Edité par The Century Company, NY, 1905
Langue: anglais
Vendeur : Legacy Books II, Louisville, KY, Etats-Unis
EUR 7,38
Autre deviseQuantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Ajouter au panierSoft cover. Etat : VG. Harry Fenn, Allen True (illustrateur). 12pp extract, printed in double columns, numerous illustrations and photos, including several full-page plates, faded water-staining noted along bottom margins, salvaged from a damaged issue of The Century Illustrated Monthly Magazine, Volume LXX, No. 4, August, 1905. Illustrations include La Grave, Briancon, the Combe Laval canyon, various views of automobiles along the route, the descent of Les Ecouges, the vestibule to A Valhalla. Housed in protective mylar report cover.
Edité par Century Magazine, 1903
Vendeur : Larry W Price Books, Portland, OR, Etats-Unis
Edition originale
EUR 7,72
Autre deviseQuantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Ajouter au panierPamphlet. Etat : Very Good. 1st Edition. Oct, 1903, pp. 869-878, Photos, Extracted from orig vol, thus begins with title page, trimmed & stapled pamphlet, else VG.
Edité par '40 rue Laffitte Paris | September 29', 1894
Vendeur : Richard M. Ford Ltd, London, Royaume-Uni
Manuscrit / Papier ancien
EUR 213,22
Autre deviseQuantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Ajouter au panier1p, 4to. On leaf of aged, worn and creased cartridge paper. Addressed to 'A. T. Q. C., | Care of The Editor of | The Speaker, 115, Fleet Street, E.C., London.' An interesting letter, touching on English and American journalistic practice, 'sensational' copy, plagiarism and fin-de-siècle Paris. The context is not entirely clear: one reading is that the recipient reported on or reproduced in the Fleet Street newspaper the Speaker one of Heilig's 'sensational letters to the American Sunday papers', only to have it 'cribbed' by Pearson's Weekly. Heilig begins: 'Dear Sir, | I was so amused to compare your own text with that of your robber's, in a recent number of The Speaker, enclosed. In the one case it was a stolen ruby or flute or piano or [spade?]. In the present it is some stolen skeletons. My business of writing sensational letters to the American Sunday papers does not hold me to any crazy accuracy. The editors trust me, they allow me to paint the lily.' He explains that 'In the Cabaret du Neant there are really no skeletons sitting about, or, at most, one in miniature upon a shelf. I thought there ought to be skeletons sitting around, so I put them in.' He explains that 'The "P. W. man", going towards the Montmartre hill (in full Montmartre!) saw these skeletons "lounging on benches" and some which stood about and snapped their jaws a frequent intervals.' He explains that another passage 'has no place in the patter of the show. I took it bodily from their first advertising sheet, a journal called "La Mort".' He begins the final paragraph by explaining that he knows 'little of London and nothing of Pearson's Weekly', but that it has occurred to him that 'there may be something even yet more amusing behind their offers of twenty guineas etc.' He believes that 'one of the uses of these offers is to give the editors a screen behind which to protect themselves from even the appearance of evil. They can always say: "The thing was sent in to us. We regret it." Nevertheless I fancy the cribbing is done regularly in their own offices, by paid clerks.'.