reflected not only Tucker’s acquaintance with the former president and close association with James Madison and others in the Jefferson circle, but extensive research that included the use of Jefferson’s papers and conversations with members of his family… His exposition of the national problems that arose, and of the conflict over them, is a genuine contribution to history… the first substantial life of Jefferson” (ANB). Near-fine. americana First trade edition of the first volume of Eisenhower’s presidential memoirs, inscribed entirely in his hand in the year of publication, “For M— C— with the affectionate regard of her friends, Mamie and Ike Eisenhower, 1963.” The first of Eisenhower’s books on his presidency covers the critical years of his first term, in which he dealt with issues such as the end of the Korean War, the Cold War, trouble in the Suez and the Rosenberg case. About-fine. gift catalogue 2014 65 Inscribed By President Eisenhower, The First Of His Books On The Presidency “A Classic Civil War Autobiography” americana 151. (PRESIDENTS) GRANT, Ulysses S. Personal Memoirs of U.S. Grant. New York, 1885-86. Two volumes. Octavo, original deluxe full brown morocco gilt. $4500. gift catalogue 2014 66 First edition of “one of the most valuable writings by a military commander in history,” illustrated with numerous steel engravings, facsimiles and 43 maps, in handsome publisher’s deluxe full morocco binding. “No Union list of personal narratives could possibly begin without the story of the victorious general. A truly remarkable work” (New York Times). About-fine. “In The End The President Must Decide” 152. (PRESIDENTS) JOHNSON, Lyndon Baines. The Vantage Point. New York, 1971. Octavo, original red cloth, dust jacket. $1250. First edition of President Lyndon Johnson’s extensively illustrated memoirs, signed by him on a tipped-in leaf. Near-fine. Signed By Both President Woodrow Wilson And V.P. Thomas Marshall 153. (PRESIDENTS) WILSON, Woodrow. MARSHALL, Thomas R. Inaugural Addresses... Washington, 1913. Slim octavo, original ivory self-wrappers. $8500. Official first edition, Senate issue, of President Wilson’s electrifying first Inaugural Address, signed by him on the last page of his address, together with Vice President Marshall’s first Inaugural Address signed by him—especially scarce signed by both leaders. “Wilson oversaw and pushed through a truly staggering program of major legislation… one of the three great legislative presidents of the 20th century, perhaps all of American history” (Cooper). “The 1912 election that brought Wilson and Marshall to Washington proved to be the national high-water mark for progressivism.” Fine. 154. (PRESIDENTS) (KENNEDY, Robert) KENNEDY, John F. As We Remember Joe. Cambridge, MA, 1945. Octavo, original maroon cloth, custom clamshell box. $7200. Twice Inscribed By Truman 155. (PRESIDENTS) TRUMAN, Harry. Memoirs: Year of Decisions. WITH: Memoirs: Years of Trial and Hope. Garden City, 1955-56. Two volumes. Octavo, original black cloth, dust jackets. $2200. First editions of the memoirs of the 33rd U.S. President, inscribed in the first volume: “To Joseph Gaumont, Kindest regards from Harry Truman. 6/27/59,” and in the second volume: “Best wishes to Joseph Gaumont from Harry Truman. 6/27/59.” “An invaluable record” spanning the entirety of the former president’s career, filled with candid descriptions and assessments of world leaders. Light wear and soiling to cloth; toning to spines of dust jackets with tape repairs to versos, very good. americana First edition, second issue (of only 250 copies), of this tribute to the eldest of the Kennedy brothers, inscribed by Robert Kennedy to his successor as Attorney General, Nicholas Katzenbach: “For Nick, Bob Kennedy. Christmas 1965.” Privately printed for family and friends. John F. Kennedy edited this collection of 20 essays (and also wrote the first, “My Brother Joe”) memorializing his eldest brother, Joseph P. Kennedy, Jr., who won the Naval Cross and was killed in action in 1944. The recipient of this copy, Nicholas Katzenbach, was appointed Assistant Attorney General in the Office of Legal Counsel in 1961 by Robert Kennedy; he became famous when he personally confronted Alabama Governor George Wallace when he blocked the entrance to the University of Alabama in an attempt to prevent two black students from attending. Very nearly fine. 67 gift catalogue 2014 Inscribed By Bobby Kennedy To His Successor As Attorney General gift catalogue 2014 americana 68 Lincoln’s Complete Works, Edited By Nicolay And Hay 156. (PRESIDENTS) LINCOLN, Abraham. The Complete Works. Harrogate, Tennessee, 1926. Twelve volumes. Octavo, original full brown morocco gilt. $3800. Limited later “Sponsors’ Edition” of the definitive edition of Lincoln’s works, number 238 of an unstated limitation, illustrated with photogravures and facsimiles, including a frontispiece portrait in each volume. Nicolay, Lincoln’s private secretary, “enjoyed the full intimate friendship of the President… few men were as close to Lincoln as Nicolay or so fully enjoyed his confidence” (DAB). After serving as Lincoln’s assistant and confidant, Hay achieved literary fame as the co-author of the definitive biography of Lincoln, and for his skill in helping edit Lincoln’s Complete Works (first published beginning in 1894). Fine. “First In War, First In Peace, And First In The Hearts Of His Countrymen” 157. (PRESIDENTS) (WASHINGTON, George) LEE, Henry. Funeral Oration on the Death of General Washington. Boston, 1800. Octavo, later blue paper wrappers; pp. 15. $4000. Scarce 1800 edition, issued in Boston the same year as the very rare Philadelphia first edition, one of the very earliest printings of Henry Lee’s immortal oration on the death of George Washington, which contains for the first time in print the famous phrase, “first in war, first in peace, and first in the hearts of his countrymen.” Of the funeral orations delivered at Washington’s death, Henry Lee’s official oration, delivered before Congress, is the most famous and memorable. Near-fine.` Signed By Woodward And Bernstein Signed By President Nixon 159. (PRESIDENTS) NIXON, Richard. Seize the Moment. New York, 1992. Octavo, original half blue cloth, dust jacket. $700. First trade edition of Nixon’s critically praised assessment of American foreign policy, signed by him. Nixon makes “short work of ‘three myths’ about the future of American foreign policy: the myths of the end of history, of the irrelevance of military power and of the decline of the United States” (New York Times). Fine. “This Book Is A Cri De Coeur…” 160. NIXON, Richard. The Real War. New York, 1980. Octavo, original maroon cloth, slipcase. $800. Deluxe signed limited edition, one of an unstated number of copies signed on a special tipped-in leaf by President Nixon. “This is a struggle of titans,” Nixon writes of America’s engagement in the Cold War, “the like of which the world has never seen.” This limited edition from the second printing. Fine. americana First edition of the book version of Bernstein and Woodward’s Pulitzer Prize-winning series of articles for the Washington Post, signed by both celebrated journalists. Bernstein and Woodward’s investigation of the Watergate scandal in the Washington Post exposed the abuses of the Nixon White House and garnered the reporters a Pulitzer Prize. Very nearly fine. gift catalogue 2014 158. (PRESIDENTS) BERNSTEIN, Carl, and WOODWARD, Bob. All the President’s Men. New York, 1974. Octavo, original blue cloth, dust jacket. $2400. 69 Inscribed By President Reagan americana 161. (PRESIDENTS) REAGAN, Ronald. An American Life. New York, 1992. Octavo, original paper wrappers. $1800. gift catalogue 2014 70 First trade paperback edition of the 40th President’s autobiography, inscribed and dated, “To Mary—With Best Wishes, Ronald Reagan Dec. 18—’91.” President Reagan’s illustrated autobiography, originally published in 1990. Given the date of the inscription and the date of publication on the copyright page (“January 1992”), this copy may have been an advance copy. Near-fine. Inscribed By President Reagan 162. (PRESIDENTS) REAGAN, Ronald. Speaking My Mind. New York, 1989. Tall octavo, original half blue cloth, dust jacket. $3000. First trade edition of Reagan’s selected speeches, inscribed, “To L— O— With Best Wishes Ronald Reagan, Feb. 2—1990.” Selected and annotated by Reagan, this collection begins with one of his first public talks, delivered in 1951, and includes the many speeches that helped define the “Reagan Revolution” and his two terms in the White House. Fine. Signed By Eleanor Roosevelt 163. ROOSEVELT, Eleanor. On My Own. New York, 1958. Octavo, original blue cloth, dust jacket. $1500. First edition of Roosevelt’s post-White House memoirs, signed by her. Eleanor Roosevelt’s last book of autobiography before her death in 1962 at the age of 78 chronicles her active life after the death of her husband in 1945. Light rubbing and toning to cloth; light wear and soiling to spine and rear panel of bright dust jacket, extremely good. 164. (PRESIDENTS). The White House Gallery of Official Portraits of the Presidents. New York and Washington, 1901. Large folio (17 by 22-1/2 inches), original threequarter brown morocco, original red silk wrap-around with presidential seal. $6500. “The Only Way On Earth To Influence The Other Fellow Is To Talk About What He Wants And Show Him How To Get It” 165. CARNEGIE, Dale. How to Win Friends and Influence People. New York, 1937. Octavo, original red cloth, dust jacket. $850. Early printing of this wildly influential self-help book, signed by Carnegie in green ink, in scarce original dust jacket. “In 1936 Carnegie hit the jackpot with his book How to Win Friends and Influence People. It was an immediate bestseller, and brought a great demand for lectures, periodical articles, and even a syndicated newspaper column. In a short period this book of ‘common-sense advice’ was translated into 30 languages, and by 1986 it had sold more than 15 million copies. This copy is from the 26th printing, appearing in the year after the first. Mild wear and chipping to extremities of scarce, unrestored dust jacket. Extremely good. americana Limited first edition of this collection of 24 striking photogravures of American Presidential portraits from Washington to McKinley, number 26 of an unspecified limitation, in original three-quarter morocco. Each portrait is accompanied by a page of biographical text. Fine broadside of McKinley’s Last Speech, with marginal vignettes, laid in. Fine. 71 gift catalogue 2014 24 Fine Photogravures Of Official Presidential Portraits, Limited Large Folio Edition gift catalogue 2014 americana 72 With 24 Beautiful Chromolithographic Plates 166. THAYER, Emma Homan. Wild Flowers of Colorado… New York, 1885. Folio, later blue buckram with original cloth front pictorial cover and spine neatly laid down. $1800. First edition, beautifully illustrated with 24 full-page, color-printed lithographic plates. Thayer combined travel, adventure and botany, as she describes the native flowers, and her experiences while hunting for the plants. Text and plates clean. A very nice copy. Signed By Paul Tibbets 167. (WORLD WAR II) TIBBETS, Paul W. Return of the Enola Gay. Columbus, Ohio, 1998. Octavo, original black cloth, dust jacket. $950. First trade edition of Tibbets’ revised autobiography, highlighting his core role in piloting the Enola Gay, signed by him. Controversy surrounding the National Air and Space Museum’s 1995 exhibit of the Enola Gay prompted Tibbets to write this revision of his 1989 book, Flight of the Enola Gay. Fine. HOLIDAY “Suddenly There Was A Knock Which Made Her Pause— Could It Perhaps Be Santa Claus?” 168. BEMELMANS, Ludwig. Madeline’s Christmas. New York, 1956. Slim 12mo, original self-wrapper. $550. First appearance of this delightful children’s story, a special insert in the 1956 Christmas edition of McCall’s Magazine. Madeline’s magical adventures on Christmas Eve first appeared in this scarce, fragile form; the hardcover first edition was not issued until 1985. Fine. “Can’t You Let Yourself Believe In People Like Kris—In Fun And Joy And Love And All The Other Intangibles?” 169. DAVIES, Valentine. Miracle on 34th Street. New York, 1947. Small octavo, original russet cloth, dust jacket. $1100. First edition of this modern Christmas classic, in scarce dust jacket. Based on Davies’ original, screenplay for “the United States Christmas movie” (Clute & Grant, 650), starring Maureen O’Hara and Edmund Gwenn (who won an Oscar for his portrayal of Kris Kringle). Near-fine. Signed By Capote HOLIDAY 170. CAPOTE, Truman. One Christmas. New York, 1983. Octavo, original maroon cloth, slipcase with pictorial label. $1500. gift catalogue 2014 74 First trade edition, advance review copy, signed on the title page by Truman Capote. The redemptive story of a young Capote’s first Christmas with his estranged father. With publisher’s review slip laid in. Fine. Signed By President Jimmy Carter 171. CARTER, Jimmy. Christmas in Plains. Illustrated by Amy Carter. New York, 2001. Octavo, original white paper boards, dust jacket. $285. First edition, with illustrations by Amy Carter, boldly signed by President Jimmy Carter. In the tradition of Capote’s A Christmas Memory and Thomas’ A Child’s Christmas in Wales, Carter recalls family celebrations in Plains, Georgia. Fine. “Hereafter I’ll Make It A Rule, I Believe, To Have Santa Claus Visit Us Each Christmas Eve” 172. (CHRISTMAS). Santa Claus Book (Annie’s and Willie’s Prayer). New York, circa 1920. 12mo, original color pictorial contoured paper self-wrappers, staple-bound as issued; pp. [14]. $175. Vintage 1920s children’s Christmas gift book, with contoured, vividly chromolithographic wrappers depicting Santa Claus. An entry in the publisher’s “Christmas Cut Out” series, with six fullpage, tinted illustrations. About-fine. 75 gift catalogue 2014 HOLIDAY Visions Of St. Nick, With Five Christmas Pop-Ups 173. (POP-UP BOOKS) BRADFORD, E.A. Visions of St. Nick. No place, 1950. Oblong octavo, original pictorial paper boards, box. $600. First edition of this wonderful Christmas-themed pop-up book, featuring five scenes between boards that can be tied together to form a three-dimensional circular display. Without original instruction sheet for using book as a decorative item. With original metal clip for connecting boards. About-fine. Rare in original box. First Edition Of Olivia Helps With Christmas, Signed By Ian Falconer 174. FALCONER, Ian. Olivia Helps with Christmas. New York, 2007. Quarto, original pictorial red paper boards, dust jacket. $1250. First edition of the fifth book in the Olivia series, boldly signed by Ian Falconer. Fine. gift catalogue 2014 HOLIDAY 76 “That’s Why Whenever It’s Foggy And Gray, It’s Rudolph The Red-Nose Who Guides Santa’s Sleigh” 175. MAY, Robert L. Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer. Chicago, 1939. Small quarto, original pictorial paper wrappers. $1800. First edition of the very first appearance of this beloved Christmas character, with 41 illustrations by Denver Gillen. Montgomery Ward and Company asked May to write a booklet of Christmas verses as a premium for children to take home after visiting the department store’s Santa Claus. May produced Rudolph the RedNosed Reindeer, an endearing take on the familiar “ugly duckling” theme, written in verse that mimics Clement Moore’s “The Night Before Christmas.” Near-fine. With An Original Lithograph Signed By Sendak 176. HOFFMAN, E.T.A. The Nutcracker. Translated by Ralph Manheim. New York, 1984. Quarto, original gray cloth, slipcase. With mounted lithograph measuring 5 by 5 inches, matted. $2500. Deluxe limited first edition, one of only 250 copies signed by Sendak, with ten doublepage full-color illustrations and numerous other color illustrations after watercolors by Sendak, and a mounted lithograph numbered and signed by Sendak. This beautiful book preserves the compelling vision of Hoffman’s classic Christmas tale (written in 1816) that acclaimed illustrator Sendak created for the Pacific Northwest Ballet. A beautiful copy. Keith Ward’s Night Before Christmas 77 177. MOORE, Clement C. The Night Before Christmas. Racine, Wisconsin, 1935. Slim folio, original illustrated self-wrappers. $350. gift catalogue 2014 First Ward-illustrated edition, with wonderful illustrations from his watercolors on every page. Ward’s illustrations here evoke the “Dick and Jane” readers of the 1940s—no wonder, as Keith Ward illustrated them, too. Interior lightly soiled. Spine lightly worn, with small loss around some staples; lower corner of front wrapper lightly creased. Extremely good. 178. SCHULZ, Charles M. A Charlie Brown Christmas. Cleveland and New York, 1965. Quarto, original pictorial black cloth, dust jacket. $850. First edition, adapted from the perennial Christmas television favorite. The Bill Melendez production first aired December 9, 1965. Fine. Inscribed By Charles Schulz With An Original Drawing Of Linus 179. SCHULZ, Charles M. Christmas is Together-Time. San Francisco, 1964. Small square quarto, original pictorial white paper boards, dust jacket. $2800. First edition of Schulz’ first Christmas book, inscribed by Charles Schulz using his nickname, “Sparky”: For C——, my good friend—Sparky,” with a scarce original drawing of Linus. Drawings of characters other than Snoopy and Charlie Brown are quite scarce. Near-fine. HOLIDAY “And That’s What Christmas Is All About, Charlie Brown” gift catalogue 2014 HOLIDAY 78 The Littlest Angel, First Edition 180. TAZEWELL, Charles. The Littlest Angel. Chicago, 1946. Slim octavo, original pictorial paper boards, dust jacket. $350. First edition of this beloved Christmas classic, illustrated by Katherine Evans. Following The Littlest Angel’s first appearance in the December issue of Coronet, Helen Hayes became its perennial narrator at Christmastime, and Loretta Young recorded a version. Extremely good. “All The Christmases Roll Down Toward The Two-Tongued Sea…” 181. THOMAS, Dylan. A Child’s Christmas in Wales. Norfolk, Connecticut, 1955. 12mo, original cream paper boards, dust jacket. $550. First separate edition of Thomas’ beloved Christmas story. Published the year after its first appearance in the short story collection Quite Early One Morning, and specially produced for sale at Christmastime 1955. Very nearly fine. “OOOOOOOOOOOOO! I Absolutely Love Christmas” 182. THOMPSON, Kay. Eloise at Christmastime. Drawings by Hilary Knight. New York, 1958. Slim folio, original pictorial red boards, dust jacket. $900. First edition of the third book in the wonderfully illustrated series of Eloise stories. Eloise creates holiday gifts— and havoc— at the Plaza Hotel. Book very nearly fine. Dust jacket extremely good, with light wear to extremities. A desirable copy. TRAVEL & EXPLORATION robert e . peary The First Explorer To Reach The North Pole 183. (POLAR) PEARY, Robert E. The North Pole. New York, 1910. Thick octavo, modern three-quarter navy morocco gilt. $4800. Signed limited “General Hubbard” edition of Peary’s illustrated account of his journey to the North Pole, number 155 of only 500 copies signed by Peary. This work includes the preparations, organization, and the march to the Pole. Immediately after Peary’s arrival, the Cook/Peary controversy broke out as a result of Cook’s almost simultaneous announcement that he had reached the Pole one year earlier. “The National Geographic Society commissioned a new examination of Peary’s route by the Navigation Foundation, of Maryland, which reported in Peary’s favor” (Holland, 475). Fine. gift catalogue 2014 travel & exploration 80 Cook’s Complete Illustrated Voyages, With Fine Hand-Colored Maps 184. COOK, James. The Three Voyages of Captain James Cook Round the World. London, 1852. Two volumes. Quarto, contemporary three-quarter crimson pebbled morocco gilt. $4200. Handsomely bound 19th-century edition of Cook’s complete voyages, complete with 12 hand-colored double-page steel-engraved maps showing the courses of his travels and 145 in-text wood-engravings, with frontispiece portraits, engraved vignette title page in Volume I, and a full-page engraving of “The Death of Captain Cook” in Volume II. “The famous accounts of Captain Cook’s three voyages form the basis for any collection of Pacific books” (Hill). Includes a brief “Life of Captain Cook.” Near-fine. Signed By Charles Lindbergh 185. (AVIATION) LINDBERGH, Charles A. The Spirit of St. Louis. New York, 1953. Octavo, original red cloth, acetate. $5500. “Presentation” first edition, number 507 of an undetermined limitation, signed by Lindbergh on a tipped-in leaf. Winner of the 1954 Pulitzer Prize for Autobiography, this is Lindbergh’s riveting account of the first solo nonstop flight between the United States and Europe he undertook in 1927. Fine. 81 “There Before Us Lay The Sealed Door” Ebers’ Great Illustrated History Of Egypt 187. (EGYPT) EBERS, Georges. Egypt: Descriptive, Historical, and Picturesque. London, 1887. Two volumes. Folio, original decorative olive cloth. $1500. Early edition in English of this monumental work in Egyptology, profusely illustrated with over 70 full-page woodengravings and over 500 in-text illustrations of decorative motifs, ancient ruins, biblical and historical scenes, and contemporary Egypt. This work is part history, part travelogue, and provides a fascinating view of Egypt in the late 19th century. Near-fine in original cloth. travel & exploration First edition of Carter’s account of the discovery of King Tutankhamen’s tomb, including the scarce third volume, with 247 dramatic illustrations, in original bright gilt-stamped cloth. When Carter entered King Tut’s tomb in 1922 he bridged 3000 years separating the reign of the Boy-King from the modern world. Because of the Depression, the third and final volume, included here, was printed in limited numbers and is consequently quite scarce. A lovely set. gift catalogue 2014 186. (EGYPT) CARTER, Howard and MACE, A.C. The Tomb of Tutankhamen. London, 1923-33. Three volumes. Thick octavo, original brown cloth gilt, custom slipcase. $4500. gift catalogue 2014 travel & exploration 82 “A Few More Whacks Of The Ice-Axe, A Few Very Weary Steps, And We Were On The Summit Of Everest” 188. (EVEREST) HILLARY, Edmund. Ice axe signed. Kandersteg, Switzerland, 1941. Wood and steel shaft measures 33-1/2 inches; steel blade measures 11-1/2 inches. $2000. Vintage ice axe boldly signed at a later date in black ink on the wooden shaft by mountaineering legend Edmund Hillary. In 1953, Sir Edmund Hillary, with Tenzing Norgay, established his reputation as the first to summit Mount Everest, the world’s highest peak. Fine. Dedicatee George Lowe’s Copy, Signed By Hillary 189. (EVEREST) HILLARY, Edmund. High Adventure. London, 1955. Octavo, original blue cloth, dust jacket. $2500. First edition of Hillary’s account of his life as a mountain-climber, signed by him on the title. The copy of noted mountaineer George Lowe, one of the dedicatees of this work, with his bookplate, ownership signature on the half title, and additional signature on the Dedication page. George Lowe served with Hillary on Sir John Hunt’s successful 1953 British expedition of Everest; he was one of four men to whom Hillary dedicated the present book: “To my old friend George Lowe for so many years of cheerful comradeship.” Fine. Nansen’s In Northern Mists 190. (POLAR) NANSEN, Fridtjof. In Northern Mists. London, 1911. Two volumes. Quarto, original giltdecorated blue cloth. $1500. First edition in English of Nansen’s illustrated Arctic study, with color frontispieces and over 150 other illustrations. “One of the most imaginative and intrepid of Arctic explorers” (Britannica). Very nearly fine. Call us at 212-751-0011 for more gift recommendations, or visit our website at BaumanRareBooks.com. “We Have Provisions For Twenty Days… But Game Is Absolutely Necessary If We Are To Remain Here” 191. (POLAR) MIKKELSEN, Ejnar. Lost in the Arctic. London, 1913. Thick quarto, original silver-stamped green cloth. $1200. First edition in English of this account of an expedition to Greenland’s north-west coast, published in the same year as the Danish first edition, with numerous photographic plates and a large folding map. “The principal object of this expedition was to trace two of the lost members of the Danmark expedition, 190608, and if possible, to recover their records and collections” (Arctic Bibliography 11417). Mikkelsen’s expedition succeeded in recovering these lost materials. About-fine. Signed By Astronaut Wally Schirra travel & exploration 192. (SPACE) SCHIRRA, Walter M., Jr. Schirra’s Space. Boston, 1988. Octavo, original blue paper boards, dust jacket. $950. gift catalogue 2014 84 First edition of Mercury astronaut Schirra’s account of his legendary career, signed by him. One of the original seven astronauts of Project Mercury, Walter Schirra, who died in 2007, was the only astronaut to fly in all three of NASA’s earliest manned space programs—Mercury, Gemini and Apollo. Book fine; dust jacket near-fine. “The World Was Divided Into Those Who Had It And Those Who Did Not” 193. (SPACE) WOLFE, Tom. The Right Stuff. New York, 1979. Octavo, original gray cloth, dust jacket. $800. First edition of Wolfe’s award-winning classic about America’s early manned space program, signed on the title page by him with his characteristic flourish. Basis for the acclaimed 1983 film written and directed by Philip Kaufman, starring Sam Shepard and Ed Harris. Near-fine. Signed By Astronaut Alan Shepard 194. (SPACE) SHEPARD, Alan; SLAYTON, Deke. Moon Shot. Norwalk, Connecticut, 1997. Octavo, publisher’s full black morocco gilt. $1200. Signed limited edition, one of 3000 copies signed by Alan Shepard, handsomely bound. Written by two of the seven original Mercury astronauts, Moon Shot was published shortly after Slayton’s death in 1993. Shepard is distinguished as the first American to journey into space and as Commander of Apollo 14, the third expedition to walk on the moon. Fine. Signed By Astronaut Scott Carpenter 195. (SPACE) CARPENTER, M. Scott, et al. We Seven. New York, 1962. Octavo, original black cloth, dust jacket. $2700. First edition of this comprehensive and engaging first-hand account of the genesis of America’s manned space program, signed by Mercury astronaut Scott Carpenter, the fourth American in space and the second to orbit the earth. Chronicles the beginnings of American manned space exploration from the perspectives of those who pioneered it, with each member of Project Mercury contributing at least three essay-length sections. Book fine, dust jacket near-fine. “Builders Of Churches In Those Days… Desired Perfection In Their Works” 196. (ENGLAND) POOLE, George Ayliffe. HUGALL, J.W. An Historical & Descriptive Guide to York Cathedral and Its Antiquities. York, 1850. Quarto, early 20th-century full brown morocco gilt. $1500. First edition of this generously illustrated history of York Cathedral, with 40 plates (including three double-page and two handcolored), handsomely bound in full moroccogilt by Cary. King Edwin laid the first foundation for a cathedral in York in 627, but the construction of the edifice examined in these pages spanned the 12th to 15th centuries. Attractive binding with the lightest touch of restoration. An elegant volume in excellent condition. HISTORY, PHILOSOPHY & RELIGION gustave doré “Perhaps The Most Important Landmark In Doré’s Career” 197. DORÉ, Gustave. The Holy Bible. With Illustrations by Gustave Doré. London and New York, circa 1867. Two volumes. Thick folio (12 by 15 inches), contemporary full brown morocco gilt. $6500. One of the earliest editions in English (all undated) of Gustave Doré’s great folio Bible, splendidly illustrated by him with 238 full-page wood-engravings and beautifully bound in contemporary full morocco-gilt. “In the 1870s, The Doré Bible was perhaps the most treasured (and expensive) book in the world” (Malan, 81). Scattered light foxing, contemporary morocco in wonderful condition. Beautiful. 198. BIBLE. The Holy Bible, Faithfully Translated into English out of the authentical Latin… Rouen, France, 1635. Two volumes. Small, thick quarto, contemporary full calf rebacked.$6800. Inscribed In French In The Year Of Publication By Charrière As “Papillon” 199. CHARRIÈRE, Henri. Papillon. New York, 1970. Octavo, original half red cloth, dust jacket. $1750. First edition in English of the powerful prison memoir by Charrière (aka “Papillon”), the first man to escape from Devil’s Island, the basis for the Oscar-nominated 1973 film starring Steve McQueen and Dustin Hoffman, boldly inscribed in the year of publication by Charrière in French: “Bonne Chance. Papillon. 11-10-70.” Preceded by the 1969 French first edition. Near-fine. history, philosophy & religion Second edition of the Roman Catholic translation in English of the Old Testament—and the last for more than a century— in contemporary calf bindings. “This version of the Old Testament… came from the same hands as the Rheims New Testament of 1582” (Darlow & Moule, 129), translated by “religious refugees who carried their faith and work abroad” (Great Books and Book Collectors, 108). Three dozen leaves expertly cleaned in Volume I, scattered light foxing, occasional minor edge-wear and mild marginal dampstaining, expert restoration to calf boards. A distinguished and desirable copy. 87 gift catalogue 2014 Second Edition Of The Roman Catholic Translation In English Of The Old Testament, 1635, In Handsome Contemporary Calf 200. CHURCHILL, Winston. The Second World War. London, 194854. Six volumes. Octavo, modern full red morocco gilt. $3500. First English editions of Churchill’s WWII masterpiece, part history and part memoir, written after he lost reelection as Prime Minister, handsomely bound. Although preceded by the American editions, the English editions are generally preferred for their profusion of diagrams, maps and facsimile documents. Occasional scattered light foxing to interiors, as often. Fine. “Never In The Field Of Human Conflict Was So Much Owed By So Many To So Few” gift catalogue 2014 history, philosophy & religion 88 “This Is Not History: This Is My Case” 201. CHURCHILL, Winston. A Speech by The Prime Minister... London, 1940. Octavo, original gray wrappers printed in maroon; pp. 16, custom box. $1600. First edition of Churchill’s famous 1940 address to the House of Commons at the height of the Second World War, one of history’s most stirring and influential speeches. “Churchill’s historic exhortations are equal [to the Gettysburg address] in their ringing assertion of democracy confronting the seemingly irresistible forces of tyranny” (PMM 424). Near-fine. Signed By The Dalai Lama 202. DALAI LAMA Tenzin Gyatso. Freedom in Exile. The Autobiography of His Holiness the Dalai Lama of Tibet. New York, 1990. Octavo, original half black cloth, dust jacket. $3000. First American edition, signed in Tibetan by the winner of the 1989 Nobel Peace Prize, His Holiness, the 14th Dalai Lama of Tibet. Preceded by the British first edition of the same year. Fine. 203. DODGSON, Charles L. Euclid and his Modern Rivals. London, 1879. Small octavo, original gilt-stamped red cloth, custom chemise and half morocco slipcase. $9200. Frazer’s Classic Study Of Magic And Religion 204. FRAZER, James George. The Golden Bough; A Study in Magic and Religion. New York, 1935. Twelve volumes. Octavo, original gilt-stamped dark green cloth. $2200. Third and best edition, American issue, of Frazer’s landmark anthropological study of magic and religion, greatly enlarged and expanded to a dozen volumes. The third edition was expanded from the 1890 first edition (in two volumes) and the 1900 second edition (in three volumes); the 12th volume contains an extensive bibliography and general index. Without scarce original dust jackets. Fine. history, philosophy & religion First edition of Dodgson’s defense of using Euclid to teach elementary geometry, inscribed by the author in his characteristic purple ink to a distant relative: “E.B. Shuldam, Esq. with the Author’s sincere regards. Mar. 27 / 79.” Although the whimsical works of fantasy he wrote as “Lewis Carroll” won him eternal fame, Charles Lutwidge Dodgson was a lecturer of mathematics at Christ Church, Oxford for some three decades. “Euclid dominated his professional work, and he devised fresh approaches to the master, refusing to tamper with his texts, since he insisted that Euclid had to be seen plain” (DNB). Edward Barton Shuldam was a physician at St James Homeopathic Hospital whose interests included stammering, a condition with which his friend (and distant relation) Dodgson coped. Near-fine. 89 gift catalogue 2014 Inscribed By Dodgson To Physician E.B. Shuldam history, philosophy & religion 90 gift catalogue 2014 The Second Great War, With Over 7500 Illustrations 205. HAMMERTON, Sir John, and GWYNN, Sir Charles. The Second Great War. London, 1941-47. Eight volumes. Quarto, contemporary three-quarter blue morocco gilt. $1200. First edition, lavishly illustrated with 139 color plates, over 300 maps, and over 7500 black-and-white (mostly photographic) illustrations. Designed as a “contemporary history” and written while the events were still in progress, The Second Great War covers all theatres of operation and deals with the aftermath of the war throughout Europe and Asia. Near-fine. “Xerxes, The Son Of Darius, Killed The Priest Who Forbade Him To Move The Statue, And Took It Away” 206. HERODOTUS. The History of Herodotus. London, 1935. Oblong quarto, original half blue vellum gilt. $2400. Limited edition, one of only 675 copies of Rawlinson’s esteemed translation of Herodotus, with nine wood engravings and nine maps (seven double-page), this copy signed by editor A.W. Lawrence. “Herodotus is the earliest historian; his predecessors were by contrast chroniclers. He was the first to collect his materials systematically, to test their accuracy as far as he could, to arrange his story so as to appeal to, as well as inform, his readers” (PMM 41). Rawlinson’s translation was first published in 1858-60. Fine. 207. Twelfth Zionist Congress. Souvenir of the 12th Zionist Congress: photographic collage with philatelic additions. Carlsbad (Karlovy Vary), 1921. Two photographs, each measuring 9 by 6 inches; mounted on heavy cardstock and surrounded by a border of canceled postage stamps, entire piece measures 13-1/2 by 16-1/2 inches. $5000. First Edition Of Sale’s Landmark English Translation Of The Koran, 1734, In Contemporary Tree Calf 208. SALE, George. The Koran, Commonly Called the Alcoran of Mohammed. London, 1734. Quarto, contemporary full brown tree calf rebacked. $6000. First edition of George Sale’s important translation of the Koran, the first to translate directly from the Arabic into English, with genealogical charts, folding map of Arabia, and folding plan of the Great Mosque of Mecca. “Sale’s translation is remarkably accurate… His version remains the best [translation] in any language” (DNB). With a line of writing in Arabic to bottom margin of title page. Some dampstaining to top margins of preliminary and concluding leaves, expert paper repair to small tear on folding map, expert restoration to contemporary boards. Handsome. history, philosophy & religion Two photographs of the 12th Zionist Congress in Carlsbad by photographer Carl Wagner—one of the entire 12th Congress and another of the “HaMizrahi” delegates—sent as a souvenir to one of the congress’ delegates, Joseph Seltzer. The 1921 Zionist Congress was the first Congress to be held after World War I, during which time the Zionist movement had won British support for its endeavors to create a Jewish national home in Palestine (the Balfour Declaration). Excellent condition. 91 gift catalogue 2014 Two Large Souvenir Photographs Of The 1921 12th Zionist Congress In Carlsbad gift catalogue 2014 history, philosophy & religion 92 Inscribed By Mother Teresa 209. MOTHER TERESA. Typed letter inscribed. Calcutta, August 16, 1988. Printed buff-colored postcard, measuring 5-1/2 by 3-1/2 inches, with typed signed letter on verso. $1500. Postcard from the Missionaries of Charity in Calcutta with a typed letter from Mother Teresa thanking a Mr. Aruldass for his 10 rupee donation; praying that he grow in God’s love and radiate it to others; and asking that he pray for Mother Teresa as she prays for him, inscribed: “God bless you M Teresa MC.” Original postal markings. About-fine. “The Greatest Confession Since Rousseau And St. Augustine” 210. NEWMAN, John Henry. Apologia pro Vita Sua. London, 1864. Octavo, mid-20th century three-quarter brown morocco gilt. $2000. First edition, first issue, bound from parts, of Cardinal Newman’s eloquent spiritual autobiography, “one of the world’s greatest books of self-revelation.” Newman’s Apologia appeared in 1864 in response to a published misrepresentation of his beliefs, making “a profound impression on many who did not share his religious convictions… it is now recognized as a literary masterpiece” (Drabble, 694-95). Very nearly fine. 211. RALEIGH, Walter. The History of the World. London, 1614 [colophon dated 1621]. Thick folio, contemporary full dark brown calf rebacked. $7000. “Man Is Born Free, And Yet Is Universally Enslaved” 212. ROUSSEAU, Jean Jacques. A Dissertation on Political Economy: To Which Is Added, A Treatise on the Social Compact or, The Principles of Political Law. Albany, 1797. Octavo, contemporary full brown tree sheep rebacked. $3200. First American edition of two collected works by Rousseau, his treatise on the establishment of good government, and his Contrat Social—”the bible of the revolutionaries”—pivotal in its influence on the French Revolution and Jefferson’s thoughts in the Declaration of Independence. The Social Compact spurred the French Revolution’s cry of “Liberty, Equality, Fraternity” and inspired Jefferson in writing the Declaration of Independence. English translation that of Rousseau’s Works (London, 1767). Text generally fresh with light scattered foxing, several rear leaves with light margin dampstaining. history, philosophy & religion Third edition of Raleigh’s monumental history of the world, written during his long imprisonment in the Tower of London. With handsome engraved title page, engraved portrait, eight doublepage maps, tables and numerous woodcuts. Raleigh intended to publish his history in three parts, but completed only the first volume, beginning with the Creation and ending at 130 B.C. The first edition was published in 1614. Expert paper repairs to margins of a few double-page maps, affecting outer edge of image on map opposite page 152, expert restoration to contemporary calf boards. A very good copy. 93 gift catalogue 2014 1621 Edition Of Raleigh’s History Of The World, With Fine Folding Maps gift catalogue 2014 history, philosophy & religion 94 Association First Edition Of Edward Said’s Orientalism, From The Library Of Max Lerner, Inscribed By Lerner With His Marginalia Throughout 213. SAID, Edward. Orientalism. New York, 1978. Octavo, original navy cloth, dust jacket. $1600. First edition of Said’s electrifying and foundational work in post-colonial theory, the copy of historian Max Lerner, whose perspective on the Middle East often opposed Said’s, with Lerner’s owner signature and inscription, along with his marginalia in key passages throughout. Orientalism, a founding work in post-colonial theory, “remains the most influential and most controversial” in the field (Cass, 25). Lerner’s “magnum opus, America as a Civilization… was hailed by eminent reviewers as a rich synthesis worthy of comparison with the classic studies of Tocqueville.” Fine. “Most Handsome Book Produced In The Whole Of The 19th Century” 214. SHAW, Henry. Dresses and Decorations of the Middle Ages from the Seventh to the Seventeenth Centuries. London, 1843. Two volumes. Quarto, early 20th-century threequarter red morocco gilt. $3500. First edition of this beautifully illustrated study of costumes and decorations by Shaw, one of the greatest illuminators of the 19th century, with 94 plates of French and English Medieval dress, many exquisitely hand-colored, handsomely bound. Appearing in monthly parts from 1840, this was Shaw’s “most ambitious work… [with] plates highly finished and heightened in gold… It is a magnificent production” (McLean, 66). An extremely good copy, with patches of foxing (as usual). FINANCE & ECONOMICS bernard de mandeville “The Only Possible Justification Of Individualism And Laissez Faire” 215. MANDEVILLE, Bernard de. The Fable of the Bees: or, Private Vices, Publick Benefits. WITH: The Fable of the Bees. Part II. London, 1723, 1729. Together, two volumes. Octavo, early 19th-century burgundy morocco gilt (Volume I rebacked with original spine laid down). $15,000. Rare and important second edition of Part I and rare first edition of Part II of Mandeville’s classic satire of economic orthodoxy, considered by many to be the first complete edition of this seminal text of libertarian thought. “Mandeville gave great offence by this book, in which a cynical system of morality was made attractive by ingenious paradoxes. It was long popular, and later critics have pointed out the real acuteness of the writer as well as the vigor of his style… Dr. Johnson was much impressed by the ‘Fable,’ which, he said, did not puzzle him, but ‘opened his views into real life very much” (DNB). This combination of the revised and enlarged second edition of Part I and rare first edition of Part II is a complete edition containing nearly all of Mandeville’s thoughts and corrections. Light foxing. Extremely good. gift catalogue 2014 finance & economics 96 Warmly Inscribed By Peter Bernstein 216. BERNSTEIN, Peter. Economist on Wall Street. New York, 1970. Octavo, original orange cloth, dust jacket. $450. First edition of a major collection of writings by Bernstein—”the dean of investment analysis”—inscribed by him, “For A— In deepest friendship and affection. Peter.” Features works written for clients of his investment-counsel firm, Bernstein-Macaulay, Inc., as well as key articles and speeches appearing in book form for the first time. Fine. “The Last Enlightenment Thinkers In A Post-Modern World” 217. FRIEDMAN, Milton, and FRIEDMAN, Rose D. Two Lucky People: Memoirs. Chicago, 1998. Octavo, original burgundy cloth, dust jacket. $1650. First edition, presentation copy, of this memoir by the Nobel Prize-winning economist and his wife Rose, a professor at the University of Chicago Law School, inscribed by Milton Friedman: “For Bill & Mary, who helped prod us into writing this. With love and thanks, Milton &” [signed by Rose Friedman] “Rose.” “The Friedmans come across as the last Enlightenment thinkers in a postmodern world. . . This is a book that restores your faith in reasoned discourse. . . There really are people who believe in scholarly exchange as a way to discover truth” (New York Times Book Review). Fine. “The Greatest British Theorist Of The Century” 97 218. HICKS, John R. Economic Perspectives. Oxford, England, 1977. Octavo, original navy cloth, dust jacket. $400. gift catalogue 2014 First edition of this collection of essays on money and growth, including two previously unpublished essays. “One of the most important and influential economists of the 20th century” (Fonseca), Hicks was awarded the Nobel Prize in economics in 1972. Book fine, dust jacket very nearly so. 219. GALBRAITH, John Kenneth. The Age of Uncertainty. Boston, 1977. Large octavo, original blue cloth, dust jacket. $1750. First American edition of Galbraith’s history of economics, inscribed: “But thanks to supporters like you we might have a measure of certainty. John Kenneth Galbraith. 1990.” Galbraith wrote The Age of Uncertainty to accompany his landmark BBC series of the same name. Near-fine. “McCulloch’s Most Important Contribution To Economic Theory” 220. MCCULLOCH, John Ramsay. A Treatise on the Principles and Practical Importance of Taxation and the Funding System. London, 1845. Octavo, contemporary full tan polished calf gilt. $2200. First edition of McCulloch’s important contribution to economic theory and the study of taxation. McCulloch, a follower of English economist David Ricardo, is best known for A Dictionary, of Commerce and Commercial Navigation (1832). Taxation is “probably McCulloch’s most important contribution to economic theory” (Amex 282). Fine. finance & economics “But Thanks To Supporters Like You We Might Have A Measure Of Certainty” gift catalogue 2014 finance & economics 98 Two Of Nash’s Most Influential Articles: “The Bargaining Problem” And “Two-Person Cooperative Games” 221. NASH, John. “The Bargaining Problem” IN: Econometrica, Volume 18, Number 2, pp. 155-62. WITH: “Two-Person Cooperative Games.” IN: Econometrica, Volume 21, Number 1, pp. 128-40. Chicago, April 1950 and January 1953. Large octavo, original gray wrappers. $3200. First editions of the first publications of these two influential articles on game theory and the Nash equilibrium. The copies of renowned mathematician and economist Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen, with “The Bargaining Problem” bearing his owner stamps. Published shortly after Nash received his Ph.D. in 1950, these are two of only three articles directly derived from Nash’s thesis research. As a graduate student at Princeton, Nash encountered game theory, which had been recently articulated by John von Neumann and Oskar Morgenstern. While their theory dealt with two-person zero-sum games, or “pure rivalries,” Nash explored rivalries with the possibility of mutual gain, where each player acts independently and no outside authority makes sure that players stick to predetermined rules. His idea that any game such as this has one equilibrium point became known as the “Nash equilibrium,” a founding concept in analyzing economic behavior, and the one for which he won the Nobel Prize in 1994. Near-fine. “A Special Position To The Entrepreneur” 222. SCHUMPETER, Joseph A. Economic Doctrine and Method. London, 1954. Octavo, original blue cloth, dust jacket. $1250. First edition in English of Schumpeter’s 1914 Epochen der Dogmen—und Methodengeschichte. In this brief history of economic doctrines by “the greatest historian economic science has ever had,” Schumpeter “gave a special position in the explanation of the process of evolution to the entrepreneur, that is the man who has the flair to seize upon the possibilities that these changes offer and to translate them into economic reality” (Niehans, 451; Roll, 542). Fine. 223. SMITH, Adam. An Inquiry Into the Nature and Causes of The Wealth of Nations. London, 1793. Three volumes. Octavo, contemporary full brown tree calf gilt rebacked. $5500. “One Of The Best-Known Writers On The Stock Market” 224. WYCKOFF, Richard D. Wall Street Ventures and Adventures through Forty Years. New York and London, 1930. Octavo, original cloth, dust jacket. $4200. First edition of this fascinating insider’s view of Wall Street by Richard Wyckoff, founder of The Magazine of Wall Street, with 35 photogravures and a folding facsimile, in scarce dust jacket. “Starting as a $5-a-week stock runner, Richard D. Wyckoff became one of the best-known writers on the stock market in Wall Street… In 1907, after experience as a broker, he started The Ticker, subsequently known as The Magazine of Wall Street” (New York Times). Here Wyckoff offers a rare insider’s view of the inner workings of the New York Stock Market, as well as a unique perspective on the financial secrets of such men as J.P. Morgan, Jesse Livermore and E.H. Harriman. Book fine, dust jacket near-fine. finance & economics 1793 edition of Smith’s magnum opus, very scarce in contemporary tree calf covers. “Where the political aspects of human rights had taken two centuries to explore, Smith’s achievement was to bring the study of economic aspects to the same point in a single work… it is the first and greatest classic of modern economic thought” (PMM 221). Buckle’s History of Civilization calls Wealth of Nations “probably the most important book which has ever been written,” while economist J.A.R. Mariott asserts that “there is probably no single work in the language which has in its day exercised an influence so profound.” First published in 1776. Near-fine. 99 gift catalogue 2014 “The First And Greatest Classic Of Modern Economic Thought” SPORTS “He Wants To Be A Ball Player!” 225. (BASEBALL) COCHRANE, Gordon S. (Mickey). Baseball: The Fans’ Game. New York and London, 1939. Octavo, original orange cloth, dust jacket. $1500. First edition of this autobiography and collection of baseball tips by the Hall-of-Fame catcher, with photographic frontispiece and 14 black-andwhite plates, signed, “Best Wishes, Mickey Cochrane.” Cochrane was a lifetime .320 hitter and won three World Series as catcher for the Philadelphia Athletics (1929-31) and one as playermanager for the Detroit Tigers (1935). Near-fine. Signed By Joe DiMaggio 226. (BASEBALL) DIMAGGIO, Joe. The DiMaggio Albums. New York, 1989. Two volumes. Quarto, original blue cloth, slipcase. $1600. First trade edition of this lavishly illustrated survey of Joltin’ Joe’s amazing career, signed by DiMaggio in blue ink on the title page of Volume I. These volumes contain over 800 pages of newspaper accounts, photos and reproductions of memorabilia from DiMaggio’s incomparable career, with commentary and an introduction by DiMaggio himself. Fine. 101 gift catalogue 2014 “Best Wishes, Joe DiMaggio, ‘Yankee Clipper’” 227. (BASEBALL) DIMAGGIO, Joe. Photograph inscribed. Pleasantville, NY, circa 1988. Color photographic print (8 by 10 inches). $1600. sports Handsome color photographic print of the legendary Joe DiMaggio, inscribed by him, “Best Wishes, Joe DiMaggio, ‘Yankee Clipper.’” “No one more embodied the American dream of fame and fortune or created a more enduring legend than Joe DiMaggio.” Fine. One Of The Most Famous And Controversial Figures In Boxing 228. (BOXING) JOHNSON, Jack. Jack Johnson— In the Ring—and Out. Chicago, 1927. Octavo, original red cloth, dust jacket. $5600. First edition, presentation/association copy, of Johnson’s autobiography, illustrated with 16 drawings and photographs, inscribed to the owner of Ring magazine, “To My Pal Nat. From Former Champion Jack Johnson.” The recipient of this copy was undoubtedly Nat Fleischer, founder of Ring Magazine, who said of Johnson, “In allaround ability he was tops. After years devoted to the study of heavyweight fighters, I have no hesitation in naming Jack Johnson as the greatest of them all. He possessed every asset” (Durant). Book and inscription fine, moderate edge-wear to original dust jacket. gift catalogue 2014 sports 102 Hutchinson’s Dog Encyclopaedia, Richly Illustrated 229. HUTCHINSON, Walter, editor. Hutchinson’s Dog Encyclopaedia. London, circa 1934. Three volumes. Large quarto, original full red morocco gilt. $1650. First edition of this comprehensive resource on dogs, copiously illustrated with more than 1000 plates and in-text illustrations, some in color. A beautiful set. “One Of The Most Fascinating, And Therefore Many May Say The Most Dangerous, Of All The Card Games That Were Ever Invented” 230. (POKER) WELSH, Charles. Poker; How to Play It. London, 1882. Small octavo, original pictorial beige cloth rebacked. $1500. First edition of this 19th-century guide to Americanstyle poker, in original cloth. This is one of the earliest works solely about poker. Long regarded as a game for cheats and scoundrels played on the American frontier, poker only began to be regarded as a serious card game in the 1870s. Near-fine. 231. (GOLF) TRAVERS, Jerome D. Travers’ Golf Book. New York, 1913. Octavo, original olive green cloth gilt. $6500. “Leading Golf Links Of The United Kingdom” 232. (GOLF) HUTCHINSON, Horace G. British Golf Links. London, 1897. Folio, original olive cloth. $2500. First trade edition of this illustrated survey of 54 British golf courses, with hundreds of photographic views of courses and portraits of famous golfers. “Certainly no account of the literature of this era would be complete without acknowledging [his] contributions” (Donovan & Murdoch, 13). Interior generally clean; light wear to original cloth. An exceptionally good copy. sports First edition, second issue, of this four-time U.S. amateur champion’s first book, with 48 stop-action photographs, inscribed, “To Archie Gwathmey, Compliments of Jerome D. Travers.” “Travers dominated golf in the decade before World War I with his stunning iron shots and expert putting… He won the United States Amateur in 1907, 1908, 1912, and 1913, and was runner-up in 1914. His victory in 1913 set a record for that tournament—not broken until Bobby Jones won it five times” (DAB). Text and illustrations fine, water ring to cover photograph, gilt bright and fine. 103 gift catalogue 2014 “Why The Business Man Should Play Golf” FOOD & WINE Salvador Dalí’s Cookbook 233. DALÍ, Salvador. Les Dîners de Gala. New York, 1973. Folio, original pictorial cloth, dust jacket. $800. First edition of this extravagant, lavishly illustrated cookbook, created by Dalí in honor of his wife Gala. “When six years old I wanted to be a cook.” At age 68, Dalí fulfilled that ambition in this book. Fine. 234. CHILD, Julia. From Julia Child’s Kitchen. New York, 1982. Octavo, original pictorial stiff paper wrappers. $800. “His Observations Are As Valid Now As Then” 235. (HENDERSON, Alexander). The History of Ancient and Modern Wines. London, 1824. Quarto, contemporary full brown calf gilt rebacked and recornered. $2700. First edition, splendidly illustrated with mounted vignette on title page and over 30 wood-engraved initials, head- and tailpieces, in contemporary calf-gilt. “Henderson devotes 14 chapters to modern wines and many of his observations are as valid now as then. It is a large, well-printed text, tastefully illustrated” (Gabler). Near-fine. food & wine First edition in wrappers, inscribed to the founder of McDonald’s, “Bon Appétit to Ray Kroc, Julia Child,” and signed by her husband. Winner of three Emmys, the Peabody Award, the National Book Award, and the French Légion d’Honneur, Child was the first woman ever inducted into the Culinary Institute of America’s Hall of Fame and her kitchen has been installed in the Smithsonian. Preceded by the 1975 first edition in cloth. Repair to front joint. Extremely good. 105 gift catalogue 2014 Inscribed And Signed By Julia Child And Paul Child gift catalogue 2014 food & wine 106 “A Very Popular Treatise” 236. CHORLTON, William. The American Grape Grower’s Guide. New York, 1852. Octavo, original green cloth. $1500. First edition, first printing, of this detailed and highly influential guide to growing grapes in the United States, with 32 in-text illustrations, in original cloth. “Chorlton gives a long list of European grapes suitable for indoor cultivation and suggests the American varieties isabella, catawba, diana and concord for outdoors. This was a very popular treatise and there were numerous subsequent and revised editions” (Gabler G1622). Near-fine. Rickeys, Daisies, Slings, Shrubs, Smashes, Fizzes, Juleps 237. CRADDOCK, Harry. The Savoy Cocktail Book. London, 1930. Octavo, original half black cloth, Art Deco pictorial boards. $850. First trade edition of this quintessential book of cocktail recipes, with lively and colorful Art Deco illustrations by Gilbert Rumbold and bold Art Deco binding. Craddock fled prohibition in the United States to become Head Barman at the London Savoy. He was the inventor of the “Old Fashioned.” Llight scattered foxing, slight edgewear, some toning to spine, minor rubbing to boards. Extremely good. “The Best Of Them All” 238. SPEECHLY, William. A Treatise on the Culture of the Vine. York, 1790. Quarto, contemporary three-quarter brown sheep gilt. $4000. First edition of this “excellent work,” illustrated with five engraved plates (three folding) depicting vineyards, stove plans, and growth patterns. Speechly, an agriculturalist, was gardener to the Duke of Portland on his estate in Nottinghamshire. “The best of them all is that of Speechly… a model of the sound, practical, well-written and beautifully printed manual” (Gabler, 265). Faint foxing mainly to plates and adjacent pages, a bit of wear to marbled boards, extremely good. INDEX A CHURCHILL, Winston 56, 88 ADAMS, Ansel 46, 47 CLINTON, Bill 64 ADDAMS, Charles 47 COCHRANE, Gordon S. 100 ARMSTRONG, William H. 34 COHEN, Leonard 50 AUSTEN, Jane 3 COLT, Samuel 60 B BEARDSLEY, Aubrey 48 BEAUREGARD, P.G.T. 56 BECKETT, Samuel 8 BEMELMANS, Ludwig 34, 73 CONDON, Richard 11 CONROY, Pat 12 COOK, James 80 CRADDOCK, Harry 106 CRAFT, Robert 54 BENCHLEY, Peter 8 D BERNSTEIN, Carl 69 DALAI LAMA 88 BERNSTEIN, Peter 96 DALÍ, Salvador 104 Bible 86, 87 DAVIES, Valentine 73 BOND, Michael 35 DAVIS, Jefferson 57 BRADFORD, E.A. 75 DELILLO, Don 12 BROWN, Dan 8 DICKENS, Charles 2, 4, 33 BURGESS, Anthony 10 DIMAGGIO, Joe 100, 101 BURROUGHS, Edgar Rice 9 DINESEN, Isak 12 BUSH, George H.W. 62, 63 DODGSON, Charles L. 89 C CAPOTE, Truman 10, 74 DORÉ, Gustave 51, 86 DU BOIS, W.E.B. 61 CARD, Orson Scott 11 E CARNEGIE, Dale 71 EBERS, Georges 81 CARPENTER, M. Scott 85 EISENHOWER, Dwight D. 64, 65 CARROLL, Lewis 89 ELIOT, T.S. 14 CARTER, Howard 81 F CARTER, Jimmy 74 CARVER, Raymond 11 FALCONER, Ian 75 FARRAR, Timothy 60 CHAGALL, Marc 49 FAULKNER, William 13 CHARRIÈRE, Henri 87 FITZGERALD, F. Scott 14 CHAUCER, Geoffrey 3 FLEMING, Ian 15, 16 CHILD, Julia 105 FOWLES, John 17 CHORLTON, William 106 FRAZER, James George 89 index 108 FRIEDMAN, Milton 96 L FRIEDMAN, Rose D. 96 LASSAIGNE, Jacques 49 FROST, Robert 16 LAWRENCE, D.H. 21 G LAWRENCE, T.E. 22 GALBRAITH, John Kenneth 97 LAWSON, Robert 38 gift catalogue 2014 GARCIA MARQUEZ, Gabriel 17 GARDNER, John 17 GOLIKOV, Ivan 51 GRANT, Ulysses S. 66 GRASS, Gunther 18 LEE, Harper 21 LEE, Henry 68 LINCOLN, Abraham 58, 68 LINDBERGH, Charles A. 80 LONDON, Jack 5 GWYNN, Sir Charles 90 LONGSTREET, James 59 H M HAMMERTON, John 90 MACDONALD, George 36 HEMINGWAY, Ernest 18 HENDERSON, Alexander 105 HERODOTUS 90 HICKS, John R. 97 HILLARY, Edmund 82 HIRSCHFELD, Al 32, 52 HOFFMAN, E.T.A. 76 HOOD, John Bell 57 HUGALL, J.W. 85 HUTCHINSON, Horace G 103 MACE, A.C. 81 MACLEAN, Norman 22 MALAMUD, Bernard 22 MALORY, Thomas 48 MANDEVILLE, Bernard de 95 MARSHALL, Thomas R. 66 MAY, Robert L. 76 MCCARTHY, Cormac 23 MCCOURT, Frank 23 MCCULLOCH, John Ramsay 97 HUTCHINSON, Walter 102 MCMURTRY, Larry 24 J MILLER, Arthur 25 MIKKELSEN, Ejnar 83 JAMES, Will 36 MILLER, Francis Trevelyan 55 JEFFERSON, Thomas 65 MINARIK, Else Holmelund 38 JOHNSON, Crockett 35 MIRÓ, Joan 52 JOHNSON, Jack 101 MOORE, Clement C. 77 JOHNSON, Lyndon Baines 66 Mother Theresa 92 JOYCE, James 19 K N NANSEN, Fridtjof 83 KENNEDY, John F. 67 NASH, John 98 KENNEDY, Robert 62, 67 NATHAN, Robert 25 KEROUAC, Jack 19 NEWHALL, Nancy 47 KESEY, Ken 20 NEWMAN, John Henry 92 KING, Stephen 20 NIXON, Richard 69 KOSINSKI, Jerzy 21 109 SMITH, Adam 99 O’BRIEN, Tim 25 SOLZHENITSYN, Alexander 28 O’CONNOR, Flannery 26 SPEECHLY, William 106 O’NEILL, Eugene 26 P PAINE, Thomas 61 PARRISH, Maxfield 45 PEARY, Robert E. 79 PIRSIG, Robert M. 26 POOLE, George Ayliffe 85 PORTER, Cole 53 STEINBECK, John 29 STRAVINSKY, Igor 54 T TANIZAKI, Junichiro 30 Tattoo Art 49 TAZEWELL, Charles 78 TENNYSON, Alfred 51 THAYER, Emma Homan 72 THOMAS, Dylan 30, 78 THOMPSON, Kay 41, 78 R TIBBETS, Paul W. 72 RACKHAM, Arthur 53 TOLKIEN, J.R.R. 31 RALEIGH, Walter 93 TRAVERS, Jerome D. 103 RAND, Ayn 27 TRUMAN, Harry 67 REAGAN, Ronald 70 TUCKER, George 65 RICE, Anne 28 TURGENEV, Ivan 7 ROMAN, Alfred 56 TWAIN, Mark 6 ROOSEVELT, Eleanor 70 U ROTH, Philip 27, 28 UPDIKE, John 31 ROUSSEAU, Jean Jacques 93 S SAID, Edward 94 SALE, George 91 SAUNDERS, Louise 45 SCHIRRA, Walter M., Jr. 84 SCHULZ, Charles M. 40, 77 SCHUMPETER, Joseph A. 98 SENDAK, Maurice 38, 39, 76 SEUSS, Dr. 41 SHAARA, Michael 58 SHAKESPEARE, William 53 SHAW, Henry 94 SHELLEY, Mary Wollstonecraft 5 W WARHOL, Andy 54 WASHINGTON, George 68 WATSON, Winifred 32 WELSH, Charles 102 WHITE, E.B. 42, 43 WILDER, Laura Ingalls 44 WILLIAMS, Tennessee 32 WILSON, Woodrow 66 WOLFE, Tom 84 WOODWARD, Bob 69 WOOLF, Virginia 31 WORDSWORTH, William 7 SHEPARD, Alan 84 WYCKOFF, Richard D. 99 SHERIDAN, P.H. 59 Y SILVERSTEIN, Shel 42 YEATS, William Butler 32 SLAYTON, Deke 84 index POTTER, Beatrix 37 gift catalogue 2014 O O ctober 2014 | I n dex | 109 © James R. Morse NYC Our Madison Avenue Gallery 535 madison avenue, nyc grand canal shoppes, the venetian | the palazzo, las vegas 1608 walnut st, philadelphia www. baumanrarebooks .com 1-800-97-bauman