Type d'article
Etat
Reliure
Particularités
Pays
Evaluation du vendeur
Edité par Nicholson & Watson, UK, 1943
Vendeur : RIVERLEE BOOKS, Waltham Cross, HERTS, Royaume-Uni
Livre
Hardcover. Etat : Fair. Fair condition hard cover, some wear to cover and spine, tanning to pages, chip to first page, otherwise in a good readable condition.
Edité par Nicolson & Watson, London, UK, 1943
Vendeur : BookAddiction (ibooknet member), Canterbury, Royaume-Uni
Livre Edition originale
Hardcover. Etat : Good. 1st Edition. First edition, first printing. 232pp. In red cloth boards with yellow lettering on spine. 8vo. Cloth is worn and faded, moderately rubbed and rounded at corners and spine ends, with a few mild marks. Small paper scar at top of front hinge. Gift inscription, dated 1944, on front free endpapers. Slight soiling to text block and page edges. An examination of the Second World War campaigns in Sicily and Southern Italy based on the contributions of two war correspondents.
Edité par Nicholson & Watson, London, 1943
Vendeur : Good Reading Secondhand Books, Benalla, VIC, Australie
Hard Cover. No Jacket. The cover is bumped at the edges and the back hinge is exposed and the front one foe a svery small section only. This does not affect the binding, which is solid. The pages are tanned. A clean, unmarked copy, though obviously second hand. 231 pages. "THIS curiously named book is about the campaigns in Sicily and Southern Italy. The suspicion aroused by its title is not altogether allayed by a reading of the book, which is made up by piecing together the contributions of two war correspondents. The book has faults. There are occasional slight inaccuraoies, no doubt due to hasty compilation. There is some unnecessary personal information about Americans, intended no doubt for "home town" consumption. And the general thesis, which makes the whole Italian surrender turn on the food situation, is a little too slick ; one prefers to suspend judgement until the information is more substantial. On the credit side, however, there are good descriptions of actions and experiences, including an extremely detailed account of the taking of Pantellaria. A particularly useful chapter, entitled "Without Glamour," describes the organisation of Palermo as a base by the United States Navy. There is also a valuable account of what Mr. Wagg saw at Salerno. On the whole, once one has discounted a certain pretentiousness, this book is a useful addition to the tale of those produced by war corre- spondents." (The Spectator, 31 March 1944) Size: 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall.
Edité par Nicholson & Watson, UK, 1943
Vendeur : RIVERLEE BOOKS, Waltham Cross, HERTS, Royaume-Uni
Livre
Hardcover. Etat : Fair. No Jacket. Hardcover in fair condition. Foxing and tanning. 231 pages.