Showing all 20 results
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$30.00NY: Alfred A. Knopf (1983). First edition. 202 pp. Very near fine in like dust jacket. 'American popular culture from World War II to the present, re-examined through a close-up exploration of 109 photographs, movie stills, and other images of the past five decades.' Includes 200 illustrations.$40.00NY: Rinehart & Company (1949). First edition. 592 pp w/index. Very good plus in like price-clipped dust jacket with shallow chipping along top edge, light toning to spine, and rubbing along spine edges. Illustrated by Edward Shenton. A volume in the “Rivers of America” series.$100.00NY: Rinehart & Co. (1952). First edition. 239 pp. Near fine in near fine dust jacket. Illustrated by John O’Hara Cosgrave II. A volume in the “Rivers of America” series.$100.00NY: Simon & Schuster (1988). First edition. 1064 pp w/index. Very near fine in like dust jacket. Promotional flyer and review slip laid in.$125.00NY: Farrar & Rinehart (1941). First edition. xi + 285 pp w/index. Fine in near fine, price-clipped dust jacket. Illustrated by Andrew Wyeth. A volume in the “Rivers of America” series.$500.00San Francisco: Arion Press, 1987. First edition. Folio. 53 pp. Fine in paper-covered boards with cloth spine and printed label. No dust jacket, as issued. Introduction by Glenn Todd. One of 400 copies on Rives Heavyweight paper SIGNED by Bosman.$12.50NY: Cambridge University Press (2005). First edition. 346 pp w/index. Very near fine in like dust jacket.$85.00NY: Rinehart & Company (1951). First edition. xiv + 370 pp. Generic bookplate inside front cover, else near fine in near fine dust jacket with light rubbing along spine. Illustrated by John O’Hara Cosgrave II. A volume in the “Rivers of America” series.$60.00NY: Berkeley Medallion (1962). First paperback printing. 224 pp w/index. Near fine in illustrated wrappers.$40.00NY: Knopf, 1967. First edition. xvi + 513 pp w/index. Fine in near fine dust jacket with light edgewear.$10.00San Francisco: Turtle Island Foundation (1973). First trade paperback printing. 204 pp w/index. Fine in illustrated wrappers.$25.00Berkeley: Turtle Island, 1970. First edition. 295 pp w/index. Fine in near fine dust jacket. Foreword by Bob Callahan.$15.00Berkeley: Turtle Island, 1970. First edition. 295 pp w/index. Near fine in illustrated wrappers. Foreword by Bob Callahan.$35.00Berkeley: Turtle Island, 1975. Second printing of the second edition (originally published in 1939). 267 pp w/index & maps. Very near fine in illustrated boards. No dust jacket, as issued. Illustrated with drawings by Antonio Sotomayor.$50.00NY: New York Academy of Sciences, 1963. Annals, Volume 105, Art. 5, pages 287-382. [92 pp]. Light surface damage to rear cover, else near fine in stapled wrappers. Introduction by John S. Laughlin. Illustrated, and with charts. Reproduced at the end of the volume are eight pages of transcription from the vigorous discussion produced by the presentation of this speculative paper.$100.00NY: Milton Balch & Company, 1929. First edition. 311 pp w/index. Very near fine in full black cloth with printed paper spine and cover labels. A nice bright copy.$200.00NY: Milton Balch & Company, 1928. First edition. 322 pp w/appendixes. Bookplate inside front board, else very near fine in full black cloth with printed paper spine and cover labels. Lacks dust jacket. A nice bright copy.$75.00NY: Farrar & Rinehart (1941). First edition. x + 356 pp w/index. Near fine in very good plus, price-clipped dust jacket with toning to spine and edges of flap folds. Illustrated by Ernest J. Donnelly. A volume in the “Rivers of America” series.$20.00Lexington: The University Press of Kentucky (1980). First edition. 114 pp. Fine in fine dust jacket. A long autobiographical essay on Southern politics, American history, the career of Jefferson Davis, the writing of history, and, of all things: memory. A mix of a Southerner's nostalgia and a writer's objective eye.$45.00NY: Arbor House (1986). First edition. 248 pp w/notes & bibliography. Fine in fine dust jacket. After putting a microscope to Congress in his first book, Weatheford tackles the Triple-X scene in Washington DC.