Type d'article
Etat
Reliure
Particularités
Pays
Evaluation du vendeur
Edité par Guido Bruno, Washington Square, 1916
Vendeur : Pensees Bookshop, Charleston, IL, Etats-Unis
Livre
Soft cover. Etat : Good. Mustard colored staple bound covers with black stamped lettering and design. Chipped at three corners with a small tear on the back. pages numbered 427-442.
Edité par NY: Guido Bruno, 1921
Vendeur : Zubal-Books, Since 1961, Cleveland, OH, Etats-Unis
Etat : Very Good. vol. 1#5, complete issue in original paper wrappers, near very good; contributors include Jack London, Sven Hedin, Walter de la Mare, Sadakichi Hartman, et al. - If you are reading this, this item is actually (physically) in our stock and ready for shipment once ordered. We are not bookjackers. Buyer is responsible for any additional duties, taxes, or fees required by recipient's country.
Edité par Charles Edison, New York, 1916
Vendeur : About Books, Henderson, NV, Etats-Unis
Edition originale
Paperback. Etat : Good - Very Good condition. Beardsley, Aubrey (cover art) (illustrateur). First Edition. New York: Charles Edison, 1916. 5" wide by 7.75" tall. Illustrated. Original yellow wrappers, including the Aubrey Beardsley drawing, are in Very Good condition Inside pages are fragile, brittle, browning and separated at the fold. Avant-garde little magazine with much on Greenwich Village and its goings-on. This issue's feature article, by Guido Bruno, is Anarachists in Greenwich Village. Includes the Aubrey Beardsley poem, Ave Atque Vale Catullus, Carmen CI. Also in this issue is Suicide by Leo Tolstoy, translated by Bruno. First Edition. Softcover. Good - Very Good condition. Illus. by Beardsley, Aubrey (cover art) . pp 743-758.
Edité par The MIT Press, 1988
ISBN 10 : 0262022796ISBN 13 : 9780262022798
Vendeur : Broad Street Books, Branchville, NJ, Etats-Unis
Livre
Hardcover. Etat : Good. Black cloth boards, no dust jacket. Book is in excellent condition, text is unmarked and pages are tight.
Edité par EOC, Italy, 2007
Soft Cover. Etat : Very Good. No Jacket. Paperback. 147pp, illus. Slightest wear to covers only. An excellent clean copy. (bstop).
Edité par Pearson's, New York, 1917
Vendeur : The Reluctant Bookseller, Albany, NY, Etats-Unis
Livre Edition originale
Soft cover. Etat : Very Good. illustrated throughout (illustrateur). 1st Edition. Pearson's Magazine, volume 37, number 6. This was the June of 1917 issue of this controversial monthly. Bound in publishers illustrated wrappers. Illustrated throughout. This was the final issue of Pearson's more compact spine bound design. With the July of 1917 issue , they adopted a larger flat format. A very good copy with some browning to acidic paper and wear to wrappers. This issue includes numerous pieces by Harris, including his scathing critique of Arthur Balfour.( His malice towards Balfour is balanced by his admiration for Leo Trotsky. ) There is also an interesting article by Erich Brandeis; ' What Will You Do With Us ? '. Brandeis provides elucidation to the movement of San Francisco's 500 prostitutes to prevent their trade's potential disappearance with the push to eradicate their profession. Numerous other authors and social issues explored.
Edité par Pearson's, New York, 1917
Vendeur : The Reluctant Bookseller, Albany, NY, Etats-Unis
Livre Edition originale
Soft cover. Etat : Very Good. illustrated (illustrateur). 1st Edition. Pearson's Monthly Magazine for May of 1917. Volume number 37, number 5. Bound in publisher's wrappers, front panel illustrated by Ilonka Karasz. Illustrated throughout. This issue features numerous contributions from the editor Frank Harris, as well as pieces by Eugene Debs, Carlo Edwards, Guido Bruno et al. The examination of the Russian Revolution - and the rise of Communism is, ore than one hundred years later, an interesting piece. A very good copy with browning to the acidic pages and some wear to the edges of the yapped wrappers.
Edité par Bruno's Review Press, New York, 1921
Vendeur : Bolerium Books Inc., San Francisco, CA, Etats-Unis
Magazine / Périodique Edition originale
Magazine. pp199-222, 6x9 inches, stories, articles, vintage illustrations, very worn and soiled booklet in stapled orange printed wraps. Includes "Stranger Than Fiction" by London, "At A Railway Station" by Hearn, "The Lost Greenwich Village" & "Cabaret: Its Origin, Its Rise & Its Decline". Bruno was the notorious "Barnum of Bohemia" who published chapbooks and a Weekly as well as a Greenwich Village magazine and charged admission to see Bohemians at work. He published Djuna Barnes and Alfred Kreymborg.